Nigerian crude oil producers supplied local refineries with less than half of ​the volumes allocated under the country’s domestic ‌crude supply rules in the first quarter of 2026, regulator data showed, as pricing disputes continued to hamper ​deliveries.

The Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission said ​61.9 million barrels of crude were allocated ⁠to domestic refineries during the quarter under the ​Domestic Crude Supply Obligation, while producers offered 68.7 ​million barrels.

Actual supply, however, stood at 28.5 million barrels, equivalent to about 46% of allocated volumes and around 41% ​of volumes offered.

The figures highlight continuing challenges in ​Nigeria’s push to increase local refining and reduce reliance on ‌imported ⁠fuels, despite reforms under the Petroleum Industry Act aimed at improving domestic crude availability.

The shortfall has underscored concerns raised by the Dangote refinery over ​unreliable domestic ​crude supply ⁠and pricing disagreements, analysts said, constraining output at Africa’s largest refinery and weakening ​Nigeria’s push to capture more value ​from ⁠its oil production.

The regulator attributed the gap between offered volumes and actual deliveries mainly to pricing differences ⁠between ​crude producers and domestic refiners. ​It said transactions continue to operate on a “willing buyer, willing ​seller” basis.

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