We are lucky to have a very visionary leader at this time. It could have been worse, however, he is very focused. |
Dr. Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu |
The oil price, which was above $100 per barrel in
2014, has fallen below $30 per barrel, and Kachikwu, who declared in an
interview with newsmen said that this free fall in prices of crude is putting
the country in pain, maintained that the pain extends to both oil producing and
non-oil producing nations.
(more after the cut)
He said: “Everybody is in pain. It doesn’t matter
where you are, whether you are producing or not producing, we’re all in pain.
The producers are not all Nigerians, they come from the western countries, and
they are also in pain. So, the pain is there. But this is an opportunity. We
are lucky to have a very visionary leader at this time. It could have been
worse, however, he is very focused.
“I think everybody’s hurting. I mean and even the
Saudi’s will prefer to tell you the sort of numbers they expect – nobody
expected those sorts of numbers. So, they should understand that it is whether
they are willing therefore to be the bleeding guy on the block – that is the issue.
The Russians are pumping. They are also suffering, at some points, realized
that countries don’t make investments in oil.”
Stating that members of the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) are working on an emergency in March, the
minister said that there is a lot of energy around it, lots of majority of
members want it.
“But having said that, the rule, of course, is that
we are not going to have a meeting unless almost an absolute majority calls for
it, right now, it is looking sort of uncertain. And I think the chances are
more that we are going to do the June meeting, which is already fixed.
“Well, the Saudis are still keeping to their
position, we are not the problem. We are trying to let every other person who
is an active player here, sit down to talk so we can all collaborate and they
do have a point in terms of that. It is just that, however, the market is
reacting so negatively to any perception of OPEC inactivity, as it were and
that is blocking the market.
“Well, I have not said March is off the table – it
is being worked, but I can’t say to you we’re going to have a meeting in March
unless a March meeting has been fixed,” he declared.
Asked whether the production cuts were realistic or
not, he stated: “Well, for me, I think it is more a meeting for parties to sit
down and talk, talk and say what is the future of oil. Everybody emphasizes
price, but price is really not the issue.”
No comments:
Post a Comment