Nigeria’s fiscal outlook has received a significant boost with surging global oil prices driven by escalating tensions in the Middle East opening the door to a potential N30.2 trillion windfall. That was even as economists warned against a repeat of past boom-and-bust excesses.
With crude hovering near $100 per barrel and projections pointing to $130 if the conflict deepens, analysts say the price rally has created a rare window of opportunity for Africa’s largest oil producer, whose 2026 budget was benchmarked at a conservative $60–$65 per barrel.
At current output of about 1.7 million barrels per day, Nigeria’s oil earnings are estimated at roughly $14.5 million daily, with a projected $1.3 billion gain by the end of March due to supply disruptions, including concerns around the Strait of Hormuz. According to Energy economist, Dr Ibrahim Sule, the development has “materially altered Nigeria’s revenue position.”
“The gap between the benchmark and actual price is where the windfall lies. At current levels, government revenues are outperforming projections, reducing immediate borrowing pressures.” Sule further said: “Every extra Dollar above the benchmark translates directly into unplanned revenue.
At current levels, Nigeria is earning significantly more than anticipated, which could ease fiscal pressures, reduce borrowing needs, and support the Naira.” However, experts caution that the gains are tied to volatile geopolitical developments and may not be sustained. Energy analyst and Chief Executive Officer of Dairy Hills Limited, Kelvin Emmanuel, described the current rally as, “event-driven rather than structural.”
“This is not a demand driven boom; it is a supply shock. Once tensions ease, prices could retrace quickly. So, policymakers must treat this as temporary income,” Emmanuel said. The inflow of petrodollars is also expected to support the Naira by improving foreign exchange liquidity, a key pressure point for the economy in recent months.
Chief Economist at SPM Professionals, Paul Alaje, said higher oil receipts could provide short-term stability. “Increased Dollar inflows give the Central Bank more room to intervene in the FX market. It may not solve structural issues, but it can ease volatility in the near term,” Alaje noted.
Despite the upside, analysts warned that Nigeria’s dependence on imported refined petroleum products could dilute the net benefit of higher crude prices. Energy expert and Cofounder of Dairy Hills Limited, Kelvin Emmanuel, described the situation as “a mixed blessing.”
“Higher crude prices mean more export earnings, but also higher import costs for fuel. Until domestic refining is fully optimised, part of the windfall will leak through this channel,” he said. There are also concerns that improved revenues could weaken the urgency for fiscal reforms.
Director-General of the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG), Dr. Tayo Aduloju, warned against expanding recurrent expenditure. “Nigeria has a history of treating temporary oil gains as permanent income. The priority should be debt reduction, infrastructure investment and building fiscal buffers not increasing the cost of governance,” Aduloju said.
On the production side, modest gains to 1.7 million barrels per day have strengthened Nigeria’s ability to benefit from the price surge, aided by improved pipeline security and reduced crude theft.
National Publicity Secretary of the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN), Chinedu Ukadike, said output recovery is “crucial to maximising the moment.” “Price alone is not enough; volume matters. The recent stability in production has positioned Nigeria to take fuller advantage of the rally,” Ukadike stated.
