Tuesday, March 31, 2026 - The United States reduced its purchase of Nigerian crude oil sharply in January 2026, with imports dropping by about 47.16 per cent month-on-month, according to the latest data from the U.S. Census Bureau and the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Figures from the U.S. International Trade in Goods and
Services report indicate that U.S. crude imports from Nigeria fell to 1.664
million barrels in January 2026, down from 3.149 million barrels recorded in
December 2025. This represents a decline of 1.485 million barrels within one
month, showing a significant contraction in Nigeria’s share of the U.S. crude
market.
In value terms, the drop was equally steep. The customs
value of Nigerian crude imports declined from $217.36m in December to $115.99m
in January, while the cost, insurance, and freight value fell from $223.10m to
$118.95m over the same period. The difference between the two measures reflects
additional costs such as shipping and insurance included in CIF values, which
are excluded from customs valuation.
This means that in January, the CIF value of Nigerian crude
was about $2.96m higher than its customs value, compared to a wider gap of
about $5.74m in December. The narrowing gap suggests relatively lower freight
or insurance costs, or shorter shipping distances within the period.
The contraction comes amid a broader slowdown in total U.S.
crude imports, which declined from 198.29 million barrels in December to 188.21
million barrels in January, representing a drop of about 5.1 per cent. Total
import value also fell, with customs value decreasing from $11.41bn to
$10.56bn, while CIF value dropped from $12.04bn to $11.15bn.
Within Africa, Nigeria lost ground to some peers. While
total African crude exports to the U.S. remained flat at 6.933 million barrels,
Angola recorded a sharp increase, rising from 575,000 barrels in December to
2.062 million barrels in January.
Ghana also emerged as a new supplier with 738,000 barrels,
having recorded no measurable exports in December. By contrast, Libya saw its
exports to the U.S. decline from 2.137 million barrels to 1.086 million barrels
over the period.
Nigeria’s share of total U.S. crude imports also weakened.
The country accounted for roughly 0.88 per cent of total U.S. crude imports in
January, down from about 1.59 per cent in December, reflecting the sharp
reduction in volumes.
Further analysis of U.S. trade data shows that crude oil
remains the dominant component of Nigeria’s exports to the United States. Total
U.S. imports from Nigeria stood at $183m in January 2026, compared to $297m in
December 2025.
With crude oil imports valued at $115.99m (customs basis)
and $118.95m on a CIF basis, crude accounted for approximately 63.4 per cent to
65.0 per cent of total U.S. imports from Nigeria in January. This compares with
about 73.2 per cent in December on a customs basis, indicating a relative
moderation in crude dominance as overall imports declined.
The PUNCH further observed that the U.S. recorded a goods
trade surplus of $419m with Nigeria in January, up from $84m in December. This
was driven by a rise in U.S. exports to Nigeria, which increased from $381m to
$602m, even as imports from Nigeria declined.
Across Africa, the U.S. posted a trade deficit of $503m in
January, reversing a $174m surplus recorded in December. Total U.S. imports
from Africa rose from $2.88bn to $3.54bn, while exports to the region edged
slightly lower from $3.05bn to $3.04bn.
The PUNCH earlier reported that Nigeria accounted for about
52 per cent of Africa’s crude oil exports to the United States in 2025.
According to the previous report, total U.S. crude imports from Africa stood at
89.371 million barrels in 2025, down from 103.631 million barrels in 2024,
representing a decline of 14.26 million barrels or 13.8 per cent.
Out of the 89.371 million barrels imported from Africa in
2025, Nigeria supplied 46.618 million barrels, compared to 50.793 million
barrels in 2024. This was a drop of 4.175 million barrels or 8.2 per cent year
on year.
Despite the lower volume, Nigeria’s share of Africa’s crude
exports to the U.S. rose. In 2025, Nigeria’s 46.618 million barrels accounted
for 52.2 per cent of Africa’s total shipments, up from 49.0 per cent in 2024,
when it exported 50.793 million barrels out of the continent’s 103.631 million
barrels.
The PUNCH earlier reported that the Nigerian National
Petroleum Company Limited recorded a profit after tax of N385bn in January
2026, even as crude oil and condensate production rose to 1.64 million barrels
per day, according to the firm’s latest monthly operational report.
The January 2026 NNPC Monthly Report Summary, released on
Monday, showed that the state-owned energy company generated N2.571tn in
revenue during the month while remitting N726bn as statutory payments to the
Federation.
This means the company recorded a sharp 47 per cent decline
in its monthly revenue, which fell from N4.82tn in December 2025 to N2.57tn in
January 2026. This contraction occurred despite a marginal increase in the
company’s after-tax profit.
It disclosed that Nigeria produced 1.64 million barrels per
day, up from 1.55 million barrels per day recorded in December 2025. This
represents an increase of 0.09mbpd, or about 5.8 per cent month-on-month.
The PUNCH observed that the decline in crude exports to the
U.S. occurred despite higher production. The trade outcomes come against the
backdrop of renewed US protectionist rhetoric and tariff-focused trade policies
associated with US President Donald Trump, which have influenced sourcing
decisions, pricing structures, and trade flows globally.
Last year, Donald Trump signed an executive order raising
Nigeria’s tariff rate from 14 per cent to 15 per cent, with Washington
implementing its “reciprocal” tariff regime.
The order, issued in late July, took effect on August 7,
2025. Although crude oil has been exempted in several cases, the higher duty
applies directly to a wide range of non-oil Nigerian exports, creating
uncertainty for American importers and dampening demand ahead of and after the
effective date.
With crude oil exports largely exempted from the new tariff
regime, non-oil exports appear to have borne the brunt of the disruption.
A renowned economist and Chief Executive Officer of the
Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise, Dr Muda Yusuf, downplayed the
impact of the U.S. tariffs on Nigeria.
“Our trade with the US is not that strategic. When anything
goes wrong, it is not as if it can have any fundamental effect on our economy.
Our trade exposure to them is very limited,” Yusuf explained.
He noted that Nigerian exports to the US are dominated by
crude oil and a handful of other commodities, such as fertilisers, making the
country’s trade profile narrow and underdeveloped in non-oil areas. Yusuf added
that Nigeria’s tariff exposure is relatively moderate compared with other
countries.
However, he identified another challenge beyond tariffs: US
visa policy. “The bigger challenge for Nigeria’s trade relationship with the US
is Washington’s visa policy. Barriers to travel limit business interactions and
investment inflows. That is more critical than tariffs in the long run,” he
said.
Since its inception, the Trump administration has steadily
rolled out a series of visa restrictions and travel bans targeting Nigeria and
several other countries.

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