Experts: Nigeria Risks Shaky Return as Africa’s Top
Oil Producer
*Niger Delta not Sambisa forest, IYC tells presidency
Nigeria may have to remain Africa’s second largest crude oil
producer after Angola for now until it is able to find solutions to emerging
security challenges threatening the industry in the Niger Delta, according to
industry experts.
The experts said following the country’s loss of its position
to Angola last week emerging trend in security breaches on export pipelines and
other facilities in the region posed great setbacks to the country clawing back
lost output levels in the immediate future.
They told journalists today in Abuja that the cost
and time needed to restart production from the shut-ins at affected oil
facilities were considerable factors that could also keep Angola’s production
above Nigeria’s for now.
Their response to the development also came on a
day the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) told the federal government that its reported
plan to designate oil vandals in the Niger Delta as terrorists and deal with
them like it is doing with Boko Haram terrorists was ill-mannered, stressing
that the region was not Sambisa forest and so does not need such measure.
Latest data from the April Monthly Oil Market
Report (MOMR) of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)
showed that Nigeria’s crude oil production fell by 67,000 barrels per day (bpd)
in March from 1.744 million bpd to 1.677mbpd, while Angola saw its oil output
rise to 1.782mbpd within the same period.
The report reflects the continued shut-in of
Nigeria’s popular crude oil grade Forcados following sabotage on the subsea
Forcados pipeline and export terminal.
While Vice-President Yemi Osibanjo last week put the
total loss per day at 250,000 barrels, Minister of State for Petroleum Resources,
Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, earlier said it was 300,000bpd.
However, one of the experts, Dr. Timothy Okon, who
is the Group Chief Executive Officer of an economic think-tank, the
International Institute for Petroleum, Energy Law and Policy (IIPELP), said the
government would have to sort out the prevalent governance issues in the Niger
Delta region to allow for a steady production level.
Okon, however, noted that other oil producers would
be glad Nigeria is experiencing such production shut-ins.
“The loss is temporary and has to do with the break in Trans
Forcados line and the force majeure that had been declared. However, the issue
that surrounds production losses in Nigeria is multifaceted and this particular
instance has to do with militancy which is related to some issues surrounding
the region and the president,” said Okon.
He further explained that: “I think anytime you lose
250,000bpd of production, it is significant especially in terms of the current
price levels, and so it is important for the income of the state, and to deal
with the issues immediately.
“Pipeline vandalism didn’t just start, it emanated
from the failure in politics and governance in the Niger Delta, and without
making excuses for criminality, I think those issues have to be tackled at
ground zero level which is the interaction of the local authorities with the
state authorities.”
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