ExxonMobil Seeks Alternative Route to Export Qua Iboe Grade Crude Oil
• Breached NPDC/Shoreline trunkline spills oil into Delta communities
• IEA: Global oil demand to exceed production
As
repairs continue on its main export pipeline damaged last month, Mobil
Producing Nigeria Unlimited, a subsidiary of ExxonMobil, is seeking to
use an alternative pipeline to transport its Qua Iboe crude grade from
the company’s producing fields to its Qua Iboe export terminal in Akwa
Ibom State.
ExxonMobil’s
subsea pipeline was purportedly breached by a militia group last month,
forcing the company to declare force majeure on the export of the Qua
Iboe crude grade, Nigeria’s largest export stream.
The
Niger Delta Avengers had claimed responsibility for the attack on the
company’s 48-inch pipeline, which the company denied, calling it a
“system anomaly”.
Reuters
quoted company sources as saying that the company later found
substantial damage that would take at least one to two months to repair.
Whatever
the cause of the damage, port sources and oil traders said repairs
would take months, spurring the decision to try to export via a second,
smaller pipeline that also feeds the platform.
“Exxon
is preparing the alternate export line,” one source informed Reuters,
adding that if it is successful, some exports could emerge within two
weeks.
Two
sources added that Exxon, and the Qua Iboe terminal itself, were not
sharing details on the repair progress or export plans for fear of
provoking militant attacks on oil infrastructure.
A
spokesman for Mobil Producing Nigeria Unlimited declined to comment on
the plan to use an alternative pipeline, saying: “We're continuing to
make progress, but we would not speculate on a timeline for repairs.”
Nigeria’s
oil production has been impacted by militancy since the beginning of
the year, with the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) saying
in its latest monthly report that pipeline attacks had taken out some
700,000 barrels per day from the country’s production, which was above 2
million bpd.
In
addition to Qua Iboe, Shell’s Forcados and Agip’s Brass River crude
grades are also under force majeure, while the pipelines for Shell’s
Bonny Light and Chevron’s Escravos exports have been shut down.
In
another incident, the oil spill arising from the breaching of a major
trunk delivery pipeline to the Eriemu manifold in Urhoboland, Delta
State, belonging to the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC)
and Shoreline Resources has spread to neighbouring communities,
destroying farmlands in the area.
THISDAY’s
investigation revealed that the oil spill was spreading fast and will
require urgent attention to prevent it from spreading further.
A
new militant group, the Niger Delta Greenland Justice Mandate claimed
on Wednesday that it breached the trunkline operated by NPDC and
Shoreline Resources.
A
member of Operation Safe Delta, the joint task force of the Nigerian
Armed Forces with an operational base in the Niger Delta, yesterday
confirmed the attack on the delivery line and environmental damage
caused by the oil spill.
A
security source said: “Yes, there was an attack on the Uzere-Eriemu
trunk 16 line in Isoko South Local Government Area of Delta State.
“The
attack was carried out with the use of dynamite and as I speak to you,
surrounding communities like Agbarha-Otor and Uzere, both in Ughelli
North and Isoko South council areas have been affected by the spill from
the affected trunk line.”
A youth leader from Agbarha-Otor community, Victor Emuherie confirmed the oil spill in his community and the surrounding areas.
He
said: “We started noticing crude oil on our land only to be told that
it was as a result of a spill from a trunk line conveying crude from
Isoko to the Eriemu manifold.”
The
new militant group, which claims to be agitating for the people of
upland areas that are hosts to oil facilities, said they had been left
out of previous negotiations between the federal government and riverine
community hosts in the past.
The
group had announced its emergence on Tuesday with a 48-hour ultimatum
to all the oil companies still in the onshore locations of the region –
Agip, Total, Shell, Mobil, Shoreline, Neconde, ND Western, Seplat and
others – to evacuate their personnel from the region, especially in the
Ogba/Egi axis of Rivers State; Urhobo/Isoko/Ndokwa axis of Delta State;
and other upland oil producing areas.
It
also threatened to blow up the Warri and Port Harcourt refineries as
well as the Utorogun gas plants in Ughelli South Local Government area
of Delta State.
But
as oil companies in Nigeria struggle to survive in the face of unabated
militancy in the Niger Delta, the International Energy Agency (IEA) has
raised hopes for crude oil producers, with its latest report showing
that the global production of crude oil is falling behind demand,
heightening expectations of potential recovery of prices.
IEA,
which monitors energy trends for the industrialised countries, mostly
consumer nations, said yesterday in its Oil Market Report (OMR) for
August that from July through September, global production of crude oil
would fall behind demand by almost one million barrels a day.
The
Paris-based agency insisted that the oversupply of crude, which caused
glut in the international market, is clearing out even though the
Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) pumped at record or
near record levels.
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