Nigeria’s Oil Export Suffers Setback As Shell Shuts Facility
By Chika Izuora
— Nov 25, 2014 |
Nigeria’s oil exports were disrupted after Shell’s local unit
shut a pipeline that carries a key grade after it discovered a leak on
Saturday, the company said yesterday.
The pipeline carries one of Nigeria’s main export grades, Bonny Light BFO-BON.
The facility services about six cargoes of the crude which are exported each month, or around 180,000-200,000 barrels per day.
Reuters quoted unnamed Shell spokeswoman in London that force majeure had not been declared on the grade.
“SPDC is investigating the source of a leak at Okolo Launch in
eastern Niger Delta which occurred near the 24-inch and the 28-inch TNP
(Trans-Niger Pipeline),” said Reuters quoting a spokesman at Shell’s
Nigeria unit.
“The leak occurred near where one of our contractors was preparing to
remove crude theft connections on the line. On noticing the leak on
November 22, we deployed booms and also shut in the 28-inch TNP.”
The 24-inch pipeline had been shut since October 18, 2013, for repair and integrity checks, the spokesman added.
Nigeria’s oil industry suffers from rampant oil theft. A report by a
national conference convened by President Goodluck Jonathan in March
said the country was losing an estimated $35 million a day to oil theft.
In March this year, Shell said it lost nearly $1 billion in 2013
through theft and various disruptions to its Nigerian oil and gas
operations.
The oil major has since sold some of its onshore producing fields in part due to these problems.