
Oil production in
the country has dropped by 150,000 barrels of oil per day following the shutdown
of the Trans Niger Pipeline by Shell Petroleum Development Company.
Corporate Media
Relations Manager, SPDC, Precious Okolobo, said in a statement that company had
deferred about 150,000 barrels of oil and 500 million standard cubic feet of
gas per day as a result of oil theft.
He also said SPDC
had declared force majeure on Bonny Light exports and gas supply to the
Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas company effective September 23, 2013.
This development,
according to the statement, is linked to oil theft, which is denying the
Federal Government of about $7bn annually.
The company had on
September 8 reopened the TNP after it was shut for two months due to incessant
theft and vandalism.
The TNP has been
repeatedly targeted and closed down five times since early July due to multiple
leaks from crude theft connections.
The recent opening
of the crucial pipeline was said to have lifted crude oil production, which has
been fluctuating between 2.1 million barrels per day and 2.3 million bpd since
the beginning of the year.
A statement by the
Acting Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division, Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation, Tumini Green, had declared that crude oil production had
risen to 2.4 million barrels per day due to what she claimed were the results
of the reforms introduced in the industry.
Industrial scale
oil theft, sabotage and technical problems have caused crude output to drop to
less than 1.9 million barrels a day, the lowest since mid-2009, when production
briefly dipped to a 20-year low of 1.5 million bpd.
Any further fall,
according to a recent report by Financial Times, will allow Angola to assume
Nigeria’s position as the continent’s largest crude producer.
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