Anglo-Dutch oil giant Shell’s
Nigerian subsidiary on Wednesday said it has declared force majeure on Bonny
Light crude exports following a leak on a key pipeline. The Shell Petroleum
Development Company of Nigeria Ltd (SPDC) said the measure came into effect on
Tuesday at 1100 GMT, as the leak had shut the Nembe Creek Trunk line, pending
repairs.
Force majeure is a legal term
that frees a company from any contractual obligation due to circumstances
beyond its control. SPDC did not disclose the volume of production lost from
Bonny, which is one of Nigeria’s main export terminals. But Shell’s website
said the Nembe Creek Trunk Line, which runs for 100 kilometres (62 miles)
through the delta region to the Bonny terminal, can handle up to 600,000
barrels per day (bpd).
Bloomberg quoted the pipeline
operator Aieto Exploration and Production Company as saying at least 78,000 bpd
of the firm’s crude output has been shut down. A spokesman for Aieto said the
cause of the leak could not be immediately identified. “We don’t know if it’s
an attack or sabotage,” Sola Omole was quoted as saying.
The Nembe pipeline was damaged
with the Trans-Niger pipeline in August last year, again forcing SPDC to
declare force majeure on Bonny Light exports. Tuesday’s incident comes after an
increase in attacks on oil facilities and infrastructure by militants wanting a
fairer share of revenue for local people in the impoverished region.
The Niger Delta Avengers group
last week claimed responsibility for attacking the Okan offshore facility
operated by US group Chevron. Previous pipeline attacks have halted shipments
from Shell’s Forcados terminal and in the wake of the Okan incident, employees
were airlifted from the Eja facility. The overall effect has been to cut
output. Bloomberg said on Tuesday production had dipped to below 1.7 million
bpd for the first time since 1994.
Culled from: Vanguard Newspaper
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/05/shell-closes-bonny-terminal-alleged-attack-nembe-pipeline/
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