Energy
Militants attack: ExxonMobil suspends crude export from Nigeria
UNITED States-based Exxon Mobil has suspended exports of crude from the country’s top crude stream, adding to economic strains from unrest and violence that have cut production to its lowest in decades.
Exxon Mobil confirmed on at the weekend that it had declared a force majeure a suspension of deliveries because of events beyond its control on Nigeria’s Qua Iboe crude oil grade, and that a portion of production had been curtailed.
If outages at Qua Iboe and other streams are prolonged, Nigeria’s output could fall to around 1.2 million barrels per day, according to Reuter’s calculations. This would be the lowest output since 1970, according to BP’s statistical review.
The outage adds to production problems at two of the other largest crude streams, Bonny Light and Forcados, which have already taken Nigeria’s output to a 22-year low.
ALSO SEE: We’ll make you suffer, militants threaten oil majors
Royal Dutch Shell’s local operation on Tuesday declared force majeure on Bonny Light crude exports as a result of a leak that led to the closure of Nembe Creek Trunk line for repairs by the operator, Aiteo Eastern E & P Company Ltd.
In February this year, an attack on a Shell oil pipeline also shut the 250,000 bpd Forcados export terminal. A Geneva-based trader said that output of Qua Iboe had stopped completely and that it was unclear when it would re-start. It was set to account for 317,000 bpd of exports in June.
Up until this year Nigeria had been Africa’s largest crude exporter with its economy heavily reliant on oil. However, rampant oil theft and corruption has kept production well below its capacity of above two million bpd.
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