Pipeline repairs halted |
(From 247Ureports)
Royal Dutch Shell Plc said it won’t attempt to
repair a key pipeline in Nigeria for now after freedom fighters attacked it a second
time last week, the latest sign of alarm among foreign oil companies in the
African country.
Chief Financial Officer Simon Henry said the company
had to withdraw repair crews last week after a second attack against the
48-inch Forcados export pipeline that links onshore storage tanks with an
offshore port.
“We cannot operate or repair if our people are
threatened,” Henry said in an interview at Shell’s annual capital markets day.
While the company previously said it planned to repair the facility, first
attacked in February, this month, the CFO said that it was “not possible” at
this time.
Shell’s resignation over the disabled pipeline
suggests a new level of insecurity as a wave of violence hits the oil-rich
Niger Delta, leaving production at its lowest level in nearly three decades. In
the past, energy companies were able to repair pipelines after attacks, barring
a few exceptions deep into the region’s swamps and creeks. The attacks are more
destructive than in the past, Henry said.
“There is clearly better organization and
targeting,” according to the CFO.
The freedom fighters say they are waging a war for a
free Niger Delta Republic in what it tags, Operation Red Economy, with a view
of halting crude oil production in Nigeria to force the government to grant the
group’s demands.
The Avengers claim it has reduced oil production in
the country to less than one million barrels a day. An analyst at VOA News corroborates
the freedom fighters’ claims saying that oil production has dropped below one
million barrels a day due to the waves of attacks on pipelines and oil
installations.
The freedom fighting group has released its rules of
engagement and says that it doesn’t kill anybody or attack oil workers or
soldiers. The Delta Avengers called on all other groups operating in the region
to abide by these rules of engagement. “We need God now, more than ever,” the
group said in a statement.
The Niger Delta Avengers has presented an 11-point
demand to President Muhammadu Buhari. Among the demand is the release of Nnamdi
Kanu, Leader of Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB); and Director of Radio
Biafra and Biafra Television.
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