An explosion closed a
second Chevron facility in Nigeria, witnesses said Friday, as renewed attacks
by militants further cut production in Africa's biggest petroleum producer.
Associated
Press report continues:
Adding
to Nigeria's economic woes, Exxon Mobil on Friday said some production of Qua
Iboe crude — the West African nation's largest crude grade — has halted because
a drilling rig damaged a pipeline. The company declared force majeure,
protecting it from contractual export obligations.
Nigeria's
oil production already had reached a 20-year low of less than 1.6 million
barrels a day from a projected 2.2 million, because of attacks on a Chevron
platform last week and on a pipeline that forced Shell to declare force majeure
on Bonny Light crude on Wednesday. The same day, Shell began evacuating workers
from its offshore Bonga oilfield following a militant threat, though production
there is continuing.
Shell's
Forcados export terminal has been shut since a February bombing.
In
this Monday, Dec. 26, 2011 file photo, Shell Bonga offshore oil Floating
Production Storage and Offloading vessel off the coast of the Niger Delta in
Nigeria. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)
|
Villagers
said militants attacked a Chevron well on Marakaba pipeline on Thursday. They
requested anonymity for fear of repercussions amid a massive deployment of
troops that has led more than 10,000 people to flee the fallout. Chevron did
not respond to requests for comment.
A
new group, the Niger Delta Avengers, has claimed most attacks. They want
natives of the oil-producing southern Niger Delta to get a bigger share of oil
wealth and are angry about cuts to an amnesty program that paid militants to
guard the installations they once attacked.
There
are suggestions the violence is being fueled by some Christian politicians in
the oil-producing south opposed to President Muhammadu Buhari, a northern
Muslim. Eurasia Group risk assessment said the sophistication of attacks points
to such a scenario and would indicate the Avenger group "poses a greater
threat than its small numbers and scant grassroots support would
indicate."
The Nigerian production cuts have helped boost oil prices — to nearly US$50 a barrel from under US$30 a barrel in January — according to the International Energy Agency.
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