Nigeria
is home to 3% of the world's proven crude oil reserves, says OPEC AFP
|
Nigeria will legalize
currently outlawed mini refineries in the Niger Delta oil hub by the end of the
year and supply them with crude at a reasonable price, the presidency said on
Thursday, fulfilling demands from community leaders.
Reuters
report continues:
On
Monday, Niger Delta leaders threatened to pull out of peace talks with the
government unless their demands were met by Nov. 1.
"The Federal
Government has started the process of replacing illegal refineries in the
region with modular ones," the presidency said in a statement as Acting
President Yemi Osinbajo met Niger Delta community leaders in Abuja.
Each
of the Niger Delta states would receive two modular refineries to start up in
the fourth quarter, the statement said.
The
community leaders welcomed the outcome of the meeting.
"The
meeting was excellent. We met with Mr Acting President and the discussion was
very honest, truthful, forthright. We are very, very satisfied. No more
ultimatum," Edwin Clark, head of the community leaders, told reporters.
The
government has been in talks with community leaders since last year to end
militant attacks on oil production facilities, which cut the OPEC member's
output by 700,000 barrels a day for several months last year.
But
a military crackdown on thousands of illegal refineries in the southern swamps,
which process crude oil stolen from oil majors and state oil firm NNPC, has
raised tensions.
The
refineries process stolen crude in makeshift pipes and metal tanks hidden in
oil-soaked clearings deep in the southern swampland's thick bush land.
The
Niger Delta leaders had presented President Muhammadu Buhari a list of 16
demands last November to drag the southern swampland out of poverty. The
militants then halted attacks to give the talks a chance.
The
presidency said it was also discussing with oil majors to move their regional
headquarters to the Niger Delta, another demand from communities complaining
they do not benefit from the crude in their region.
"There
is more consensus," Oil Minister Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu said after the
meeting, without elaborating. "Today was an environment of peace, calm,
friendliness, and mutual dialogue of issues."
Osinbajo
was appointed by Buhari to head Nigeria while Buhari is on medical leave in
Britain for an undisclosed ailment.
Oil exports are now set to exceed 2 million barrels per day (bpd) in August, the highest in 17 months, from as little as just over 1 million bpd at certain points last year, thanks to a steady decline in attacks on pipelines.
No comments:
Post a Comment