US energy giant Chevron said it has lost
thousands of barrels worth of oil production capacity since militants blew up
an offshore platform in Nigeria in renewed violence that could hit exports from
Africa’s largest oil producer, the company said.
“Approximately 35,000 barrels per day (bpd) of Chevron’s net
crude oil production in Nigeria are impacted,” company spokeswoman Isabel
Ordonez said in a statement late Friday.
Militants on Wednesday night used explosives to blow up the Okan
platform, a collection facility for offshore oil and gas that feeds the
Escravos terminal in southern Nigeria.
The impact of the attack was significant in a country where
Chevron’s net daily production in 2014 averaged 240,000 barrels of crude oil,
236 million cubic feet of natural gas and 6,000 barrels of liquefied petroleum
gas, according to the company’s website.
Nigerian navy spokesman Chris Ezekobe said that a previously
unknown group called the Niger Delta Avengers claimed responsibility for the
assault.
The involvement of former Niger Delta militant leaders including
Tompolo, who is wanted on fraud charges, has not been ruled out, Ezekobe said.
Tompolo, who wreaked havoc in the creeks and rivers of the delta
in the 2000s, is accused of defrauding the government of more than $175 million
(161 million euros).
The Niger Delta Avengers group is thought to involve supporters
of Tompolo — whose real name is Government Ekpemupolo — unhappy about charges
against him and the winding down of a government amnesty programme that ended the
unrest in 2009.
But Tompolo has previously said he is not part of the group.
Chevron has confirmed that “unknown persons” attacked its Okan
Valve Platform offshore facility near oil city Warri late Wednesday. There were
no known casualties.
“All persons have been accounted for and no injuries have been
reported,” the company said.
Chevron Nigeria Limited (CNL) operates the joint venture with
Nigeria’s giant state-run oil firm, Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation
(NNPC).
The upsurge of attacks risks hitting crude supplies at a time
when Nigeria’s oil-dependent economy is facing a slump because of the fall in
global prices.
Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari signed the 2016 budget in
Abuja Friday, dependent on $38 per barrel.
Nigeria derives more than 90 percent of its foreign exchange
earnings from oil.
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