Jump to navigation

Nigeria

Corruption, low investment and shrinking markets haunt oil and gas industry

Bitter legacy in the Niger Delta 26 years after the execution of Ken Saro Wiwa and eight others

Just weeks after President Muhammadu Buhari signed into law far-reaching reforms of the oil and gas industry, national production is lagging behind forecasts and revenues are falling short.

Technical glitches and cuts caused by vandalism, oil theft, strikes and outdated infrastructure mean that production has been running 200,000 barrels a day below Nigeria's target of 1.65million b/d set by the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).

Deputy oil minister Timipre Sylva's forecast that Nigeria's production would reach 2 mn b/d by the end of the year looks far-fetched. These shortfalls could undercut the country's allocated production targets to be set by OPEC for next year. The cartel usually cuts the production allocation for a country when it fails to meet its current target.

Nigerian policymakers also have to manage wider changes in the ownership and structure of the oil industry as some major foreign oil companies start to sell their onshore operations. Mostly, their reasons are commercial. Onshore production contracts are less lucrative and more cumbersome to operate than the production-sharing agreements for the offshore deep-water operations.

Political factors, recurring unrest in the Niger Delta and wider pressure from environmental campaigners to cut fossil fuel production, have also encouraged the sales.

Supporters of the writer and minority rights campaigner Ken Saro-Wiwa marked the 26th anniversary of his execution on 10 November. Another eight activists were executed by the regime  on the same day.

The executions ordered by General Sani Abacha's military regime triggered Nigeria's three-year suspension from the Commonwealth and tougher scrutiny for oil company operations in the Niger Delta.

The only international response to date, the UN-mandated clean-up of Ogoniland, is mired in allegations of mismanagement. Some US$360 mn paid into the clean-up by oil companies, including Shell, of a projected billion dollars is unaccounted for (AC Vol 59 No 24, Clean-up gets murky & Vol 62 No 4, Shell retreats from the Delta). The UN and Shell have declined to comment on the position of the much-criticised director for the clean-up operation, Marvin Dekil.

Saro-Wiwa's grass-roots Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) has split into factions. Some are negotiating terms with President Buhari's government for oil extraction in Ogoni to resume, perhaps with an eye on rising global prices.

Others staunchly oppose oil companies, even the state oil corporation, resuming production in Ogoniland. They regard addressing the corruption and bureaucratic mismanagement of the UN's $1bn clean-up (less than 1% of what is required to remediate oil despoliation in the Niger Delta) as the first order priority.



Related Articles

Clean-up gets murky

Hold-ups in promised action against pollution in Ogoni region in the Niger Delta are multiplying and tension is rising

A long-delayed environmental restoration programme in Ogoni is finally in the works after decades of oil spills and fires left it one of the most polluted places in...


Shell retreats from the Delta

The Anglo-Dutch giant is losing its battle to fight off international lawsuits over pollution

Shell is retreating from onshore oilfields in the Niger Delta under a cloud, facing lawsuits, recriminations and so far failing to deal with some of the most serious...


Return of the Jagaban

Bola Tinubu – the Lagos kingmaker – holds the key to plans for President Muhammadu Buhari’s re-election next year

It was smiles all round as the happy band of politicians encircled a giant green and white birthday cake. Centre-stage at this grand party in Lagos on 27...

READ FOR FREE

At last a cabinet, and now for the policies

After balancing political interests and restructuring ministries, the most urgent issue facing President Buhari is economic strategy

At his self-imposed eleventh hour, President Muhammadu Buhari submitted his list of 21 ministerial nominees to the Senate on 30 September. On 8 October, the Senate was to...

READ FOR FREE

Oil cuts as Delta erupts

Piracy and militant attacks are cutting oil production in the Niger Delta as the government struggles with northern insurgents

As the government contends with a Boko Haram militia determined to make the north ungovernable, a new round of attacks has erupted in the oil-producing Niger Delta. Apart...