Nigeria defers 700,000bpd of Crude Oil due to Pipeline Vandalism

Thu, Sep 14, 2017 | By publisher


Oil & Gas

 

MAIKANTI Baru, group managing director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, has said that an average of 700,000bpd of crude oil was deferred in 2016 due to pipeline sabotage, saying this brought Nigeria’s production down to as low as 1.3 million barrels per day from 2.2 million barrels targeted for the period.

Baru, who stated this in a keynote address at the maiden edition of the Nigerian International Pipeline Technology and Security Conference, NIPITECS 2017, in Abuja on Wednesday, said year-to-date 2017, NNPC had recorded 27 breaching incidents on the Trans Niger Pipeline, TNP, adding that for the Trans Forcados Pipeline, TFP, with a capacity of 300,000bpd, 17 breaches were recorded in 2016.

Baru declared that year-to-date 2017, NNPC had suffered at least 15 breaching incidents on the TFP, while charging members of the Pipeline Professionals’ Association of Nigeria, PLAN, to conduct a systematic diagnosis of the pipelines system in Nigeria and come up with sustainable and actionable solutions to the menace of pipeline vandalism in the country.

He urged all key players to rally round the pipeline professionals to proffer solutions to the pipeline vandalism challenge as it posed a great threat to the Nigerian economy in terms of revenue loss and environmental degradation.

“The foregoing summarises the effect of pipeline vandalism and therefore underscores the importance of protecting our pipeline system and treating them as National Assets… On the strength of that, we must endeavor to carry out a systematic diagnosis and proffer workable, practicable and actionable solutions that will guarantee sustainability of pipeline infrastructure,” Baru said.

He listed some of the measures deployed by NNPC to stem the tide of pipeline vandalism to include: Horizontal Directional Drilling, HDD, technology to bury pipelines deeper to prevent easy accessibility; technology-based pipeline surveillance mechanism with capability to detect, alert and deny access; and aerial monitoring and marine patrols by the Military Joint Tax Force, JTF.

Baru further said government was working out a political solution to the socially-induced-agitation sabotage while the law enforcement agencies had been empowered to deal with those who engage in pipeline vandalism out of criminality such as oil theft.

Earlier, on the significance of the conference, Geoff Onuoha, chairman of PLAN, said considering the critical role of pipelines to the entire value chain of the oil and gas industry, there was need for a forum like NIPITECS to bring professionals and stakeholders together to brainstorm and share knowledge and technology.

Simbi Wabote, executive secretary of the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), who also spoke at the occasion, said the board was working hard to boost local production of pipes, adding that its efforts were already yielding dividends as Nigeria now has two world class pipe mills in full operation.

On his part, Chidi Izuwah, director general of Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission, ICRC,  challenged industry players to tap into the opportunities in Public Private Partnership, PPP, to boost pipeline and other infrastructures in the country.

 

– Sept. 14, 2017 @ 12:26 GMT

 

 

 

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