The Shell Petroleum Development Company Limited, the
Nigerian subsidiary of Dutch oil giant, Royal Dutch Shell, on Friday has confirmed
Niger Delta Avengers’ claims that a major damage was done to its oil
installations in Delta State in the early hours of Friday, saying the attack
had forced it to shut down crude exports indefinitely.
Responding to news of the attack, Shell’s spokesman,
Bamidele Odugbesan, said the incident happened between a shoreline and the
Forcados Export Terminal which impacted seriously on its export capabilities.
“The Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited,
operator of the SPDC JV, has confirmed signs of a leak on the 48 inch Forcados
export pipeline at a location between shoreline and the Forcados terminal in
the western Niger Delta, coming on the heels of a reported attack on the
pipeline in the early hours of Friday, June 3,” the statement said. Mr.
Odugbesan said the company was assessing the impact of the damage and had
“mobilised appropriate oil spill response measures”.
“We are yet to fully evaluate the potential impact and
damage to the pipeline resulting from this latest incident. We have however
mobilised appropriate oil spill response measures and will be conducting a
joint investigation visit to the leak site with relevant stakeholders.
“We are currently focused on securing the pipeline to
protect the environment. Given this latest incident and the wider security
situation in the Niger Delta, we are unable to determine probable timing of
resumption of exports from the Forcados terminal,” Mr. Odugbesan said.
Shell Nigeria is “the operator of the export line on behalf
of the joint venture partners comprising the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation, NNPC (55%), SPDC (30%), Total E&P Nigeria Ltd (10%) and
Nigerian Agip Oil Company (5%),” the statement said. The latest damage to Shell
installations followed a series of bombings that rocked Chevron, Agip, and NNPC
oil and gas installations across the Niger Delta in the last few days,
including other Shell- operated facilities.
On Thursday night, the group made a similar claims on its
Twitter account, saying it blew up “Ogboinbiri to Tebidaba and Clough Creek to
Tebidaba crude oil pipelines in Bayelsa State,” as part of its campaign to
bring Nigeria’s oil production output to “zero”. On Wednesday, the Avengers
said it was responsible for the destruction of Chevron oil wells RMP 23 and RMP
24, and mocked Nigeria’s military for being only “good in harassing innocent
civilians.”
No comments:
Post a Comment