With the declaration of force majeure on
Bonny Light exports by Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria
Limited, about 400,000 barrels per day of Nigeria’s production has now
been shut in.
Force majeure is a legal clause that allows an oil firm to stop shipments without breaching contracts.
The oil major said in a statement signed
by its spokesperson, Mr. Bamidele Odugbesan, on Wednesday that the
force majeure took effect from Tuesday, May 10, 2016.
It said the decision came as a result of
a leak that led to the closure of the Nembe Creek Trunk line for
repairs by the operator, Aiteo Eastern E & P Company Limited.
Shell had in February declared force
majeure on liftings from the Forcados export terminal following the
disruption in production caused by the spill on its subsea crude export
pipeline.
A group named Niger Delta Avengers
claimed responsibility for the attack on the Shell oil pipeline, which
shut down the 250,000bpd export terminal.
Commissioned in 2010, the 100-km NCT
feeds the Bonny export terminal, and the disruption will affect the
loading of seven cargoes, representing a combined volume 217,000 bpd. It
has a capacity of 600,000 bpd, according to Shell’s website.
The halt in Bonny Light loadings comes
less than a week after Chevron said 35,000 bpd of its Nigerian net crude
production had been halted by an attack on its offshore Okan facility,
and three months after Shell suspended production at Forcados.
If all Bonny Light production is cut, it
will bring output to below 1.5 million bpd for the first time since
September 1994, according to Energy Information Administration data.
Nigeria exports almost all its production.
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