Oil theft in Nigeria |
LAGOS (AFP) – Oil
theft in Nigeria is a huge criminal operation affecting companies and states
around the world, but interest in tackling the problem is low, Chatham House
said in a report Thursday.
The new study from the London-based think-tank, based on
interviews with some 200 government, private sector and independent sources,
said "Nigerian crude oil is being stolen on an industrial scale."
Estimates on the scale of the problem vary, with some Nigerian
officials saying 150,000 barrels per day is stolen, costing some $6 billion a
year in lost revenue.
Chatham House, which also reviewed thousands of documents, said
the figure was almost certainly more than 100,000 barrels per day.
Nigeria is Africa's largest oil producer, with output at around
2.0 million barrels per day.
"Proceeds are laundered through world financial centres and
used to buy assets in and outside Nigeria," according to the think-tank.
Few fully grasp the problem and those affected have shown little
desire to act, it added.
"In Nigeria, politicians, military officers, militants, oil
industry personnel, oil traders and communities profit," Chatham House
said.
For Nigeria, cracking down could inflame tensions among powerful
figures, particularly in the southern oil-producing Niger Delta region, where
unrest declined after a 2009 amnesty deal with rebels, but where stability
remains elusive.
Despite rhetoric about the scourge of oil theft from Western
governments and foreign oil majors, neither camp has fully attacked the
problem, the report said.
There is "very little incentive for foreign partners to
act, including risk of a diplomatic rift and almost no leverage," in part
because of Nigeria's low aid dependence.
Global oil giants like Shell, ExxonMobil, Total, Chevron and ENI
all operate in the Niger Delta, but it is "unclear how much export
oil" these companies lose, Chatham House said.
"We have never reached the breaking point," one oil
executive was quoted as saying. "Something always happens that rights the
ship."
Among the majors, Shell has been the most vocal and is likely
the hardest hit given its larger presence onshore.
But companies have in recent months sold onshore assets,
seemingly to focus on deepwater projects, where the risks of theft and unrest
are limited.
The initial stages of Nigerian crude theft are largely known,
with gangs tapping into pipelines, pumping crude to smaller vessels which take
it to larger ships for international sale.
A certain amount is refined and sold locally.
Chatham House said it was less clear where the illicit crude is
taken abroad and how it gets there.
It partly reaches world markets through "co-loading",
where stolen oil is put on a ship carrying legal oil. Documents are forged and
the vessel departs seemingly laden with legitimate cargo.
The report suggests the United States, one of the largest
markets for Nigerian oil, may not be a leading destination for illicit cargo,
perhaps because US refineries more rigorously inspect incoming crude.
Refineries in regional markets, including Cameroon, Ghana and
Ivory Coast, were listed as likely buyers.
Various sources told Chatham House that refineries in China,
India, Singapore and Eastern Europe all purchased stolen Nigerian oil, but the
think-tank found little direct evidence to support any specific charge.
The report offered various possible strategies to tackle the
problem, but said the priority should be to learn more, including sweeping
intelligence gathering involving all those affected.
"Oil theft is a species of organised crime that is almost
totally off the international community's radar," Chatham House said.
"Without
better knowledge of how the stolen oil trade works, not every government can
ignore it with confidence."
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