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FACTBOX-Which oil firms are affected by Niger Delta unrest?

Tue Jul 14, 2009 4:47am EDT

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July 14 (Reuters) - Nigeria's main militant group said on Monday it had sabotaged an oil dock in Lagos state, killing five people in the group's first attack outside the Niger Delta since it began its latest campaign.

A total of around 300,000 barrels per day of Nigeria's oil output has been shut down since The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) launched its latest campaign of violence in late May.

Following are details on which firms have been affected and what they have said about production:

CHEVRON CXV.N

MEND said on July 10 it attacked a recently repaired oil pipeline linking Alero creek through Abiteye to Chevron's export terminal in Delta state. [ID:nLA94547]

The militant group said on July 6 it attacked Chevron's Okan manifold in southern Delta state. [ID:nL627910]

The U.S. energy firm said on May 25 it had shut in approximately 100,000 barrels per day (bpd) of oil production from its swamp operations in Delta state following the first major strike in the militants' latest campaign. [ID:nLP693007]

MEND said that day it had sabotaged pipelines to flow stations at Alero Creek, Otunana, Abiteye, Makaraba and Dibi in Delta state.

MEND claimed on June 10 to have sabotaged Chevron's Otunana pumping station in Delta state but the military denied any such attack had occurred. It said a fire at the facility, confirmed by Chevron, was the result of a systems failure. [ID:nLA242679]

On June 13, Chevron confirmed there was a breach on its Makaraba-Utonana-Abiteye pipeline and fire at its Makaraba Jacket 5 facility in Delta state but said output was unaffected as the infrastructure had already been shut down.

MEND said on June 15 it had attacked Chevron's Abiteye flow station. [ID:nLF222833]



ROYAL DUTCH SHELL (RDSa.L)

Shell has said the latest attacks have slashed output from its onshore facilities to 140,000 barrels per day (bpd), around half of what it was producing earlier this year. [ID:nLU240107]

MEND said on July 8 it had attacked Shell's Nembe creek oil pipeline at Asawo village in Bayelsa state.

The militant group said on July 5 it had attacked a Shell oil well head in the Cawthorne Channel which is connected to the Bonny export terminal in Rivers state. Shell said no output was affected.

Shell said on June 29 it had shut in some production after reports of attacks, claimed by MEND, on two well clusters in its Estuary Field, near to its Forcados export terminal.

Shell had on June 17 extended a force majeure on its Forcados oil shipments for the rest of June and all of July. The measure, which frees it from contractual obligations, was first imposed in March after an attack on its trans-Escravos pipeline.

Shell said on June 25 it had shut down one of its pipeline valves at Krakrama manifold in its eastern operations in the Niger Delta after MEND claimed an attack on the Billie/Krakama pipeline in Rivers state. [ID:nLP466266]

The firm declined to say whether output was affected.

Shell also said it was investigating reports of attacks at three locations on June 21, two of them in the eastern state of Rivers. [ID:nLL486595]

MEND said it had attacked Shell pipelines at Adamakiri and Kula, both in Rivers state, and had later attacked what it described as part of an offshore oilfield in shallow water further west, saying that the structure was "engulfed in fire".

A senior industry source said the third attack was not thought to have been on an offshore installation as MEND claimed, but on a facility located in the mangrove creeks in the same broad area as where the first two attacks took place.

Shell said on June 18 some oil production had been halted following an attack on the Trans Ramos pipeline the previous day at Aghoro-2 community in Bayelsa state. [ID:nLI310768]



AGIP (ENI.MI)

MEND on July 8 sabotaged the Agip pipeline that connects to its Brass terminal at Nembe creek in Bayelsa state, forcing the company to cut around 24,000 bpd. Agip's equity share of lost output is 4,800 bpd.

MEND said on June 19 it had attacked an oil and gas pipeline at Nembe creek in Bayelsa state operated by Italian energy firm Agip, which delivers oil to the Brass export terminal.

Agip said the attack on the pipeline operated by its Eni unit between the Ogoda Manifold and the Brass terminal halted production of around 33,000 bpd of oil and 2 million cubic metres of gas per day. [ID:nLJ121769]

It said its equity share of the lost output was around 6,000 bpd of oil and 437,000 cubic metres of gas. [ID:nMAT009687]

The Italian firm declared force majeure on crude oil exports from Brass River on June 23. [ID:nMAT009694]



For full coverage please click on [ID:nLM7620]

(Writing by Randy Fabi; editing by Ralph Boulton)



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