Two Nigerian oil pipelines shut down due to leaks
January 21, 2015
ABUJA/LONDON, Jan 20 (Reuters) -
Nigeria's Trans Forcados oil and gas pipeline and related production as well as
Shell's Nembe Creek line, carrying Bonny Light crude, were shut at the weekend,
the ministry of power and Shell said in separate statements on Tuesday.
The 150,000 barrel per day (bpd)
Nembe line was shut on Jan. 17 after a leak was found, which is still being
investigated, a spokeswoman for Shell said. A section of the Trans Escravos
pipeline was also closed on Jan. 14 for works and to remove crude theft
connections.
The pipelines are operated by
Shell's Nigerian joint venture SPDC. Traders said it was too early to tell
whether the shut downs would impact exports. Bonny Light exports were scheduled
at 185,000 bpd in January and 170,000 in February. The grade is also
transported via the Trans Niger Pipeline.
A spokeswoman for Shell said there
was no impact on Bonny Light exports at present.
Nigeria's power ministry said the
Forcados pipeline was closed after a leak occurred at the Oteghele axis in the
southern state of Bayelsa and there was no timeframe yet for the duration of
the disruption.
"The minister of power ... has
appealed for the understanding of electricity consumers, for the reduction in
power supply which this development may cause," the statement said.
The affected section of the Forcados
pipeline is run by state-owned Nigerian Petroleum Development Corporation,
a subsidiary of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation. An NNPC spokesman
did not respond to a request for comment.
A spokesman for SPDC in Lagos said
its production is linked lower down the pipe and was not affected. Nigeria's
Seplat Petroleum, which produces around 60,000 bpd and exports crude via the
Forcados pipeline, declined to comment immediately but said it would issue a
statement later.
Two other incidents of vandalism occurred
in early January affecting the 24-inch and 28-inch sections of the pipeline.
The damage took about a week each time to repair before the pipeline was back
in use, the power ministry said.
The pipeline transports the Forcados
crude oil grade. About 260,000 bpd were scheduled to be exported in January and
210,000 bpd in February.
"(The shutdown) takes some
cargoes out of the market, but we already had 10 days delay in Forcados,"
a trader said, adding that two January cargoes had already been deferred to
February with a knock-on effect into March.
"This may cause further
delays" he said, which would support the prices of other Nigerian grades.
(Additional reporting by Camillus Eboh; editing by Tim Cocks and David Evans