When militants in Nigeria’s southern Niger River delta started
attacking oil installations, President Muhammadu Buhari promised to crush them
by force. A year and $7 billion in lost oil
exports later, his decision to switch tack by negotiating with
the fighters seems to be working.
All but one
force majeure, a clause that gives oil producers the right to miss supply
obligations, have been lifted since peace talks were initiated in November
with militants. Shipments at Forcados, the nation’s third-largest export
terminal, are on course to restart in the second quarter. Nigeria rivals Angola
as Africa’s biggest oil producer.
“Despite the
president’s initial threats and bluster on the delta, common sense now seems to
be prevailing,” said Cheta Nwanze, Lagos-based head of research at risk
advisers SBM Intelligence. “The government needs steady oil production to stand
any chance of a quick end to the economic recession.”
Since the
truce, Nigeria has restored output to 1.68 million barrels a day from the
27-year low of 1.4 million barrels a day in August, according to Bloomberg
estimates, with the last attack reported by the main militant group in
November. While that’s still below the 2014-15 average of about 2 million
barrels a day, it’s brightened prospects that the country can emerge from its
worst economic slump in a quarter-century and ease a foreign-currency crisis
sparked by the lower production of oil, its main export, and falling crude
prices.
Brent crude,
the global benchmark, was trading at $52.87 a barrel, down 0.5 percent, as of
9:30 a.m. Tuesday in London.
The dialogue started with back-channel contacts initiated by
Petroleum Minister of State Emmanuel Kachikwu, a former executive of Exxon Mobil Corp.’s
Nigerian unit. The Niger Delta Avengers, the group responsible for more than 90
percent of attacks, agreed to a cease-fire in September and nominated a
group of regional elders to negotiate on their behalf.
Regional
Autonomy
Their demands
included more regional autonomy and the reinstatement of a university in
the hometown of militant leader, Government Ekpemupolo, or Tompolo, suspected
by the government of being behind the attacks, and more access to the jobs,
contracts and other benefits that come from oil activities.
Then, Vice President
Yemi Osinbajo visited all the states in the oil region in February while he was
acting as Nigeria’s leader when Buhari was in the U.K. He met representatives
of militant and community groups and made pledges to address longstanding
grievances. The government also resumed suspended payments to ex-militants
under an amnesty program.
The
government promised to accelerate infrastructure projects in the region,
reinstate the scrapped university and establish a plan to organize cottage fuel
refiners, who often steal crude from pipelines, into cooperatives that will be
legally supplied with oil to operate.
Pipeline Attacks
“The
engagement we’re seeing so far must be taken as very initial and tentative
steps,” Nnimmo Bassey, one of the founders of Environmental Rights Action, a
local affiliate of Friends of the Earth active in the delta region, said in a
phone interview from the oil-industry hub of Port Harcourt. Talks will have to
continue on the demands for “regional autonomy” and local control of oil resources,
he said.
Before the
dialogue started with the militants, fighters played a hide-and-seek game with
troops, avoiding direct confrontation while attacking the pipeline system at
strategic points to cut exports. Military reprisals alienated some delta
communities, complicating the task of protecting pipelines spread over the
70,000 square-kilometer (27,000 square-mile) delta.
Two underwater attacks on the Forcados export terminal operated
by Royal Dutch Shell Plc’s Nigerian unit put it out of action for
more than a year, and it hasn’t resumed exports. A similar attack on Exxon
Mobil Corp.’s Qua Iboe export terminal last August also caused extensive damage
that is yet to be completely fixed.
The new
government peace initiatives have struck the right chord with people in the
delta, according to Dan Ekpebide, a community leader from the Gbaramatu
district, a hotbed of the resurgent attacks, who’s involved in negotiations
with the government.
“We welcome
Osinbajo’s initiatives,” Ekpebide said by phone from the southern oil
center of Warri. “If Buhari upholds them and implements them, then that will be
the light at the end of the tunnel.”
Source: Bloomberg


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