Breaking news in Nigeria: Niger Delta Avengers Force Shell To Evacuate Staff From Major Facility Near Bonga
The menace of Niger
Delta Avengers, the newest militant group in the oil-rich region, has forced Royal Dutch Shell to evacuate most
of its staff from a production facility. The evacuation was carried out by
three helicopters on Saturday. The exercise will continue on Sunday in the
firm's facilities across the Niger Delta region.
Saturday's evacuation
saw 98 key personnel on board were overseen
by helicopters from Eja OML
79, run by Royal Dutch Nigerian subsidiary, Shell Petroleum Development
Corporation (SPDC), where production of 90k barrels of oil per day has been
halted.
Sources said that a small group of staff has been left on the
platform to carry out skeletal operations. The staff and facility are offered
protection by two gunboats belonging to the military Joint Taskforce of the
Federal Government.
Close to Eja 79 is the Bonga Field, which has a larger
production capacity and is operated by another Shell subsidiary, Shell Nigeria
Exploration and Production Company (SNEPCO). Sources told SaharaReporters that
some staff have been evacuated from Bonga while the wider security implication
is being reviewed by the company.
Since the Niger Delta Avengers began attacking oil facilities in the region, they have hit an oil platform Okan field facility run by Chevron, resulting in the loss of gas supplies to power plants across Nigeria.
Since the Niger Delta Avengers began attacking oil facilities in the region, they have hit an oil platform Okan field facility run by Chevron, resulting in the loss of gas supplies to power plants across Nigeria.
On Friday SaharaReporters reported, via tweets, that gas
plants in Omotosho, Geregu, Ughelli, Olorunsogo and Egbin had to shut down as
the main pipeline run by the Nigerian Gas Company (NGC) was blown up. While
Chevron sources said they could fix their issue in two weeks, the NGC may
not be able to restore its gas link for a while.
The militants also blew up the oil pipeline that supplies crude
to Warri and Kaduna refineries, therefore, crippling Nigeria’s ability to
refine some four million gallons of gasoline per day.
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