Ibadan pipeline explosion: We’ve resumed pumping of petroleum products – NNPC
LAGOS—The Management of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation,
NNPC, Sunday said it had successfully clamped the ruptured point along
the Mosimi–Ibadan line and resumed fuel supply operation to Ibadan and
its environs.
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The repairs came less than 24 hours after men suspected to be oil
thieves ruptured the Mosimi–Ibadan fuel supply pipeline along the
crucial System 2B Pipeline network, which erupted into an inferno
weekend.
The Acting Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division,
NNPC, Ms. Tumini Green, in a statement said a team of engineers and
technologists from the NNPC and its downstream subsidiary, the Pipelines
and Products Marketing Company, PPMC, worked assiduously over the
weekend to restore the line to normal operation.
fire-outbreak
The NNPC spokesperson said the Corporation responded quickly because
of its determination to ensure that Nigerians do not experience any form
of scarcity in petroleum products supply on account of the activities
of some unpatriotic citizens.
“At exactly 20.06 hrs on Saturday, the Mosimi–Ibadan line was
re-streamed after repair works at the ruptured point. While we remain
committed to our resolve in ensuring unimpeded distribution of petroleum
products across the country despite the mounting odds, we call on
members of the public to support the NNPC and the security agencies in
this fight against oil thieves and pipeline hackers,” the statement read
in part.
The NNPC called on Ibadan residents and the adjoining communities to
refrain from panic buying or hoarding of petroleum products in
anticipation of scarcity.
Litany of vandalism
Efforts by the NNPC to ensure unimpeded distribution of products
through its vast artery of pipelines have come under serious threats due
to the activities of oil thieves especially along the System 2B
Pipeline network, which accounts for a third of products supply in the
country.
The Corporation said there have been over 774 ruptured points between
August and October, 2012 along the System 2B line, adding that it is
currently working with the Engineering Corps of the Nigerian Army to
clear the pipeline right of way from the Atlas Cove in Lagos to the
Ilorin Depot in KwaraState.
The Corporation is also introducing the Horizontal Direct Drilling
System, HDD to redirect the pipelines from the reach of vandals.
Pipeline vandalism and crude oil theft has attained a worrisome
dimension over the years, with the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior
Staff Association of Nigeria, PENGASSAN, saying the country loses about
N954 billion ($6 billion) to crude oil theft annually.
Last year, the Minister of Petroleum Resources said Nigeria lost
about N1.908 trillion ($12 billion) to pipeline vandalism and oil theft
in 2011, while adding that of the total amount, $5 billion was spent on
pipeline repairs, while the amount lost to crude theft was valued at $7
billion.
Confirming this, the Minister of Finance and Coordinator of the
Economy, Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said Nigeria is losing an estimated
400,000 barrels per day (bpd) of crude oil, resulting in about 17 per
cent reduction in export sales, costing the nation’s treasury about $14
billion in 2011 alone.
Also, the PPMC said Nigeria lost about N165 billion in the last four
years to pipeline vandalism, adding that the sum includes the cost of
repairs and products theft.
Managing Director of PPMC, Mr. Haruna Momoh, noted that the
activities of vandals at Arepo in particular, and products theft across
the country had become a recurring national embarrassment and had cost
the country, N165 billion between 2009 and 2012.
He added that on a number of occasions, the vandals at Arepo, who
have become notorious in their operations, attacked personnel of PPMC
with guns and other dangerous weapons, and prevented them from fixing
the damaged pipelines.
This, he said, led to the death of a number of personnel over the
years and had brought about a huge cost on PPMC in the area of repair of
the vandalised pipelines.
He said: “In one case, the vandals killed one of our personnel, who
had gone to fix a vandalised pipeline and buried him in an unknown
grave. It took the intervention of the management of PPMC, who pleaded
with the community for several days before they could show us the grave,
allowing us to exhume the body so as to give the personnel a befitting
burial.”
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