In Nigeria, Shell’s onshore roots still run deep
Send a link to a friend
[September 25, 2018]
By Ron Bousso
BODO, Nigeria (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell
wants to reweight its footprint in Nigeria to focus on oil and gas
fields far offshore, away from the theft, spills, corruption and unrest
that have plagued the West African country's onshore industry for
decades.
Graphic: Oil spills at Shell's Nigeria operations - https://tmsnrt.rs/2KzACfH
But for the company that pioneered Nigeria's oil industry in the 1950s,
the Niger Delta remains as important -- and problematic -- as ever.
While Shell has cut onshore oil production and sold some onshore assets,
it continues to invest in others. In fact, onshore production has risen
in recent years as a share of Shell's output in Nigeria, an analysis of
company data over the past decade shows.
Graphic: Shell Nigeria production - https://tmsnrt.rs/2OB5wa0
Much of the increase comes from less polluting gas, used mainly in power
generation, which Shell thinks will be key to the transition to lower
carbon energy. Gas made up 70 percent of onshore production in 2017, up
from 47 percent in 2008.
Graphic: Nigeria onshore production -
https://tmsnrt.rs/2CLPxEU
The company still controls thousands of kilometers of pipelines
connecting inland fields to coastal terminals through its subsidiary,
Shell Petroleum Development Co of Nigeria (SPDC), however.
So while SPDC has cut oil production in the Delta by 70 percent since
2011, when it first started reporting data on spills, the incidence of
spills and theft from pipelines has fallen at a much lower rate and has
picked up again recently, the data shows.
Shell's Nigeria Country Chair Osagie Okunbor hinted it was a sensitive
balancing act.
"We are too big just to see ourselves as 'there is a problem and we have
to run'. That is not what we are thinking of doing," he told reporters
on a media trip to the country in July. "But at the same time we don't
want to spread our footprint."
Two pipeline spills in 2008 in the small community of Bodo in Ogoniland
are emblematic of the problems in the Delta, a vast maze of creeks and
mangrove swamps criss-crossed by pipelines and blighted by poverty and
oil-fueled violence.
On a speedboat trip to the site of a clean-up operation launched by
Shell last year, a makeshift oil refinery stood idle on a charred
landing. The ground was soaked with oil, the air heavy with petrol fumes
and slicks glistened in the water nearby. There were few signs of birds
or fish.
So far this year, 85 crude spills have been recorded, already higher
than the previous two years. In 2016, militant attacks pushed the volume
of spills to more than 30,000 barrels, a high since 2011.
Oil theft from SPDC rose to around 9,000 barrels per day (bpd) in 2017 -
a loss of nearly $180 million for the year - from 6,000 bpd the year
before.
Despite all the problems and costs, however, Nigerian onshore operations
generate billions of dollars annually.
Shell does not break down profits by country, but a report on payments
to governments that the company publishes annually showed it paid around
$1.1 billion in royalties, taxes and fees to the Nigerian government in
2017.
That means Shell earned more than $4 billion from oil and gas production
in Nigeria in 2017 - around 7 percent of its total global output.
A Shell spokesman declined to comment on the specifics of Reuters' data
analysis.
The Nigerian Petroleum Ministry declined to comment.
Shell has shown it can shut down if it is not making money. It stopped
producing oil completely in Iraq last year after half a century in the
country, although it retains substantial gas operations.
"It's hard to think Shell would stay put onshore and weather all the
problems if the assets didn't offer decent returns," said Aaron Sayne, a
financial crime lawyer working at the Natural Resource Governance
Institute (NRGI). "To some extent, the onshore must still be worth the
trouble."
THEFT AND SPILLS
Shell remains central to Nigeria's economy and society. SPDC - operated
by Shell with a 30 percent stake while the Nigerian National Petroleum
Co has 55 percent, France's Total has 10 percent and Italy's Eni has 5
percent - is the country's largest oil joint venture, employing
thousands.
[to top of second column] |
Members of the joint task force, part of the Bodo oil spill clean-up
operation, inspect the site of an illegal refinery near the village
of Bodo in the Niger Delta, Nigeria August 2, 2018. REUTERS/Ron
Bousso
The Anglo-Dutch giant's operations drew unwelcome attention in the early
1990s when residents of the Delta's Ogoni region called for fairer
distribution of oil wealth and compensation for spills. The government
cracked down and in 1995 executed nine protest leaders, including
prominent writer Ken Saro-Wiwa, prompting Shell to end production in the
area forever.
It retained control of the Trans-Niger Pipeline, however, and nearly a
quarter of a century later, little seems to have changed on the ground.
In 2015 Shell accepted responsibility for operational faults that caused
the 2008 spills that dumped tens of thousands of oil barrels into creeks
around Bodo, and paid a settlement of 55 million pounds to villagers.
Dozens of spills since, including one by a barge carrying stolen oil
that sunk in July, are frustrating remediation efforts, clean-up
officials said.
"You clean it up, you walk away, somebody goes back there and does the
same thing. It's like going around in circles," said Ogonnaya Iroakasi,
Ogoni restoration project supervisor and an SPDC member.
Around 80 percent of the spills are a result of sabotage, Shell data
shows.
Shell has taken a number of steps to improve the situation in the area,
including training youth to start up businesses and funding local
community patrols, campaigns to raise local awareness and even a local
radio station.
But critics say it is not enough.
"I am not minimizing the challenge of re-pollution but Shell are not
doing enough to solve it," said Daniel Leader, the Bodo community's lead
UK lawyer. "The pipelines are not equipped with the most basic leak
detection technology and Shell is simply not present on the ground in
these communities."
Local residents are frustrated as the slow process stops many from
fishing, one of the main sources of income. Much of the anger is focused
on Shell but Eni has also struggled to cope in recent years. Since
starting to report data to authorities in 2014, the Italian company has
recorded more spills than Shell, according to Amnesty International.
"Please, don't give up on us ... I hope that you guys here can force
Shell to do the right thing," Michael Porobunu, chairman of Gokana
council of chiefs, told the clean-up crew and reporters on his porch.
OFF THE COAST
SPDC has sold 10 of the 27 field licenses in the Delta it held in 2010,
mostly to local companies. It has applied to renew the remaining
licenses, which expire next year.
The divestments are a reminder of another cost of doing business in
Nigeria - corruption. Shell has filed a criminal complaint against a
former senior employee over suspected bribes in the $390 million sale of
oil mining license 42 to local firm Neconde in 2011.
Offshore operations are an attractive alternative to the Delta in many
ways. The Bonga field 120 km (75 miles) off the coast is one of Shell's
prized assets since starting up in 2005.
The giant tanker, with a drilling platform that pumps 225,000 barrels of
oil and 210 million cubic feet of gas per day from a field one km below,
won the company's "asset of the year award" in 2016 for its safety and
reliability.
Many risks remain. In 2016, the Trans-Forcados pipeline was shut down
for months after militants detonated a bomb at its sub-sea section.
Shell and Eni face bribery allegations in a Milan court over the 2011
purchase of an offshore license. Drilling offshore is also more
expensive and technically complex.
Shell and its partners will decide next year on whether to develop a new
offshore field, Bonga Southwest.
"Such an investment will reopen the window for the next wave of
investment in deep water Nigeria," Bayo Ojulari, managing director of
Shell Nigeria Exploration and Production Company, said in Lagos.
(Additional reporting by Alexis Akwagyiram and Didi Akinyelure in Lagos,
Julia Payne in London; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |