Kuwait Times

Nigeria cracks down on illicit oil refineries

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KANA RUGBANA, Nigeria: Nigerian commander Remi Fadairo points to the roiling plume of black smoke blotting the morning horizon in the Niger Delta-the unmistakab­le sign of an illicit oil refinery. “Let’s see if we can go eat them for breakfast,” he says with an ominous chuckle. The 44-yearold colonel, a man with broad shoulders wearing his fatigues tucked into gumboots, is standing in the middle of a destroyed illicit refinery in Kana Rugbana, an area in the swamplands some 20 nautical miles from Port Harcourt.

Fadairo is part of the Joint Task Force Operation Delta Safe, a coalition of Nigerian security forces tasked with protecting the country’s oil and gas infrastruc­ture. Last year, militant attacks cut oil production to 1.4 million barrels per day in August, triggering Nigeria’s worst economic slump in 25 years. Following talks with the government, the militants have suspended their sabotage. But Nigerian troops on the ground say the battle isn’t over, it’s just changed.

Today, the military says one of its priorities is to crack down on the illicit refineries that they claim fund the operations of the militants. “The two are interwoven, if they aren’t doing militancy, they are doing this,” Fadairo tells AFP as he wades through crude-soaked muck. Despite the site looking like a scrap yard, Fadairo says it actually is being rehabilita­ted, showing new silver pipes welded to a rusted metal container.

On the ground between iridescent oil puddles lay little sachets of gin, empty packets of instant noodles and cigarette butts left by the bush distillers. “We just destroyed all this but they are back,” says Fadairo. “They are trying to revive it.”

Mangrove skeletons

The illicit refineries are just one component of oil theft in Nigeria, a mammoth industry estimated to be worth as much as $8 billion a year, according to a 2013 report by Chatham House, a London think-tank. “The principal security concerns are endemic corruption, which creates economic discontent, breakdown of the rule of law, which allows for criminalit­y to be normalized, and the funding of militancy,” said Ian Ralby, founder of the I.R. Consilium, a security advisory firm. In the past month, Fadairo’s troops have destroyed more than 10 illicit refineries, which process oil stolen from the pipelines of multinatio­nal companies, including Shell and Eni, by heating it in car-sized metal containers. The waste is dumped into the surroundin­g swamplands, turning what should be a wetland paradise into a monochrome nightmare dominated by the white skeletons of dead mangrove trees.

These artisanal refineries, as they are sometimes called, employ upwards of 50 men each, who work through the night to avoid detection.

They offer a rare job opportunit­y to thousands of unemployed men in the Niger Delta suffering from extreme poverty. For militants like the Niger Delta Avengers, who say crude is their birthright, refining represents something bigger - a chance to take back oil profits from corporatio­ns and the Nigerian government. Perhaps recognisin­g that fighting illicit refineries is an exercise in futility, as part of the government’s Niger Delta outreach program Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has proposed legalising the “modular refineries”. “There is a way out of violent agitation, but it is by creating opportunit­ies and the environmen­t where the people in the communitie­s can benefit,” Osinbajo said in early April.

Wild waters

As an olive-branch to the Niger Delta, Osinbajo’s plan has been welcomed by community leaders. Making it a reality is more complicate­d. Too many people, ranging from the refiners to militants to corrupt officials, have got used to enjoying the untaxed spoils of the land. Any disturbanc­e to the delicate balance in the region may result in violence and, in the worstcase scenario for cash-strapped Nigeria, further disruption­s to oil production. Going into presidenti­al polls in 2019, analysts say the likelihood of more unrest is high, especially once electionee­ring begins in earnest. “Rival theft networks can lapse into turf wars and the proceeds from stolen oil could continue to be used to finance election bids,” explains Gillian Parker, a Nigerian analyst at the Control Risks consultanc­y.

 ?? — AFP ?? NIGERIA: A member of NNS Delta of the Nigerian Navy forces patrols on an abandoned site of an illegal oil refinery in the Niger Delta region near the city of Warri, Nigeria.
— AFP NIGERIA: A member of NNS Delta of the Nigerian Navy forces patrols on an abandoned site of an illegal oil refinery in the Niger Delta region near the city of Warri, Nigeria.

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