Insecurity
in Nigeria Could Push Oil Price to U.S.$150 Per Barrel
The
rising spate of insecurity in the country poses serious challenge to
the global economy as it could push crude oil price to as high as
$150 per barrel.
24
September, 2012
Global
analysts feel that Nigeria currently holds the ace in maintaining
global oil supplies in view of the sanctions on Iran and the unrest
in Libya.
David
Kotok of Cumberland Advisors said the tumultuous security situation
in Nigeria was his biggest fear for the world right now.
Kotok
described Nigeria as "the most important oil producer in the
world" and said that if unrest there got really out of hand -
which he warned was a very real possibility that everyone was
ignoring - oil could soar to $150 per barrel and crush the global
economy.
Nigeria
has been experiencing security unrest with Boko Haram insurgency in
the north and armed attacks on oil pipelines in the Niger Delta.
Just
last week, the Nigerian military reportedly killed Abu Qaqa, the
spokesman of the Islamic militant group Boko Haram, while Boko Haram
on its part struck back, murdering Zanna Malam Gana, the
attorney-general of the state of Borno .
In
the Niger Delta, a group of gunmen called the Movement for the
Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) are stepping up attacks on oil
pipelines - they siphon oil from vulnerable locations and sell it to
smugglers.
Though
the country is currently in the world eye, with Wall Street selling
at the moment, the violence caused by Boko Haram in the northeastern
region is getting worse, and it's starting to cause real trouble in
the Nigerian economy.
Goldman
Sachs Asset Management chairman Jim O'Neill calls it one of the "Next
11" big emerging markets, and Citigroup chief economist Willem
Buiter calls it one of the "3G" Global Growth Generators
over the next 40 years.
A
recent geopolitical risk report by Business Monitor International
explained that Boko Haram's disruption of agricultural production in
the north is having a bigger impact than previously anticipated.
The
Central Bank of Nigeria recently downgraded its growth estimates from
7-8 per cent in 2012 to 6-7 per cent, citing security complications
in the rural north for the slowdown in agricultural output. The
sector, which constitutes about 40 per cent of total GDP, grew by 4.2
per cent in Q1 12, the slowest rate of growth ever recorded since the
National Bureau of Statistics began publication of quarterly figures
in 2001. This has coincided with declining oil production,
constraining headline growth.
To
make matters worse, the attacks on oil pipelines in the country
strikes at the heart of the oil industry as oil is a key driver of
Wall Street's rosy outlook for the country.
The
managing director of Royal Dutch Shell's Nigerian unit, Mutiu
Sunmonu, told the Wall Street Journal that the recent pickup in
attacks on oil pipelines is "quite an escalation. If nothing is
done, it will continue to increase because more and more people will
just come to feel that this is a gold field."
Shell
estimates that 150,000 barrels of oil are being stolen from Nigerian
pipelines every single day.
According
to Roubini Global Economics (RGE), this is becoming such a problem
for the global economy because world oil supply is seriously tight
right now when you factor in the supply outages caused by sanctions
on Iran and unrest in Libya.
Many
analysts hoped that Nigeria could help fill the gap. However, RGE
points out that Nigeria is currently producing around 2.4 million
barrels of oil a day, which is about the same as they were producing
10 years ago and is way below the government's target of 4 million
barrels per day.
Now,
on-the-ground reports in Nigeria are revealing another troubling sign
- long lines forming at gas stations in Nigeria's most populous city
of Lagos as retailers run out of gas:
The
current fuel scarcity on Monday unduly influenced the price of the
product in Lagos and Abuja and fast spreading to other parts of the
country. This has forced motorists out of desperation to buy from the
black market for as much as N200 per litre. The official price is N97
per litre.
Veteran
oil trader and noted author Dan Dicker was skeptical that it's so
much worse now than it was before. However, he said that if a full
shutdown were to happen in Nigeria's oil industry, that would see the
Brent rising another $20. Despite all of the explosive developments
in Nigeria as of late, it seems like, at the moment, the situation is
sufficiently under the market's radar. If Kotok's fears materialise,
all of that could change in an instant.
Illegal
refinery not a solution
Meanwhile,
the minister of information, Mr. Labaran Maku, has cautioned
Nigerians against looking at illegal refineries as solutions to
problems in the downstream sector, saying the problem of refinery
cannot be stopped by illegal refineries.
The
minister also stated that government has a robust policy to refine
oil, even as he said that once those policies were put in place, the
problem would be solved.
He
made this known in Abuja during the national Good Governance tour to
the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps, noting that the
greatest threat to the Niger Delta region is illegal refineries and
the puncturing of pipelines.
He
however called for an end to such act, saying if it is not stopped
our environment will be contaminated.
"So
it is the policy infrastructure that the president is trying to put
in place and, once it is done, even with the green field refinery
that already the Ministry of Petroleum Resources."
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