Oil attacks in 2016 cost Nigeria up to $100 billion

17 Feb, 2017

Militant attacks on key oil facilities last year reduced Nigeria's output by one million barrels per day, resulting in a revenue loss of up to $100 billion (94 billion euros), according to the government. "At the highest point of this last year, we were producing 1.2 million barrels, which means we were losing literally a million barrels of oil per day," the junior oil minister Ibe Kachikwu said on Tuesday.
"At that time also, we were basically losing an average, if you look at 2016, of over $50 billion to $100 billion of unearned income as a result of this disruption," he said in a video posted on Facebook. The violence in the oil-producing south sent Nigeria in a tailspin, exacerbating the slump in global crude prices and pushing the west African economic powerhouse into recession in August last year. "Jobs were out; pipelines were strewn all over the place; refineries couldn't work to capacity, and we couldn't meet our contractual international obligations. And the economy basically suffered," Kachikwu said in the clip. "When you have that side by side with the fact that oil prices also declined by 60 percent over the last one and half years, you will see the massive problem that President Muhammadu Buhari has faced and had to deal with over this period."

Read Comments