Nigeria has announced it will deploy drones to curb oil thefts in the
country. The announcement was made by Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu, the newly
appointed chief of state-run oil company Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation (NNPC).Nigeria is Africa’s biggest oil producer and oil generates about 70%
of government revenues. However, frequent thefts and pipeline attacks
affect the country’s oil production. President Muhammadu Buhari, who
vowed his administration will end corruption, alleged that around
250,000 barrels of Nigerian crude oil are stolen every day and sold to
other countries.
Kachikwu said in a statement: “We are launching an armada of
approaches which will include incorporation of drones to check movements
of vessels within our territorial waters. We are looking at the current
logistical nightmares of changing staffing at the loading bay.”
He added that NNPC will also work closely with the navy to increase
patrols. Oil thefts are expected to end within the next eight months,
according to the statement.
Kachikwu also said nearly 4,000 attacks on pipelines occurred between
June 2014 and June 2015 and 350 people, including NNPC workers and
members of the community, had been killed by oil thieves in the past
three years.
NNCP has been marred by scandals linked to stolen revenues. In 2013,
the head of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, was
suspended after he claimed $20bn (£13bn) of oil revenue “went missing”
from NNPC.
As part of his anti-corruption campaign, Buhari replaced the whole
NNPC’s board and banned 113 vessels from lifting crude oil from some 27
Nigerian ports amid suspicions the vessels had been implicated in
illicit activities.
In July, US President Barack Obama announced he would give Nigeria
the names of alleged oil thieves as part of a joint effort to curb
widespread corruption in the country. Following Buhari’s appointment in
May, the two countries have improved their relations, which deteriorated
during Goodluck Jonathan’s administration.
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