Sahara Energy, 58 others to lift oil in Republic of South Sudan
Oil vessel

An estimated 84 million barrels of Nigerian crude oil is currently stranded at sea, a report by Wall Street Journal has said.

In an April 27 report, the newspaper said cargo ships filled with Nigerian crude had nowhere to go and Nigerian oil companies were competing to fill the “last few empty tankers still left at sea”.

Advertisements

The tankers are reported to be coming from production fields managed by Royal Dutch Shell and Exxon Mobil.

According to experts, it would be risky to shut down production in some oil fields as the wells are “too old to be restarted once they go idle”.

Advertisements

READ ALSO: What does sub-zero Oil mean for Nigeria’s economic outlook?

However, a situation where companies run out of vessels would make shutting the oil fields inevitable.

Advertisements

“When there are no more vessels to load the crude, then the entire world collapses,” Kola Karim, the chairman of Shoreline Natural Resources, was quoted to have said.

“You will have serious, serious security implications. Unrest.”

According to the Wall Street Journal, a tanker was turned back from the US Gulf Coast and it returned to the Canary Islands, where other Nigerian-hired ships are idled.

The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in reduced demand for crude oil across the world and a price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia worsened an already bad situation.

Advertisements

ibrandtv.com

Advertisements

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.