Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,153,759 members, 7,820,646 topics. Date: Tuesday, 07 May 2024 at 06:42 PM

Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera (887 Views)

Ghana Blames Power Outage On Nigeria’s Oil Sabotage / Nigeria’s Oil Output Rises To 1.6mbpd / Lets Pray For Diezani, See Picture Of The Once Beautiful Queen Of Nigeria Oil (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera by HungerBAD: 6:33am On Nov 28, 2015
Hilary Matfess.

On Nov. 8, the head of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu, announced that the state-run company was on the verge of a major oil discovery in the Lake Chad area after years of failed exploration attempts.

Kachikwu estimated that the new fields could contribute a significant amount to the NNPC's projected 2016 revenue of $20 billion as early as next year. He also suggested the bolstered budget would allow the company to fund more exploration projects. Given that the cratering oil prices and drop-off in oil revenue has contributed significantly to the country’s economic stagnation (the national statistics bureau estimates the national second quarter growth at 2.35 percent as compared to over 6 percent at the same time last year), many Nigerians greeted the announcement with enthusiasm. However, a more thorough examination suggests that this discovery is neither new, nor a blessing. Adding oil to already volatile social and geopolitical factors in the Lake Chad Basin — an ecological region that spans Nigeria, Niger, Chad, Cameroon and the Central African Republic — is a recipe for further instability.

Nigeria’s claims of “significant oil find” in the Lake Chad Basin are not new. It’s long been established that the region has immense potential for petroleum exploration. Chad has been producing oil on its side of the border since the 1970s with production reaching estimated 100,000 barrels a day in 2013.

The area is so valuable that Nigeria and Chad fought a series of border skirmishes in the 1970s over control of the basin. Their disputes remain unresolved. There is still ambiguity over ownership of a number of islands in Lake Chad. There’s been ongoing diplomatic posturing and local communal conflicts between Nigeria, Chad and Cameroon over control of the ecological basin. Nigeria’s intention to drill new oil fields will only heighten the stakes of these tensions and lead to violence.

Boko Haram’s insurgency may have temporarily eclipsed the standoff over drilling rights. But tensions remain. Communities around the Lake Chad Basin have borne the brunt of the insurgency, which has claimed an estimated 20,000 lives and has displaced at least 4 million people since 2009. Any serious attempt at drilling by Nigeria will require subduing the insurgency. However, amid diplomatic wrangling over national boundaries in the basin, regional cooperation on larger security issues remains complicated. Already, the deployment of the 8,7000 member force — drawn from Chad, Niger, Nigeria, Cameroon and Benin — has been delayed due to logistical and political tensions. In particular, Chad has accused Nigeria for not pulling its weight in the offensive against Boko Haram, heightening tensions between the two countries.

Even if Boko Haram is subdued to make way for oil drilling, the group has shown a remarkable resilience and could re-emerge to take advantage of the oil bunkering. As seen in Nigeria’s oil-rich Niger Delta, discontent among local communities in the Lake Chad Basin could lend support to Boko Haram or subsequent militant groups. In the mid-2000s, oil theft, and the vast revenue it produces, allowed for a conflict to accelerate and metastasize in the Niger Delta. The United States Institute of Peace estimates that the Nigerian economy lost approximately $100 billion to oil theft from 2003 to 2008. The consequences of Boko Haram tapping into such a robust revenue stream could be cataclysmic. It is already Nigeria’s single biggest and most lethal crisis since the civil war of the late 1960s.

Nigeria has proven incapable of protecting oil pipelines from theft and ensuring that oil extraction does not harm local ecologies and communities. There were more than 7,000 oil spills from 1970 to 2000 in the Niger Delta. An estimated 15 percent of Nigerian oil was stolen in 2014, resulting in a loss of 300,000-400,000 barrels per day.

The problem with Nigerian oil production does not stop there; there is also the specter of corruption. According to a recent report by the Natural Resource Governance Institute, a New York-based think tank that provides policy analysis and research, the NNPC withheld more than $12 billion from the sale of 110 million barrels of oil over the past 10 years, “spending the money in a secretive, off-budget manner.”

President Muhammadu Buhari has initiated a serious effort at reducing corruption, especially in the petroleum industry. But the recent arrests of six senior central bank officials by Nigeria’s anti-corruption agency are not sufficient to entrust the petroleum agency to pursue new drilling operations. In fact, the premature announcement of the new oil discovery appears to be part of an effort to make up for falling oil revenues. It could undermine Buhari’s agenda by fracturing the regional effort against Boko Haram and leading to additional loot before institutional reforms can be implemented.

The effects of resource curse and misuse of natural resource wealth, especially in the extractive industries, are well documented. Nigeria appears to be looking gleefully past those lessons and its own experience with oil extraction in the Niger delta. Nigeria’s oil discovery in the Lake Chad Basin should not be taken as a blessing. If anything, it highlights the urgent need for reform and greater regional cooperation to quell the Boko Haram insurgency.

Seun,Lalasticlacla

http://america.aljazeera.com/opinions/2015/11/nigerias-oil-curse.html

Hilary Matfess is a research analyst at the National Defense University’s Center for Complex Operations. The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not reflect the official policy or position of the National Defense University, the Department of Defense or the U. S. government.

1 Like

Re: Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera by funnynation(m): 6:35am On Nov 28, 2015
A teacher asked his students, 1+1= ?. A student stood up and said 4. A man passing by overhead the response, he shook his head and said: " they will kill us in this country. Everything has increased, transport fare, fuel prices, foodstuff, beer,... everything. Even 1+1 that used to be 2 has now gone up to 4. Please like my facebook fan page for more jokes and update.. m.facebook.com/funnyNation1
Re: Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera by Firefire(m): 6:36am On Nov 28, 2015
cheesy
Re: Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera by ORACLE1975(m): 6:41am On Nov 28, 2015
angry grin

1 Like

Re: Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera by PassingShot(m): 6:42am On Nov 28, 2015
Booked
Re: Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera by Sweetguy25: 6:45am On Nov 28, 2015
Anything to empower Boko Haram financially is a welcome development.
Re: Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera by SeverusSnape(m): 6:47am On Nov 28, 2015
PassingShot:
Booked

His likely comment...
grin

"Jonathan is the curse, not the oil" - PassingShot the Lie mohammed of Nairaland.

1 Like

Re: Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera by CyberWolf: 6:47am On Nov 28, 2015
What do you expect when the president is so drunk about oil that he chose to make himself the petroleum minister. How can the country free itself from over-dependence on oil when the president's eye is fixated on oil? The oil will always be a curse as long as we depend on it for survival.

What is the way forward?: Diversify the economy and this can only be implemented successfully by adopting true federalism where individual states will have control over their own affairs including all their natural resources. Anything other than these is a recipe for further disaster. angry

2 Likes

Re: Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera by HungerBAD: 6:51am On Nov 28, 2015
Sweetguy25:
Anything to empower Boko Haram financially is a welcome development.

Are you okay?

1 Like

Re: Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera by Sweetguy25: 6:52am On Nov 28, 2015
HungerBAD:

Are you okay?
Ask Buhari.
Re: Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera by Aufbauh(m): 6:53am On Nov 28, 2015
"I learned that courage was not the absence of fear, but the triumph over it, The brave man is not he who does not feel afraid, but he who conquers them" - Nelson Mandela
Re: Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera by mazeltov(m): 6:53am On Nov 28, 2015
SeverusSnape:


His likely comment...
grin

"Jonathan PDP is the curse, not the oil" - PassingShot the Lie mohammed of Nairaland.

1 Like

Re: Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera by menix(m): 6:58am On Nov 28, 2015
As long as Nigeria intends exploring the Lake Chad basin, Bokoharam will remain cous Chad will keep them afloat inorder to avoid Nigeria coming to share from what they enjoy..

I dey pray for Nigerian Oil to dry up so that every man to his tent O Israel thus developing the abundance of brain in every region..

End Time Oil..
Re: Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera by PedroJP(m): 7:02am On Nov 28, 2015
If only drilling oil from dat basin can make them loose grip of "one Nigeria".
Re: Nigeria’s Oil Curse- Aljazeera by permsec: 7:26am On Nov 28, 2015
i'm coming

(1) (Reply)

When Will This Government Bring Up Its Own Policies? / 2016 Budget :fg Votes 500b For Social Welfare / List Of Companies Dasuki Allegedly Shared Money To

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 31
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.