Teaching Comparative Government and Politics

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Limits on the state

Will Ross, a BBC reporter, describes the production end of the oil bunkering business in the Niger Delta. The limited capacity of the state, corruption, and the desperate poverty of the Ogoni people all contribute to the survival of this illegal business.

There is also a good video in which Ross offers a guided tour of one of the primitive oil "refineries" in the delta.

 Nigeria's booming illegal oil refineries
Will Ross got a rare look at an illegal oil refinery in Nigeria

Illegal refinery
"Here is our business place," a man, who did not want to give his real name but asked to be called Edward, told me as we walked around a remote, heavily polluted palm-tree fringed creek in Ogoniland in the Niger Delta.

"We use these to go and collect our natural resources - our crude oil," he said, pointing to a locally carved boat lying on its side.

In the middle of the night, to avoid detection, they break into the multinational oil companies' pipelines and help themselves…

Dotted along the creek were dozens of large drums used for boiling up the crude oil.

They had pipes protruding from them leading to troughs into which the products are collected; kerosene and petrol for the local market and diesel which is taken away on barges or inland on trucks by traders.

Next to each home-made refinery are pits full of bitumen which is sold to road construction companies.

"Almost 400 people work here and every night we produce around 11,000 litres of diesel," said 32-year-old Edward, adding that his elder brothers had learnt all about the business in Bakassi, near the Cameroonian border with Nigeria…

The military is supposed to be stopping all this and some operations have been disrupted but the effort is seriously hampered by the desire to get in on the action.

"We settle with the army people. If they see money in your hand they will take that," Edward said.

"If not they will take products from you. If we have 10 drums we will give them two," he said, adding, "It's very normal." …

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2 Comments:

At 8:52 AM, Blogger Ken Wedding said...

See the article from Leadership (Abuja), A Spotlight On Oil Theft in Nigeria

"The world is in the midst of a sustained oil boom. Yet Africa's leading producer is haemorrhaging the proceeds. The Nigerian treasury, which should be raking in record revenues, has been squeezed at both ends of the oil trade - upstream, by one of the biggest frauds in Nigerian history related to a fuel subsidy bill worth upwards of $16bn in 2011, and downstream, by the theft of oil on an industrial scale at source..."

 
At 8:54 AM, Blogger Ken Wedding said...

Also see the BBC article, Stolen Nigeria oil 'goes to Balkans and Singapore'

"The main buyers of the estimated 180,000 barrels of oil stolen each day in Nigeria are based in the Balkans and Singapore, a campaigner says.

Patrick Dele Cole, a politician from the oil-rich Niger Delta region, said 90% of the stolen oil is being shipped out of the country illegally.

"He has launched a "Stop The Theft" campaign to end to the practice.

"Nigeria is one of the world's biggest oil producers but most of its people remain mired in poverty..."

 

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