FG may transport crude oil via trucks amids pipeline vandalism

Onwubuke Melvin
Onwubuke Melvin

The Federal Government has adopted a virtual means of evacuation of crude oil that involves the utilisation of barges and trucks for the transportation of crude from the point of production to injection/storage points for eventual transportation to export terminals.

It said the Alternative Crude Oil Evacuation Systems was deployed to avoid production deferment, losses, and other undesirable consequences as a result of pipeline disruption and outages.

This is revealed in a new presentation by the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission on “Stability in the Nigerian Energy Sector: Integrated Strategies for Infrastructure, Transportation and Security,” in Abuja on Sunday.

The fact that Nigeria is losing trillions of naira a year to crude oil theft and pipeline vandalism has compelled the government to consider other means of transporting it.

The Senate had in October 2023, ordered a comprehensive probe into the activities of security forces and organised groups employing sophisticated techniques to steal crude oil in the country.

It is reported that the decision was triggered by a motion put forth by Senator Ned Nwoko (PDP, Delta North), who presented data on what Nigeria loses to pipeline vandalism and oil bunkering.

Nwoko had stated that Nigeria lost N2.3tn to oil theft in 2023 alone.

“In March 2023, Nigeria incurred a substantial loss of 65.7 million barrels of crude oil, valued at $83 per barrel, translating to a staggering revenue loss of N2.3tn as a result of oil theft,” the senator stated.

The NUPRC said the government had to promote alternative crude oil evacuation systems using trucks and barges rather than pipelines, to address this issue.

It stated that through collaboration with industry stakeholders, the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission had sustained its commitment to implementing targeted initiatives and various measures to combat vandalism and crude oil theft.

It said, “Through increased surveillance and deployment of security forces, the upstream industry has in recent times increasingly enhanced the protection of oil and gas infrastructure from criminal syndicates who often target oil and gas installations to siphon off crude oil for illegal sale.

“The activities of the syndicates have led to revenue losses for the government, oil companies, and other stakeholders, increased cost of production, as well as far-reaching environmental consequences and demarketing of the nation’s global competitiveness.

“The commission has therefore promoted the implementation of Alternative Crude Oil Evacuation Systems to avoid production deferment and losses and other undesirable consequences as a result of pipeline disruption and outages.

“This virtual means of evacuation mainly involves the utilisation of barges and trucks for the transportation of crude oil from the point of production to injection/storage points for eventual transportation to export terminals,” the commission stated in the document.

Furthermore, NUPRC noted “For the new entrants, the ACOES provides a temporary solution for crude oil evacuation before the establishment of permanent evacuation infrastructure, such as pipelines or export terminals.

“Through properly laid down regulatory requirements, permitting and approval processes, documentation, accounting of produced volumes, synergy with the Nigerian Navy and other relevant security agencies, the commission has ensured safe and secured barging and trucking operations in the upstream oil and gas industry.

“Indeed, a lot of gains have been achieved through the alternative evacuation systems. The most evident is the NCTL line which recorded as much as 90 per cent production loss last year due to crude theft. In Q1 2024 alone, over three million barrels of crude was evacuated and exported through NCTL as a direct impact of proper deployment of the virtual pipelines.”

Meanwhile, in his remark, the National Public Relations Officer of , Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria, Chief Ukadike Chinedu, applauded the government for coming up with measures to tackle oil theft.

He explained that the loss of revenue from oil theft was enormous, noting that any measure taken to stop it would have a great impact on Nigeria’s income from fossil fuels.


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