A total of 350 pipeline points were vandalised from January to July this year, the latest data obtained from the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC) have shown.
The number of vandalised pipeline points rose from 27 in January to 54 in February, according to the NNPC data.
In March, 70 pipeline points were vandalised, representing a 29.63 percent increase when compared to February.
The company said Port Harcourt area accounted for 63 percent and Mosimi Area accounted for 21 percent of the vandalised points in March while Gombe accounted for the remaining 16 percent.
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It said the number of pipeline points vandalised reduced by 34.29 percent to 46 in April.
The national oil company said Port Harcourt area accounted for 54 percent and Mosimi area accounted for 46 percent of the vandalised points.
The number of pipeline points vandalised dropped to 42 in July from 47 in June and 64 in May.
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The NNPC said Port Harcourt area accounted for 65 per cent and Mosimi and Kaduna areas accounted for 30 percent and five percent, respectively, of the vandalised points in May.
It said Port Harcourt area accounted for 43 percent, while Mosimi and Kaduna accounted for 51 percent and six percent, respectively, of the vandalised points in June.
Port Harcourt area accounted for 40 percent and Mosimi area accounted for 60 per cent of the vandalised points in July.
The NNPC said it had, in collaboration with the local communities and other stakeholders, continuously striven to reduce and eventually eliminate the menace of pipeline vandalism.
“Products theft and vandalism have continued to destroy value and put NNPC at disadvantaged competitive position. A total of 500 vandalised points have been recorded between March 2020 and March 2021,” it said.
A total of 441 points on petroleum products pipelines were vandalised last year, compared to 1,484 points in 2019, the NNPC data showed.
The company spent N53.36bn on pipeline repairs and management cost in 2020.
The Group Managing Director, NNPC, Mallam Mele Kyari, said recently that the introduction of Operation White and the Automated Downstream Operations and Financial Monitoring Centre had made it possible for the corporation to monitor products supply and distribution across the country.
He said this had reduced illicit practices such as oil theft and cross border smuggling of petroleum products which used to cause dislocation in the supply and distribution matrix and huge revenue losses to the nation.
In January, the national oil company said a total of 96 companies from various jurisdictions had indicated interest in undertaking the rehabilitation of its downstream facilities, ranging from critical pipelines to depots and terminals, through the Build, Operate and Transfer financing model.
The Managing Director of the Nigerian Pipelines and Storage Company, Mrs Ada Oyetunde, said the exercise was in conformity with the mandate of the Federal Government to prioritise the rehabilitation of critical downstream infrastructure across the country.
She listed the facilities that would be rehabilitated by successful bidders to include critical pipelines for crude oil supply to the refineries and evacuation of refined products, depots, and terminals.
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