According to information released by the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited, 63 more illicit refineries were found and taken over in the last week.
A documentary disclosed that efforts to combat oil theft were starting to yield results.
The NNPC reports that between August 3 and August 9, approximately 177 incidents were reported by various incident sources, including four from Tantita Security Services, eleven from Shell Petroleum Development Company, 26 from Pipeline Infrastructure Nigeria Limited, 20 from Maton Engineering Company, one from NNPC 18 Operating Ltd, 51 from NNPC Command and Control Centre, and 64 from government security agencies.
It stated that during the week in question, 19 illicit pipeline connections were located and confiscated, and some of them underwent repairs in a number of Bayelsa and River States areas.
According to the NNPC, 63 illicit refineries in the states of Delta, Imo, Rivers, Bayelsa, and Abia were found and taken. It further stated that an oil wellhead in Bayelsa State was vandalised and barricaded.
It has been reported that oil reservoirs in Rivers State contained stolen crude. The state-owned company reported that 17 car arrests took place in the states of Delta, Bayelsa, Rivers, and Akwa Ibom.
It stated that in the states of Rivers and Bayelsa, fifteen wooden boats carrying stolen crude were seized. 51 of those occurrences happened in the deep blue sea, according to the energy business, 21 in the western region, 29 in the central region, and 76 in the eastern region.
According to the NNPC, during the previous week, at least 16 people had been taken into custody concerning the occurrences.
The upstream industry continues to face significant challenges related to crude oil theft, which impedes the nation’s capacity to increase output. Tony Elumelu, the billionaire businessman, recently said that Nigerian security personnel and the government ought to be able to identify Nigerians who steal the nation’s crude oil, particularly when those thieves use vessels that pass through the country’s national seas.