Nigerian gas company declares force majeure over flooding by AFP Staff Writers Abuja (AFP) Oct 17, 2022 Nigeria LNG Limited (NLNG), a major liquified natural-gas company that exports internationally, on Monday declared force majeure due to flooding in the country, a spokesperson told AFP. It was unclear if or how many export cargoes would be affected. The development comes as European countries, many of which relied heavily on Russia's gas before the war in Ukraine, are scrambling to find alternative energy sources, including from Nigeria. NLNG is a joint venture between the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC), Shell, TotalEnergies and Eni. It has a total production capacity of 22 million tonnes of LNG annually. The decision to declare force majeure on product supplies was taken after upstream gas suppliers declared force majeure themselves, Andy Odeh, NLNG's General Manager for External Relations, told AFP in an email. "The notice by the gas suppliers was a result of high flood water levels in their operational areas, leading to a shut-in of gas production which has caused significant disruption of gas supply to NLNG," he said. "Consequently, NLNG activated force majeure." Nigeria has experienced exceptionally heavy rains since August -- the worst in a decade according to officials. More than 600 people have died, and over 82,000 houses and nearly 110,000 hectares (272,000 acres) of farmland have been destroyed in the floods, Nigeria's Minister of Humanitarian Affairs Sadiya Umar Farouq said Sunday. "We are currently reviewing the situation with gas suppliers to ascertain the extent of the disruption to our operations but would, as a reasonable and prudent operator, endeavour to mitigate the impact of the force majeure to the extent reasonably possible," Odeh said. Meteorological agencies have warned that a number of states, including in the southern oil-rich region, are at risk of more floods until the end of November. lhd/pma/rl
'Black gold' for Guyana and Suriname, a blessing or curse Paramaribo, Suriname (AFP) Oct 17, 2022 Emerging as potential oil powers while the world seeks to wean itself off planet-warming fossil fuels, poverty-stricken South American neighbors Guyana and Suriname say they have to cash in while they can. The former Dutch colonies are among the world's most tree-covered countries, hosts to the so-called forest "lungs" that sequester massive amounts of planet-warming carbon dioxide. Their economies and populations small, the countries have traditionally emitted little CO2 or other greenhouse gas ... read more
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