The oil company’s pipelines which cut across Orukari, Golubokiri and Kpongbokiri communities in Brass Local Government Area, Bayelsa State, were attacked on Thursday last week.
The explosion occurred barely two weeks after an earlier attack on pipelines in Delta State forced the Warri and Port Harcourt refineries to shut down.
An Agip Spokesman who confirmed the explosion yesterday said the oil firm was working to repair the damaged sections and resume production.
The company said security agencies were still investigating the cause of the explosion.
Agip said: “The Eni production impacted by the incident was 16,000 barrel oil equivalent daily, (boed) and as at Monday morning, all the activities aimed at restoring production have been activated.”
Production data obtained from Eni’s website indicated that NAOC exports some 40,000 barrels of oil equivalent from the oil firm’s crude export terminal before the explosion cut production by 16,000 barrels.
Sources at National Oil Spills Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA) said the blast was an act of sabotage which fell within the scope of security agencies.
Pipeline Vandalism Cuts Agip’s Oil Export By 16,000 Barrels – https://t.co/X2bNLWXbYO https://t.co/Ug5DAV0EWi
Pipeline Vandalism Cuts Agip’s Oil Export By 16,000 Barrels https://t.co/NvF7pMf6ex https://t.co/Jk6xxsloA8
Pipeline Vandalism Cuts Agip’s Oil Export By 16,000 Barrels https://t.co/ndCDsg7f0B https://t.co/OyUYsHYllY
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