OFFICIALS of the United States government have for the first time in
months presented an explanation on the sudden termination of oil
imports from Nigeria since July, an action which spurred concerns
whether there were any possible political connotation especially because
of the current strain in Nigeria-US diplomatic relations.
Answering a question on the issue from The Guardian, during the week,
White House Director of the US National Economic Council, Mr. Jeff
Zients, said the cessation of oil imports from Nigeria had to do with
the significant rise in US oil production.
Zients, US Labor
Secretary, Thomas Perez, and White House Policy Council Director,
Cecelia Munoz, were addressing a few US journalists on Thursday
afternoon on the state of the American economy when The Guardian raised
the question wondering why the US brought oil imports from Nigeria to a
complete zero, while still importing oil from Saudi Arabia and other
major oil producing countries.
According to the White House
Economic Council Director, “across the last several years, US oil
production has ramped up significantly by more than 50 percent to now
over eight and a half million barrels per day.”
He explained that
such a high turn up in local US oil production “has now dramatically
reduced our dependency on imports,” Zients noted, adding that “in fact,
we now produce more here than we import.”
The White House
official stated that the development is consistent with President Barack
Obama’s energy strategy, which has changed “quite a bit over the last
few years as we are much less dependent on oil imports.”
That
strategy has not only left Nigeria in the lurch, but has generally also
driven down the international market price of oil to a ridiculous $60
range by the close of trading on Friday. Oil price, which soared around
$100 in September, is now $56.52 for the WTI Crude and $61.38 for the
Brent Crude oil.
But Zients and the other US officials at the
press briefing did not address the issue of the ongoing importation from
other oil producing nations, including OPEC members like Saudi Arabia
and Kuwait and non-OPEC suppliers like Canada. In fact, as at last
month, it was reported that, while US completely halted oil imports from
Nigeria, it increased its importation from those three countries.
The reduction of US oil importation from Nigeria to zero is the very
first time since 1973 that the US did not import oil from Nigeria. US
Shale oil production is responsible for the infusion of “light, sweet
crude,” said to be similar to Nigeria’s Bonny Light oil, and US
refineries are said to have preferred buying the locally produced oil,
which is cheaper than Nigeria’s light crude.
Before Zients
explanation on Thursday, there have been muted concerns whether the
decision to completely end oil importation from Nigeria has any
political connotation. For instance, a German top bank, Deutsche Bank
had commented last month that “as if the recent drop in oil prices was
not enough bad news for Nigeria’s economy, recent data show the US
completely stopped importing crude oil from Nigeria. This marks a
dramatic reversal for Africa’s largest economy, which in 2010 was still
among America’s top 5 oil suppliers and exported at its peak 1.3m
barrels per day to the United States.”
The German bank
analysis further questioned why Nigeria was singled out, an aspect of
the question posed by The Guardian to which the US government officials
did not address. According to Deutsche Bank, the decline in US imports
from Nigeria, “proceeded much faster than for the US’ other major
suppliers.’ It is the rather drastic and complete zero oil imports from
Nigeria that suggested a possible political connotation, which was
however left unexplained by Zients.
Observers say it is not
unlikely that oil imports termination with Nigeria and the refusal of
the US government to sell weapons to Nigeria to fight Boko Haram might
both be political signals from President Barack Obama to the Nigerian
presidency as it can be seen as demonstration of a lack of commitment by
the US government to a supposed strategic partner —Nigeria — in Africa.
The Obama administration’s outright refusal to approve the sale of
specific military equipment to Nigeria, in a clear-cut public
renunciation of the Nigerian military and security apparatus which
requested the okay from the US Defense department is also a potential
dampener to US claims of a thriving diplomatic relationship with
Nigeria. First, it was the US Ambassador in Nigeria who confirmed that
the country would not okay the weapons sales to Nigeria, and then the
State Department in response to Nigeria’s Ambassador’s complaints on the
issue.
This particular refusal is sending clear indications
that there are strong oppositional voices against President Jonathan in
the White House, the State Department and Pentagon, causing further
strain between Nigeria and the American governments, according to
knowledgeable US sources.
Last month, Nigeria’s US Ambassador
had to openly criticise the US government for not approving the sales of
Cobra fighter jets to Nigeria to help fight the Boko Haram insurgency
at a meeting he had with the influential US Council for Foreign
Relations in his office. Adefuye, US sources say was expending his
far-reaching influence with top US government officials in an apparent
last-ditch effort to change the tone of the Obama administration towards
the Jonathan presidency.
In fact, authoritative US sources
said the denouncement of the military sale and the abandonment of the
highly valued Nigerian crude oil by US oil future traders recently are
happening at a time when the offices of National Security Adviser and
Finance Minister of Nigeria are spending millions of dollars to retain
US lobbyists in Washington DC to help plead the case of the Jonathan
presidency without much success.
Explaining the desperation
from the Nigerian government over the need for such lobbyists, a source
from the Foreign Affairs Ministry in Abuja also said while the federal
government through the office of the NSA and Finance Ministry were
paying millions for lobbyists, the salaries of Nigerian diplomats were
still backlogged, including in the US.
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