Nigerian Economy: Oil
• Rentier State– State gains the bulk of its revenue by “renting” or
selling a resource to other states.– Received payments are “rents.”
Oil Exports as Percent of Total Export
Percent of Govt’s Total Revenue
1970 58 26
1981 97 70
1993 91 84
2001 98 79
2008 95 80
Oil Economy
• Boom and Bust (similar to Mexico)• 1970s=boom in oil revenues– Borrow money– Finance ambitious projects– Rise in corruption
• 1980s=drop in oil prices– Devastating to economy– Skyrocketing debt
Nigerian DebtTotal External Debt as a Percentage of
GDP
1976 4
1986 110
1996 72
1999 84
2000 97
2002 77
2003 73
2007 5
•IMF and World Bank Bail Out• Impose structural adjustment measures•President Obasanjo: debt relief was a top priority.
Oil Industry
WINNERS
• Patron-client network– Those with access and
connections get contracts, leases, kickbacks, corruption.
LOSERS
• Overwhelming majority of Nigerians
• Residents of Niger River Delta
• Environment
Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND)
• Began in 2006
CONCERNS• Living conditions in delta
(more oil money).• Environmental
devastation
TACTICS• Violence, kidnapping, and
terror
“Blood Oil”
• Resource Curse– LDCs that are rentier states– Fail to diversify their economy– Fail to properly invest in future– Corruption waste
• 63% of oil revenue is supposed to go to states/local government.– Embezzled by corrupt officials.
“Blood Oil”
• Ken Saro-Wiwa– Anti-Shell Oil activist.– Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People• Precursor to MEND.
– CONCERNS• Uncompensated appropriation of land.• Environmental Damage
– Hanged by Abacha government in 1995.
Bunkering
• Stealing oil from the pipelines.• Approx. 10% of exported oil is bunkered.• Militant groups bunker to raise funds.
2009 Amnesty
• Militants who surrender would receive money and training/jobs.– (i.e., June 2011: 176 ex-militants sent to South
Africa for vocational training in marine welding).– 26,358 accepted amnesty.
• Promised investment in the Delta.• Since 2010: Resurgence in Violence in Delta– Lack of investment– Too much focus on Boko Haram
“A Spill Scourge 5 Decades Old”
• Assess the environmental damage caused by oil spills.• Who do the different parties blame for the
environmental damage?• Who do you think is more responsible?
• 205.8 million gallons leaked from Deepwater Horizon.*
• *http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/energy/coal-oil-gas/bp-oil-spill-statistics
• An Urhobo woman bakes krokpo-garri, or tapioca, in the heat of a gas flare in Afiesere. Local people have worked in this way since 1961, when Shell first opened this flow station. Pollutants from the flare cause serious health problems and life expectancy is short. (www.guardian.co.uk)
• An oil spill, polluting groundwater and ruining cropland, from a well owned by Shell that had been left abandoned for over 25 years. Badly maintained equipment is the cause of many leaks, but oil operators blame sabotage, saying oil spills are caused for compensation money. (www.guardian.co.uk)
• A young girl crosses over pipelines that run directly through the town. A troubled area near Port Harcourt, factional fighting is common in Okrika. (www.guardian.co.uk)
• In the village of Kalabilema, Bayelsa, a felled mangrove forest shows the damage of a fire which killed four people in March 2004. The cause of the fire was an old oil spill from leaking pipelines. (www.guardian.co.uk)
• Old Bonny Town on Bonnie Island, where the slave trade and palm oil trade previously thrived. Now the town is in poverty while the oil and gas companies continue to grow. (www.guardian.co.uk)
• Oil flows past a sunken boat in a creek near an illegal oil refinery in Ogoniland, outside Port Harcourt, in Nigeria's Delta region, on March 24, 2011 (www.theatlantic.com)
• An aerial view of an oil spill site in the creeks of an Ogoni community in Nigeria's Niger Delta, on July 7, 2010 (www.theatlantic.com)
• Crude oil spills from a pipeline in Dadabili, Niger state, on April 2, 2011 (www.theatlantic.com)