Nigeria’s Oil Output Rises To 1.6mbpd, Barkindo Appointed OPEC Secretary-General

Nigeria’s crude oil production has climbed to 1.6 million barrels per day (mbpd), following repairs on some of the oil and gas installations damaged by militant groups in the Niger Delta, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, disclosed yesterday.
According to reports from Reuters and Bloomberg, Kachikwu said in Vienna, Austria, where oil ministers of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) unanimously appointed the former Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr. Mohammed Barkindo, as the cartel’s Secretary-General, that the country’s production had rebounded to this level after it fell to about 1.4mbpd in May due to a string of militant attacks and an accident on the ExxonMobil Qua Iboe export platform.
He also said despite continued attacks by militants in the restive Niger Delta, Nigeria was still on target to produce 2.3mbpd in 2016.
His disclosure also followed reports that OPEC, which appointed Barkindo, has again failed to agree on production cuts or freeze to shore up crude oil prices in the international market as disagreements between two Middle East rivals, Saudi Arabia and Iran, resurfaced.
Barkindo by his appointment becomes the second Nigerian, after former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Rilwanu Lukman, to serve as the oil cartel’s secretary-general.
Kachikwu, in a tweet from his tweeter handle, confirmed Barkindo’s appointment. He also congratulated him on the feat.
“Congratulations to Dr. Barkindo Sanusi Barkindo on your appointment as OPEC Secretary General,” Kachikwu tweeted.
Kachikwu was credited with playing a huge role in Barkindo’s emergence as the cartel’s secretary-general, as the minister was said to have worked hard behind the scenes at convincing OPEC’s influential members to allow a Nigerian to oversee the administration of OPEC’s headquarters in Vienna.
Similarly, Indonesia’s Energy Minister Sudirman Said disclosed in Vienna that Barkindo’s appointment was by consensus.
Barkindo will succeed outgoing Abdalla El-Badri who had been on the job for nine years. Barkindo was also the acting head of OPEC in 2006.
Credit: Thisday

FIFA Ethics Committee Recommends 9-Year Ban On Suspended FIFA Secretary General

Jerome Valcke, the suspended FIFA Secretary General, faces being banned from football for nine years on the recommendation of the ethics committee of the game’s world governing body.

 

 

FIFA said in a statement on Tuesday in Berlin that the Chairman of the investigatory chamber of the ethics committee, Cornel Borbely, has concluded his investigation.

 

 

It said Borbely  “recommended imposing a sanction of a nine-year ban and a fine of 99,000 dollars’’ on Valcke.

 

 

FIFA said the fine was for a number of offences including “alleged violation of the general rules of conduct’’ and “accepting gifts and other benefits’’.

 

Valcke was initially suspended by FIFA for 90 days in October and as that sanction expires Tuesday, Borbely requested an extension of a further 45 days.

 

This is for the case to be passed to the adjudicatory chamber, chaired by Hans-Joachim Eckert of the ethics committee.

 

 

In July, Valcke said he expected to leave football’s world governing body when a new president is elected to replace Joseph Blatter at an extraordinary congress next month.

 

 

Blatter, who won a record fifth term on May 31 but had to quit a few days later amidst corruption allegations, is facing an eight-year ban.

 

 

FIFA has been facing corruption probes by investigators in the U.S. and Switzerland, where the organisation is based.

 

Valcke, a close confidante of Blatter, has been secretary general since 2007 and has previously denied any wrongdoing.

 

 

 

(dpa/NAN)