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Mobil rig dispute
75 on board Mobil Nigeria dispute rig
LAGOS, Nigeria (Reuter) - Around 75 people, at least 13 of them foreigners,
are on board a Mobil oil rig off southeast Nigeria under the control of
disaffected workers, a company spokesman said Friday
``There are around 75 people on board the rig and of them 25 are involved in
the dispute,'' the spokesman said in Lagos.
Diplomats said six of the foreign workers are British, four Americans, two
Irish and one Croatian.
The spokesman said discussions were underway to resolve the dispute, which
was between the workers and the contracting company which owns the rig. He
did not give the precise location of the rig.
``Nobody has been hurt in any way and everybody is being calm...disputes
over money are not unusual and because negotiations are now taking place on
the rig and onshore we hope everything will be sorted out tomorrow
(Saturday),'' he said.
``The dispute may have something to do with the likelihood that Mobil was
wanting to release the rig,'' he added.
Multinational oil companies working under joint venture agreements say they
have been forced to move rigs and scale back their activities due to a
government cut in their budgets to $2.05 billion from the $3.32 billion they
had requested.
``Given current circumstances, we need to cut down costs,'' the spokesman
said.
Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation with over 100 million people,
produces over two million barrels of crude oil per day.
from Nigeria Today, 9/15:
75 PEOPLE HELD ON MOBIL OIL RIG FREED
A strike on board a Mobil oil appraisal rig off southeast Nigeria (Edop
offshore oil field) has ended after talks between disaffected workers and
rig owner Reading and Bates, a Mobil spokesman said on Saturday. ``The
strike ended at 11 p.m. last night. The rig is now working normally,''
Lloyd Slater of Mobil's public affairs office in London said. He said the
strike had been peaceful, adding it was not directed against Mobil but
against the U.S. contracting company which owns the rig. Mobil said in
Nigeria that about 75 people, including 6 Britons, 4 Americans and 2 Irish
nationals were on board the rig. It said the dispute may have had something
to do with the likelihood that Mobil wanted to release the rig. Slater said
the drilling operation was shut down during the strike but had now resumed.
He added that contrary to earlier reports, no workers were held by the
strikers during the dispute. Multinational oil companies working under
joint venture agreements say they have been forced to move rigs and scale
back their activities because of a government cut in their budgets to $2.05
million from the $3.32 billion they had requested. Nigeria produces more
than two million barrels of crude oil per day.
BACK [Image] MOBIL CONFIRMS END TO LABOUR DISPUTE IN NIGERIA
[Image]
NEW YORK, 15 SEP. 97 (OPECNA)--MOBIL HAS CONFIRMED THAT A BRIEF LABOUR
DISPUTE INVOLVING 25 WORKERS ON THE CE THORTON DRILL RIG, OWNED AND OPERATED
BY READING + BATES, ENDED WITHOUT INCIDENT FRIDAY NIGHT.
THE RIG IS UNDER CONTRACT TO MOBIL FOR AN APPRAISAL WELL IN THE EDOP FIELD,
LOCATED SOME 48 KM OFF THE COAST OF NIGERIA'S AKWA IBOM STATE.
MOBIL ANNOUNCED THAT THE SITUATION WAS RESOLVED AND ALL 75 WORKERS ON THE
RIG WERE SAFE.
WORK WAS NOW CONTINUING TO PLUG AND ABANDON THE WELL AS PLANNED, IT SAID.
(15-SEP-97)
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