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Business

Oil majors face soaring security bill after attacks

Published: 26 Jan 2013 - 12:55 am | Last Updated: 06 Feb 2022 - 05:36 am

DAVOS: Oil executives are resigned to a rise in security costs which will be steep even for an industry used to working in dangerous places, as they strengthen defences against militants and cyber attacks alike.

Officials at the energy industry’s biggest gathering believe investment in some new projects may slow, particularly in North Africa, following last week’s siege at an Algerian gas plant and a 2012 cyber attack on Saudi oil computers.

“Our industry is traditionally linked to political risks but  last week’s events will lead to a major review of security spending,” said Andrei Kuzayev, who heads overseas operations at Russia’s Lukoil.

This would inevitably mean a big rise in costs, Kuzayev said at the gathering held on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum here. The Algerian siege staged by militants ended with heavy loss of life among foreign hostages when government forces stormed the plant deep in the Sahara desert.

Industry officials are usually reluctant to discuss their security arrangements in detail. Kuzayev, who spends his time between operations in countries including Iraq, Egypt and Ghana, said security usually accounted for one to three percent of a project’s overall costs.

Although security was not necessarily decisive in final investment decisions, costs were already rising rapidly. Kuzayev cited Egypt, where president Hosni Mubarak was overthrown in a 2011 uprising. “We had to evacuate people from Egypt three times during the revolution. Basically, the main take out here is that you cannot relax even for a second,” he said.

Oil firms are experienced in operating in turbulent countries but often the threats are greater than ever before. Two operators of the Algerian gas plant, London-based BP  and Norway’s Statoil, experienced their worst security incident in the siege staged by jihadists, who said they were retaliating against France’s intervention in Mali.

BP has operated in Algeria for more than 60 years and the energy industry there suffered no major attacks even during a civil war in the 1990s between the secular government and Islamists. But during the siege major oil companies had to evacuate dozens of expatriate workers and review security across North Africa in Libya and Egypt. Those worries are spreading as French forces battle Islamists across the Sahara in Mali.

Nigeria has already faced rebel attacks on its oil industry in the south and Islamist violence in the north. President Goodluck Jonathan said in Davos that he feared the  attacks in the Sahara could spread through west Africa if the instability in Mali were not contained. 

BP Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg acknowledged the problem but noted Algeria’s tough response when it sent in special forces to end the siege. “It is clear that with so many weapons around and all sorts of veterans, it will be tough. It is hard to speculate if it can become the new Afghanistan, but certainly not in Algeria, which made its response very clear,” he said.

Saudi Arabia said in December that it had suffered a cyber attack on 30,000 computers last August, aimed at stopping oil and gas output of the world’s biggest crude exporter. “If you don’t protect your computer systems you cannot do anything. Same if you don’t protect your oil wells. We will have to do our utmost so they don’t attack our world,” an emotional Total Chief Executive Christophe de Margerie said.Reuters