Shell has shut down Nigeria's Bonga floating production, storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel for four weeks of maintenance.
A source at the company's Nigerian joint venture SPDC told Argus that the FPSO was shut late on 18 October for repairs, with the work scheduled to last 28 days. The FPSO serves the Bonga field, Nigeria's first major deepwater oil development, and the Bonga North West field, which came on stream in 2014. The facility has the capacity to process over 200,000 b/d of crude and 150mn ft³/d of gas.
The maintenance was reflected in Nigeria's October crude export schedules, which pegged Bonga loadings at just over 30,000 b/d this month, down by almost 70pc compared with September.
Shell operates Bonga with a 55pc stake under a production-sharing contact with Nigeria's state-owned NNPC. The other project partners are ExxonMobil with 20pc, TotalEnergies with 12.5pc and Italy's Eni with 12.5pc.
The downtime at Bonga will exacerbate Nigeria's production problems. Infrastructure issues and pipeline sabotage have left the country struggling to meet its Opec+ crude quotas this year. Argus estimates that Nigeria produced 1.17mn b/d of crude in September, 660,000 b/d short of its Opec+ target for the month.
The Bonga shutdown will be partially offset by the resumption of operations at the Forcados oil terminal after a three-month halt. A cargo of Forcados crude was scheduled for export on 18 October.

