Crude-oil exports can resume from a Nigerian terminal capable of exporting 200,000 barrels a day after two months of outages there had contributed to a petroleum-price rally, Royal Dutch Shell PLC said on Thursday.

Shell declined to say exactly how much production would begin to flow through its Bonny Light terminal in the Niger Delta, which was taken off line in early May after a leak on the Shell-operated Trans-Niger pipeline. The leak was caused after suspected oil thieves damaged a pipeline.

The Anglo-Dutch company said only that conditions had improved enough to lift force majeure, a legal declaration that exempts the company from fulfilling contractual obligations due to circumstances outside its control. The pipeline was reopened on Monday and exports began on Thursday, Shell said.

The outage was among the most significant to plague Nigeria's oil industry in recent months and added to global interruptions in output from Canada to Kuwait that helped send crude prices into a rally. Brent crude, the international benchmark, traded up 14% to nearly $52 a barrel in the month after Nigeria's oil outages began, though it has since fallen. Brent was trading at $49.27 a barrel on Thursday afternoon in London.

Nigerian supply hit multiyear lows at the height of an unprecedented series of attacks by militants, with production cut to around one million barrels a day. The country is capable of producing about 1.85 million barrels a day, according to the International Energy Agency.

A reported cease-fire between militant groups and the Nigerian government resulted in production increasing in Nigeria. However, a militant group defied the cease-fire over the weekend by carrying out further attacks on the country's oil infrastructure, reaffirming analyst concerns that Nigeria remains a serious supply risk.

Elsewhere in Nigeria, Shell's force majeure on exports at the Forcados terminal is still in place, which was also caused by a pipeline leak. Forcados can export about 400,000 barrels a day.

Several other major oil companies, such as Eni and Chevron, have been affected by attacks from the Niger Delta Avengers. Exports have been affected from a number of terminals, but no other company currently has a force majeure in place.

Write to Miriam Malek at Miriam.Malek@wsj.com

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

July 07, 2016 10:55 ET (14:55 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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