Energy Companies Pull a Blackwater
Norwegian energy company Statoil said last week it was forming a special operations division to handle emergency
operations in response to a terrorist attack on a natural gas facility in Algeria. The company said it would double the
amount of employees it had designated for existing security operations after reviewing the measures in place at the In
Amenas gas facility. A January attack there left employees with Statoil and BP dead in what al-Qaida said was a response
to French intervention in Mali. With the economy just as much a viable target as any, counter-terrorism may becoming
more than just the military's game.
A January attack by a division of al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb left several energy company employees and foreign fighters dead. The
Algerian attack had the logistical support of Islamic fighters who traveled across the western border from Libya, still unsettled nearly two years after the revolution.
Statoil said last week it was forming a special unit in response to the attack as part of a comprehensive response to the tragedy.
Operations at In Amenas resumed at a limited capacity after the attack for owners Statoil, BP and Algeria's state energy
company Sonatrach. French supermajor said it too was spending more on industry-wide security operations since the January attack. Natural gas production has declined more or less since 2005 for Algeria and lingering instability in the region suggests a turnaround isn't
likely in the medium term.
BP said it had its own concerns, noting it was holding back on natural gas projects in the country because of the
security situation there. Algerian Energy Minister Youcef Yousfi told a Houston energy conference in March the country "remains a stable country" despite the terrorist attack. He said the
country wasn't discouraged by the incident and remained committed to developing its natural gas sector. Algeria has
enacted policies that would give foreign investors an incentive to take a closer look at unexplored fields in the country. Algeria in
2011 produced around 2.9 trillion cubic feet of gas and has since worked to return to its previous glory.
Statoil said it would appoint an official to lead security operations by July. The security team is part of what Statoil
said was a "broader response" to the tragedy in Algeria. British Foreign Secretary William Hague said Friday the attack in Algeria shows that al-Qaida may be weakened, but it's not yet out of the picture. He complained
some members of the international community aren't willing to take on the responsibility to tackle the threat
themselves, however. With the international economy depending on a reliable source of energy to keep churning, Statoil's
actions suggest the energy sector may start to take on some of that burden itself.
ENDS