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Especially for Nigeria, where there's a possibility of renewed conflict in the country's oil-producing Niger Delta region, according to SBM Intelligence's recently published "Nigeria in 2016" report.
The global oil picture is stacked against countries like Nigeria, in which oil constitutes some 10% of the country's GDP.
Oil plunged to under $38 a barrel by December, with Goldman Sachs raising the possibility that the price could go as low as $20 in the coming year. The implementation of the Iran nuclear deal, which is expected to occur sometime in early 2016, will lift sanctions on the country's oil exports, bringing a heightened supply to the
The rivalry between Saudi Arabia and oil producers Iran and Russia might also encourage Riyadh to raise production in order to drive down prices and cut into their opponents' bottom line. A peace deal in Ukraine - which is an outside possibility in 2016 - would assumedly lift sanctions on Russian oil and gas as well.
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Nigeria was the world's 12th-largest oil producer in 2014, extracting some 2.4 million barrels a day - thanks in large part to oil production in the Niger Delta.
The Niger Delta insurgency, which began in 2004, was a reaction to the government and the oil industry's perceived exploitation of communities living in oil-producing regions, which also suffered from the environmental effects of oil exploitation.
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The insurgency targeted the infrastructure and occasionally the employees of multinational oil companies, and caused billions in losses for the industry and the government.
Above all, the insurgency complicated the already fraught relationship between the oil sector and the people of the Niger Delta, who saw relatively little benefit from an industry that accounts for 75% of Nigeria's government revenue.
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As the SBM Intelligence report notes, the end of the amnesty at least raises the possibility of resumed instability in the Delta.
"Discontinuing access to state patronage may prompt militant leaders to resume their insurgency in
the Niger Delta, with the potential to cut crude oil outputs sharply and further reduce government revenues," the report states, adding that "Precedent suggests that militants could resume attacks on oil installations (both on-shore and offshore) and resume targeting foreign expatriates." SBM Intelligence includes Tompolo, the nickname of a former top Delta guerrilla commander, in its roundup of "key players" to watch in Nigeria in the coming year.
Disruptions to oil production in the Delta might not be disastrous for Nigeria, given the dip in global prices and the resulting disincentive to dump additional oil into the market.
But Nigeria is almost uniquely dependent on oil among countries with such a sizeable population. And the country faces security challenges with both regional and global dimensions to them.
Although Boko Haram lost territory in 2015 in the face of a renewed government offensive against the group, Africa's deadliest Jihadist organization also pledged allegiance to ISIS in March of 2015.
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The Nigerian government is facing urgent security pressures at a time when the country's main source of revenue is becoming less and less lucrative - along with, in SBM Intelligence's view, the renewed possibility of insurgent activities in the country's main oil-producing region.