Pirate attacks off West Africa’s mineral-rich Gulf of Guinea have almost doubled from last year and threaten to increase the costs and jeopardise the shipping of commodities from the region.

The Gulf of Guinea, which includes Nigeria, Ghana and Ivory Coast, is a major source of oil and cocoa and increasingly metals for world markets, although international navies are not actively engaged in counter-piracy missions in the region.

Unlike waters off Somalia and the Horn of Africa, where ships can transit past at high speed with armed guards on board, many vessels have to anchor off West African coastal nations, with little protection, making them a soft target for criminals.

A study published this week showed piracy in the Gulf of Guinea cost the world economy between $740 million and $950 million last year and that figure is expected to grow in 2013.

Kaija Hurlburt of advocacy group Oceans Beyond Piracy (OBP), which co-authored the report, said the type of vessels attacked had become more diverse. “The impact on the commercial trade sector is a problem,” she said.

A separate study by OBP earlier this year estimated the cost of Somali piracy fell 12.5 per cent in 2012 to $5.7 billion-$6.1 billion, helped by vigorous navy action, the deployment of private armed security guards and defensive measures on ships. (See story on Page 2)

In contrast, the World Bank in April estimated Somali piracy may still cost the world economy about $18 billion a year.

Data from watchdog the International Maritime Bureau, another of the latest study’s authors, showed attacks in the Gulf of Guinea for the year to date reached 67 incidents, versus 34 in the same period last year. These included five attacks off Togo, versus five in the same period last year.

Apart from the fear of increasingly violent attacks in the Gulf of Guinea, the study said seafarers were concerned that authorities in the region could not be relied upon.

“We had a ‘port inspection’ and they took eight tins of paint, two coils of rope, and several bottles of whisky,” one seafarer said in the report. “If the ‘authorities’ do this, who do we rely on for help?”

Last week the Joint War Committee, which groups syndicate members from the Lloyd’s Market Association (LMA) as well as representatives from London’s insurance company market, added Togo to its list of high-risk areas for merchant shipping, which already includes Nigeria and Benin.

“We were recognising the trend of increased risk to the assets the market insures,” LMA senior executive Neil Roberts told Reuters. “All the reports indicate the situation will continue for a while. We need to be alive to that as insurers.”

The study, which was also put together by industry alliance the Maritime Piracy Humanitarian Response Programme, estimated the total insurance cost for the Gulf of Guinea last year was between $423 million to $437 million.

“We expect, especially with the expansion of the high-risk zone by the Joint War Committee, that is going to lead to a higher cost of insurance,” said OBP’s Hurlburt.

“We have already seen a greater number of kidnappings for ransoms,” she said. “There might be a higher cost for private security as we move forward.”

Analysts say while Somali gangs have focused on capturing vessels to extract ransom money, criminality in West Africa, including oil theft, poses more complex problems.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.