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In rare compromise, Nigerian emerges as frontrunner for OPEC secretary-general

VIENNA, May 31 (Reuters) - Nigerian oil technocrat, Mohammed Barkindo, has emerged as front-runner to take the top job at  OPEC. Mohammed Barkindo is seen as a rare compromise candidate to lead the group amid rising tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

Barkindo has been a key face of the Nigerian oil industry for the past decade, during which various governments tried and effectively failed to reform Nigeria's national oil company Nigerian National Petroleum Corp. (NNPC).

Today, Nigeria, alongside Venezuela, has become one of the main victims of oil's price collapse, with the country's output declining sharply due to militant attacks on pipelines and infrastructure.

OPEC  is likely to choose Barkindo, a former head of NNPC, as the next secretary-general of the producer group, three sources with knowledge of the matter said.

Since 2012, OPEC has been looking for a replacement for Libya's Abdullah al-Badri.

However, Barkindo's appointment is by no means certain and Badri's tenure could yet be extended by another six months, some sources said.

Rivalries between  OPEC  heavyweights Saudi Arabia, Iran and Iraq have so far prevented the group from choosing candidates proposed by those countries.

OPEC  oil ministers meet on Thursday in Vienna. The consensus of all members - which in the past has sometimes been elusive - is required for the appointment of a new secretary-general.

Barkindo led NNPC from 2009 to 2010, and served as acting secretary-general of  OPEC  in 2006, after the original Nigerian nominee, junior oil minister Edmund Daukouro, took over the rotating  OPEC  presidency.

Barkindo also served on  OPEC's economic commission and held various high-ranking positions during a career at NNPC that spanned over two decades.

He was deputy managing director of the Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas Company, a joint venture between NNPC, Shell Gas BV, Total and Eni. He was also head of NNPC's London office, managing director of NNPC's oil and gas trading division, and an NNPC group executive director.

"He's a reasonably safe pair of hands and good for a more administrative role like secretary-general. He also knows the ropes at  OPEC  from when he was Lukman's (right-hand man)," a senior industry source with close ties to Nigeria said.

Rilwanu Lukman was influential in Nigeria's oil industry for many years. He served as oil minister during military rule and later as secretary-general to  OPEC  and special adviser on oil to former president Olusegun Obasanjo.

"Don't expect any fireworks, either positive or negative," the industry source said.

Reporting by  OPEC  newsroom; Writing by Julia Payne; Editing by Dale Hudson

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