New Era

Shell wins legal case over Nigeria oil spill

- - Nampa/AFP

LONDON - Britain’s highest court ruled yesterday it was too late for people in Nigeria’s Niger delta region to lodge pollution claims against energy giant Shell after a huge oil spill more than one decade ago. The Supreme Court said in a statement that its five judges “unanimousl­y” rejected an appeal over the 2011 spill, upholding prior rulings that claims were not made before a legal deadline.

Nigerian claimants say their shoreline faced a “devastatin­g impact” from a leak at the Bonga oilfield which unleashed 40 000

barrels of crude into the Gulf of Guinea. Shell claims the spill was swiftly contained.

The claimants had sought Wednesday to overturn rulings from two lower courts, arguing that the oil spill constitute­d a “continuing nuisance”, a legal definition to which the deadline would not apply.

The Supreme Court however disagreed and declared the leak was a “one-off event or an isolated escape”, in a judgement which does not affect a separate legal action against Shell over other spillages.

“The claimants’ argument that

there is a continuing nuisance, because on the assumed facts oil is still present on their land and has not been removed or cleaned up, is rejected,” said judge Andrew Burrows.

“There was no continuing nuisance in this case because outside the claimant’s land, there was no repeated activity by the defendants or an ongoing state of affairs for which the defendants were responsibl­e that was causing continuing undue interferen­ce with the use and enjoyment of the claimants’ land.”

The Supreme Court noted however that the 2011 spill was “one of the largest spills in Nigerian oil exploratio­n history”.

The London-listed energy major welcomed the judgement on Wednesday, but said the spill was “regrettabl­e”.

“It was clear from the start that these claims were unfounded and brought entirely out of time,” a Shell spokespers­on said.

“Today’s decision... rejected the claimants’ case that Bonga oil could have become trapped and re-mobilised years later, migrating upstream and impacting the claimants’ communitie­s.

“While the 2011 Bonga spill was highly regrettabl­e, it was swiftly contained and cleaned up offshore.”

Lawyers for the claimants said they had no comment when contacted by

AFP.

Nigeria, Africa’s biggest crude producer, has struggled with oil spills for decades. Shell faces a separate ongoing legal case in Britain, after the Supreme Court ruled in February 2021 that more than 50 000 people in the Niger delta region can make pollution claims in English courts.

The ruling overturned a 2017 decision against the Ogale and Bille communitie­s, who brought legal claims for clean-up and compensati­on following decades of repeated spills in the crude-rich region.

 ?? Photo: Contribute­d ?? Spill... A leak at the Bonga oilfield which unleashed 40 000 barrels of crude into the Gulf of Guinea was one of the largest spills in Nigerian oil industry history.
Photo: Contribute­d Spill... A leak at the Bonga oilfield which unleashed 40 000 barrels of crude into the Gulf of Guinea was one of the largest spills in Nigerian oil industry history.

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