Daily Trust

URE ting na villages

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cadmium can cause neurologic­al disorder and kidney problems, respective­ly. Too much arsenic and chromium can cause cancer while nickel can lead to a possible carcinogen­ic situation.

Jummai Bitrus said a pipeline rupture in Rido village in October 2016 spewed oil into her farm and destroyed all the varieties of rice she planted. “I planted step 2, step 5 and quick variety and all were destroyed by oil. I usually harvest 15 bags which I sell to pay the school fees of my children, but I didn’t get anything and the company did not pay compensati­on even after various promises.”

She said oily substances continued to gush from the rupture site a year after the incident, and caused stunted growth and leaf burning of rice crops.

She said farmers under the auspices of Rido Muslims/Christian/Farmers/ Interfaith Cooperativ­e Society Limited have tabled a complaint before the National Human Rights Commission over the matter, and this was confirmed by an official of the commission. Farmers said in the letter that “spill destroyed crops, livestock and soil fertility.”

Usaini Joseph said he has allowed his farm to fallow this year because harmful substances released after the pipeline burst in 2016 reduced soil fertility.

Sarah Paul said the pipeline break near her farm had “reduced soil quality and the rice we planted this year had delayed maturity.”

A lecturer at Kaduna Polytechni­c said toxic elements absorbed by plants could contaminat­e the food chain.

Laboratory analysis of irrigation water samples from the pipeline rupture site showed the presence of lead (0.2439Mg/L) and cadmium (0.0016) in large quantities. The soil samples too, had significan­t amount of lead (185.8Mg/l), arsenic (33.0), manganese (146.8), iron (6004.2) and nickel (19.4).

Oily sludge which contained toxic and odorous substances were said to be discharged into the nearby tributary of Romi River, behind Juji Barde.

Mohammed Haruna said he fetched sludge ejected into the river in large quantities and sold to villagers who in turn mixed it with clay soil used in building houses. “I have been collecting sludge discharged by the refinery for a long time. We don’t get sufficient sludge to sell now (August 2017) because the company hasn’t refined crude oil for some time. We sold 25 litres sludge for N5,000.”

Farmers in Karadutu village said waste water allegedly from the refinery had in the past destroyed their irrigated crops along the river ,while improperly disposed chemicals polluted the water killing fish and invertebra­te animals.

Mr. Daniel Butu has lived in Karatudu with his family since 1986. He grows crops including irrigated crops along the river. He said waste discharged into the river has damaged crops and killed aquatic creatures. “In the past we used to fish in the river but chemicals and oily substances from the refinery have killed all the organisms.

“We caught variety of fishes; some as big as a 13-year-old child but toxic chemicals have killed all the water organisms. You can’t find fish now.” 72-year-old Wada Mai Lambu said oily water from the company polluted farmlands and has damaged crops.

He said “we haven’t seen oily wastewater spilling into our farms for a long time now. But we have built an embankment to prevent erosion from wastewater.”

Analysis of effluent discharged into the river by the company showed the presence of toxic metals. These are lead (0.2501Mg/L), Cadmium (0.0667), nickel (0.0019) and Manganese (0.5855). Soil samples from the river bank too, showed the presence of lead (114.2Mg/L), cadmium (1.00), arsenic (22.2), manganese (903) and nickel (15.6)

Professor Mohammed Dabo is a lecturer in the Department of PetroChemi­cal Engineerin­g, Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria. He said toxic wastes from refineries either pollute the air, water, soil or are harmful to living things generally.

“However, refineries are designed in a way that they release these wastes in minimal level,” he said.

He said people living around refineries often complain of solid waste deposits around them. “Those deposits are from tiny catalysts from the fluid catalytic cracking unit. So, these are accidents.”

He said if the concentrat­ion of gases that escape from refineries is much and are inhaled, they can lead to health problems because they contain some heavy metals.

Group General Manager, Public Affairs Division of the NNPC, Mr. Ndu Ughamadu, said the corporatio­n has an efficient and effective waste disposal system for all the refineries.

“I am equally aware that there is a consultanc­y unit that has been trying to ensure that the sludge materials are converted into products,” he said.

Ughamadu said Kaduna refinery was one of the best in terms of NNPC’s Corporate Social Responsibi­lity (CRS) to communitie­s among all the refineries.

“As for waste disposal, it is not possible that toxic waste is dumped. The state environmen­tal department frequents the refinery to check, and if they were contraveni­ng they would have been sanctioned,” he explained

The General Manager, Kaduna State Environmen­tal Protection Authority, (KEPA) Yusuf Abdullahi Rigasa, said the refinery produced both technical and non-technical wastes and that both are treated before being discharged.

He said “we go there quarterly for compliance monitoring,” adding that KEPA conducts analysis of waste that are suspected to have toxic substances. He said there hasn’t been an Environmen­tal Impact Assessment (EIA) report before the establishm­ent of the refinery, but analysis was done by taking samples from control sites.

He said toxic substances suspected to be from the refinery had caused mass fishkill in nearby Romi River but “there was no sufficient evidence to link the substances to the refinery.”

He said KEPA had requested the amount of waste substance released into the river on the day of the incident from the company, but the data hasn’t been provided. He added that refuse from the refinery is dumped at a site in Buruku area.

A source with KEPA said most of the harmful effluent is reportedly discharged into the river at night.

Executive Director, Services, KRPC, Alhaji Abdullahi Idris, said the claims by the villagers on toxic substances were invalid. He said the villagers have taken KRPC to three different courts in Kaduna and Abuja over the matter “and two of them have thrown out the case for lack of merit and one is yet to pass judgment.” A community leader in Rido, AbdulRazak Gwarjo said the two parties involved in the third lawsuit have agreed to settle out of court. He said “our lawyers told us that the court has granted approval for the community and the company to work out a resolution out of court.”

 ??  ?? Usaini makes a point
Usaini makes a point
 ?? Photos: Misbahu Bashir ??
Photos: Misbahu Bashir

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