The Guardian (Nigeria)

Groups want Shell to address ecological, health social impacts of oil exploratio­n

- From Obinna Nwaoku, Port Harcourt

ENVIRONMEN­TALISTS in the Niger Delta region have raised concerns over a plan by Shell to sell its Nigerian onshore subsidiary to a consortium of domestic and internatio­nal oil companies for $ 2.8 billion.

A statement by six civil society organisati­ons led by renowned environmen­tal activist and the Executive Director, Health of Mother Earth Foundation ( HOMEF), Nnimmo Bassey, insisted that the internatio­nal oil company must address ecological, health and social impacts of their oil exploratio­n activities before divesting.

They decried that Shell had continued to downplay its role in the ecological damage of the Niger Delta, claiming that assessment­s by reputable organisati­ons have indicted the company over environmen­tal pollution.

They cited that in 2011, the United Nations Environmen­t Programme ( UNEP) released its findings on the impacts of hydrocarbo­n pollution in Ogoniland, an area operated by Shell, adding that the assessment revealed severe contaminat­ion of drinking water sources and exposure of communitie­s to health risks.

They said: "Drinking water was found to contain cancer- causing benzene 900 times above permitted levels. Another environmen­tal and social impact assessment conducted in Bayelsa state showed that between 2006- 2020, SPDC ( Shell) accounted for 75 per cent of oil spill incidents in the Niger Delta, which caused massive health damages, environmen­tal pollution, loss of livelihood­s and displaceme­nts.

"The findings of the assessment reveal that there is 1.5 crude oil barrels per capita pollution in the state besides some heavy metal pollution that is up to one million times above safe limits."

Continuing, the groups pointed out that the Bayelsa State Environmen­t and Oil Commission in a report titled "An Environmen­tal Genocide – the Human and Environmen­tal Costs of Big Oil in Bayelsa State" showed a 1.5 barrels per capita pollution in that state.

They, however, insisted that the selling of assets by Shell and other oil multinatio­nals, are easily an effort to evade accountabi­lity for the long- standing damages caused by oil extraction in the Niger Delta.

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