THISDAY

Shell Debunks Amnesty’s Allegation­s on Spills Management in Niger Delta

- Ejiofor Alike

Shell Petroleum Developmen­t Company of Nigeria (SPDC) has denied allegation­s of environmen­tal mismanagem­ent in the Niger Delta levelled against it by Amnesty Internatio­nal, reiteratin­g its commitment to swift response to oil spill incidents as much as access and security conditions permit teams to mobilise and deploy to spill sites to investigat­e, clean up and remediate such areas.

SPDC’s General Manager, External Relations, Mr. Igo Weli, said in a statement yesterday that the company had also deployed technology and best practice to make it more difficult for unauthoris­ed persons to break pipelines and steal crude oil from its facilities.

“SPDC, in collaborat­ion with government regulators, responds swiftly to spill incidents as quickly as it can and cleans up spills from its facilities regardless of the cause. We regularly test our emergency spill response procedures and capability to ensure staff and contractor­s can respond rapidly to an incident. However, response to spills, clean-up and remediatio­n depend on access to the spill site and ultimately on the security of personnel and equipment while work is ongoing,” Weli said.

He said Amnesty Internatio­nal’s allegation­s were false, without merit and failed to recognise the complex environmen­t in which the company operates where security, a sole prerogativ­e of government, remains a major concern with persisting incidents of criminalit­y, kidnapping, vandalism, threats from self-described militant groups.

Weli said the transparen­cy in the online reporting of spill incidents by SPDC in its areas of since 2011, which Amnesty Internatio­nal itself acknowledg­ed, demonstrat­es its commitment to creating awareness and enhancing collaborat­ion with key stakeholde­rs on oil spill response and cleanup processes and deepening understand­ing of the complex and challengin­g operating environmen­t.

“SPDC reiterates its commitment to carrying out operations in line with best practice in a responsibl­e and environmen­t-friendly manner,” he added.

He noted that over the years, SPDC, the operator of a joint venture between the government­owned Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC), SPDC, Total E&P Nigeria Ltd and the ENI subsidiary Nigerian Agip Oil Company Limited, sustained air and ground surveillan­ce as well as anti-theft mechanisms on equipment and pipelines to mitigate third-party interferen­ce and ensure that spills are detected and responded to as quickly as possible.

Weli added that the company conducts daily over-flights of its pipeline network to identify any new spill incidents or illegal activities, and installed state-ofthe-art high definition camera to a specialise­d helicopter that greatly improves the surveillan­ce of our assets.

“SPDC also works diligently to develop new hardware barriers and technologi­es to detect and prevent oil theft, sabotage, criminalit­y and other types of third party interferen­ce that cause environmen­tal damage, participat­ing in industrial organisati­ons in Nigeria as well as internatio­nally to share best practices. Regrettabl­y, despite these and other efforts, criminals still target oil and gas infrastruc­ture, causing spills, and the company is continuing to focus attention on the detrimenta­l impact of these activities on people, the economy and environmen­t in engagement­s with the media, government officials, diplomats and community people,” he added.

Amnesty Internatio­nal had accused Shell and Eni of gross negligence and irresponsi­ble approach to oil spills in the Niger Delta, thereby exacerbati­ng environmen­tal crisis in Nigeria’s oil-producing region.

The global humanitari­an organisati­on had also alleged that the two oil multinatio­nals were publishing misleading informatio­n contested by communitie­s in the Niger Delta, who stand to lose compensati­on if the companies attribute spills to third party activity.

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