THISDAY

Menace of Oil Spillage in Niger-delta Region

Since the release of the United Nations Environmen­t Programme and the Environmen­tal Assessment Report of Ogoni land in the Niger-delta region, there has been delay in the implementa­tion of the report by the federal government, writes Ugo Aliogo

- The story continues online on www.thisdayliv­e.com

Nigeria’s economic mainstay is crude oil. The country’s crude oil is extracted from the Niger-delta, a region that accounts for a large chunk of Nigeria’s crude oil. The activities of oil extraction and exploratio­n have caused environmen­tal degradatio­n, destroyed the ecosystem, especially the marine wildfire and farming activities and polluted their waters. The Internatio­nal Oil Companies (IOCs) have been held responsibl­e for these environmen­tal damages. In 1990, under the military era, the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP) was formed with the goal of protecting the environmen­t of the Ogoni People of River State in the Niger-delta.

The Ogoni struggle began as a local quarrel with Shell Petroleum Developmen­t Corporatio­n (SDPC) due to the destructio­n and damage caused to their ecosystem and environmen­tal pollution. The struggle soon went beyond Shell to the military government of Late General Sani Abacha. Though MOSOP lost the fight and this consequent­ly led to the death of Ken Saro Wiwa and eight other Ogoni sons, in November, 1995.

After the death of Ken Saro Wiwa and his kinsmen, efforts were made to resolve the conflict between the Ogonis themselves on one hand and their conflicts with Shell and the federal government on the other hand. Series of efforts were made by the federal government, Non-government­al organisati­ons, faith based organisati­ons, and others to find lasting peace in Ogoni land. The federal government under late General Sani Abacha, set up a National Reconcilia­tion Commission headed by Mr. Alex Akinyele. But the panel seemed to lack legality since the Ogonis and other Nigerians believed that the government was the source of their crisis.

Today, Civil Society Organisati­ons (CSOs) are calling on the government to wake up to the needs of the people who have voted them into power.

They urged the federal government not be blinded by the gains and revenues gotten from these companies and the divestment processes, to properly review the operations of the IOCs and how host communitie­s have become victims of their own environmen­t.

OIL SPILLS IN THE NIGERDELTA

A report by Amnesty Internatio­nal in 2008 and 2009, revealed that two massive oil spills in the fishing town of Bodo had a disastrous impact on the community. Thick black oil leaked into rivers and creeks for weeks, killing fish and robbing people of their livelihood­s.

The report said Shell, the operator of the leaking pipelines, repeatedly understate­d the volume of oil spilled and offered the community only a paltry amount of compensati­on $4000.

Amnesty Internatio­nal in the report said it assisted the Bodo community take legal action, adding that Shell acknowledg­ed that it had made false statements about the size of the spills and settled out of court, paying the community £55 million in compensati­on.

According to the report, “Since 2014, Eni has reported 820 spills in the Niger Delta, with 26,286 barrels or 4.1 million litres lost. Since 2011, Shell has reported 1,010 spills, with 110,535 barrels or 17.5 million litres lost. That’s about seven Olympic swimming pools. These are huge numbers, but the reality may be even worse. The companies’ figures are vastly different to those of the Nigerian government, which recorded 1369 Shell spills and 1659 ENI spills in the same timeframes. The spill volumes are also likely to be inaccurate as our research has shown how the companies underestim­ate the real amount.”

“In November, 2023, the Director-General of the National Oil Spills Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA), Idris Musa, said about 3,000 barrels of crude oil were lost to the 15 November, oil spill from the offshore Egina Floating Production Storage and Offloading (FPSO) vessel of Total Energies.”

SHELL’S DECISION

The decision by Shell to divest its onshore business in Nigeria by reaching an agreement with Renaissanc­e in a deal valued at $2.4billion has raised dust in the Niger-Delta, especially among the host communitie­s, CSOs, and human right activists. Renaissanc­e, a consortium of five companies, will acquire the SPDC. The consortium includes ND Western, Aradel Energy, First E&P, Waltersmit­h and Petrolin. Shell said it has structured the deal to maintain SPDC’s operationa­l capabiliti­es to support the SPDC Joint Venture (SPDC JV). With a 30 percent stake, SPDC is the operator of the SPDC JV.

On its part, Shell stated that regarding the issue of remediatio­n, it has the responsibi­lity for remediatin­g the environmen­tal impacts from its operations as well as historical spills that had not been cleaned up when its $2.4 billion onshore oil assets transactio­n is completed will be taken over by its Joint Venture (JV) partners.

In a document detailing Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) relating to the deal released on its internatio­nal website, the British multinatio­nal stated that the roles and responsibi­lities of the SPDC JV partners will remain unchanged.

It would be recalled that in 2022, SPDC said it successful­ly remediated an additional 230 impacted sites, compared to 187 sites remediated in 2021, adding that 776 affected sites had been remediated since 2016.

According to Shell Nigeria Briefing Notes For 2022 Business Activities, “In the Niger Delta, over the last 12 years, the total number of operationa­l hydrocarbo­n spills and the volume of oil spilled from them into the environmen­t have been reduced significan­tly.

UNEP REPORT

The UNEP Environmen­tal Assessment report of Ogoniland stated that due to the wide extent of contaminat­ion (in Ogoniland and nearby areas) and the varying degrees of degradatio­n, there will not be one single technique appropriat­e for the entire area.

The report explained that a combinatio­n of approaches would therefore need to be considered, adding that this would range from active interventi­on for cleaning the top soil and replanting mangrove to passive monitoring of natural regenerati­on.

The report said mangrove restoratio­n in Ogoniland would be a project which would take up to 30 years, once the ongoing pollution is stopped, and an appropriat­e approach will be to initiate restoratio­n in number of largescale experiment­al pilot sites (of 10 hectares each) and apply the lessons learnt in each of the locations to rest of the area with similar ecological and hydrologic­al conditions.

The report espoused that in locations where the mangrove trees have died, a more active interventi­on approach which involve clean-up of the hydrocarbo­ns on the top soil and bituminous substances on the dead stems followed by artificial replanting should be attempted.

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