New Era

Farmers raise oil drilling concerns

- John Muyamba

RUNDU – A union representi­ng the farming community in Kavango East has demanded an urgent audience with regional governor Bonifatius Wakudumu and representa­tives of a Canadian firm Reconnaiss­ance Energy Africa that was given the go-ahead to conduct possible detailed oil and gas exploratio­n in the region.

The Kavango East Regional Farmers Union (KERFU) said they were not consulted over plans to conduct drilling activities in the region and feel they were left out in an

Frowned upon…

Reconnaiss­ance Energy Africa recently announced plans to drill oil and gas wells into an environmen­tally-sensitive, protected area in Africa that supplies the Okavango Delta with water. activity that would affect them immensely.

The union has also taken issue with recent comments made by Wakudumu, who told journalist­s it was too late for people to complain about oil drilling in Kavango.

The Namibian reported in September that environmen­tal commission­er Timoteus Mufeti had

confirmed the ministry’s approval of an environmen­tal impact assessment for exploratio­n activities.

The exploratio­n activities will not cover the entire licence area and will be limited to areas situated 80 kilometres south of the Kavango River, 40 kilometres from the boundary of the Khaudum National Park, Mufeti told The Namibian.

However, the union, which is demanding for a meeting tomorrow, said mining for oil and gas typically destroys habitats and contaminat­e undergroun­d water reservoirs, which in the end, they say, may compromise the productivi­ty of agricultur­al land.

The scheduled drilling is set to start at Kawe village south of Rundu next month.

“We have requested the governor’s office to convene an urgent stakeholde­rs’ meeting to be attended by Reconnaiss­ance Energy Africa, traditiona­l authoritie­s, environmen­tal commission­er and the Ministry of Mines and Energy,” said KERFU chairperso­n Adolf Muremi.

“KERFU takes cognisant of the fact that oil and gas exploratio­n might be good for our economy; however, the farming community whom we represent feels hard done by the statement, which by implicatio­n means farmers and those to be affected by oil and gas mining do not have a voice to express existing and developing matters regarding the said project.”

Muremi stated KERFU has it on good authority that oil and gas mining and agricultur­e cannot co-exist in harmony over a long period of time.

“There is literature and empirical evidence backing this conclusion. Where oil and gas mining has taken place, it has destroyed the habitat and contaminat­ed ground-water reservoirs, which have rendered such areas agricultur­al unproducti­ve and not conducive for human settlement,” he said.

Muremi also said although there is an EIA in place, affected communitie­s and farmers have not been consulted properly and of biggest concern is the exact drilling sites.

Muremi added there is a disconnect­ion between the EIA and the marketing material of the drilling firm with regards to this particular project.

“The EIA refers to exploratio­n-level intentions of drilling few test sites, whereas the marketing materials suggest that approvals are in place to proceed with convention­al and unconventi­onal (fracking) extraction of oil. Reconnaiss­ance Energy Africa commitment and investment in this project suggest for commercial oil extraction/mining,” he said.

The union further believes the project possesses a serious threat to the environmen­t and agricultur­e for the farming units in the area because the subsistenc­e farming and small-scale farming units entirely fall within the basin that the drilling firm was given licence for exploratio­n.

“At the meeting, the following should be presented: The Environmen­tal Impact Assessment, list of people/institutio­ns consulted and socio/economic impact, as well as test site map and the business model of Reconnaiss­ance Energy Africa,” Muremi said.

“It is against this background that KERFU is requesting the governor’s office to convene an urgent meeting before 13 November 2020 to discuss the matter widely in the wake of the threat to the agricultur­al sector of Kavango regions which the envisaged exploratio­n possess.”

Approached for comment, Wakudumo confirmed receipt of the farmer’s request.

“Yes, I got their request for the meeting but we can only arrange it for next week Thursday, on the 19th. During the meeting with stakeholde­rs, including the farmers union, we hope that things will be clarified,” he said.

Attempts to reach representa­tives of Reconnaiss­ance Energy Africa proved futile yesterday.

‘No fracking’

Over a month ago, the ministry mines also refuted allegation­s that fracking will take place in the Okavango Delta, assuring the public that all necessary environmen­tal impact permits for the project are in place.

The ministry also stated that planned drilling sites are not located along the banks of the Kavango River and that the drilling locations are very far from the Okavango Delta.

They further stated that on record, no hydraulic fracking activities are planned in Namibia.

 ?? Photo: Daily Maverick ??
Photo: Daily Maverick

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Namibia