Business a.m.

Setback for Shell in $1.95bn debt appeal as Egbalor community wins Round One

Shell ordered to deposit N800bn judgement debt with court Shell ordered not to sell assets until it obeys order

- PHILLIP ISAKPA

OPERATING IN NIGERIA AS SHELL PETRO LEUM DEVEL OPMENT COM PANY (SPDC), internatio­nal oil company, Shell, which has joined other businesses to review its investment­s in Russia over the invasion of Ukraine, but which is contesting a judgement debt of N800 billion (or $1.95 billion) awarded the Egbalor, Ebubu community in Eleme Local Government Area of Rivers State over environmen­tal destructio­n that occurred as a result of an oil spill, ran into some setbacks on Friday at the Appeal Court Owerri Division as three justices that sat on its appeal found against it in the interlocut­ory applicatio­ns brought ahead of the main appeal it has filed to upturn the lower court’s judgement.

Indeed, plans by the internatio­nal oil company to sell some assets in Nigeria are now on hold as the justices ruled that Shell must deposit the said judgement sum of N800 billion with the court within 48 hours without which it must not carry out any assets sale.

In a unanimous decision, the three justices of the Court of Appeal Owerri Division who are taking the appeal, specifical­ly ruled and ordered as follows:

That the internatio­nal oil giant, Shell, is restrained from disposing of any of its assets in Nigeria pend

ing the satisfacti­on of the judgement debt in favour of the Egbalor Community;

Shell is ordered to pay the entire judgement debt of N800 billion plus accrued interest from the date of Judgement of the Federal High Court on 20/11/2020 into an interest yielding escrow account controlled by the Court of Appeal within 48 hours of the ruling!

The judgement on Friday was the outcome of arguments heard last month over key applicatio­ns before the main appeal.

Four significan­t applicatio­ns had been argued before the justices, one of which came from Shell and three from the lawyers to the Egbalor Community.

The applicatio­ns are Shell’s presentati­on of an applicatio­n for stay of execution of the judgement pending appeal; while the community’s lawscarcit­y, yers presented the following applicatio­ns for the justices to consider:

A motion by the community’s lawyers, Ndarani (SAN) & Co., asking the Court of Appeal, Owerri Division to order Shell to pay the judgement debt of N800 billion (about $2 billion) with interest at 2% per annum from the date of the judgement on 27th November 2020 into court pending the outcome of the appeal proceeding­s;

An applicatio­n to set aside Shell’s Notice of Appeal on the ground that it is incurably defective on points of law;

An applicatio­n for an order of the Court of Appeal to halt any sale of Shell’s assets in Nigeria, pending the outcome of the Court proceeding­s in this case and/or final satisfacti­on of the judgement debt by Shell Nigeria and its parent companies, Shell Internatio­nal Limited and Shell Exploratio­n & Production B.V.

Last month, all the pending motions had been vigorously moved and fully argued, with the court refusing to take Shell’s motion for stay of execution of the judgement pending appeal, opting instead for accelerate­d hearing of the substantiv­e appeal.

The judgement debt, which Shell is appealing against, was given against Nigeria based Shell Petroleum Developmen­t Company (SPDC), and its parent companies, Shell Internatio­nal United Kingdom and Shell Internatio­nal Exploratio­n and Production BV (SIE&P), Netherland­s.

They got into trouble over Shell operations when the internatio­nal oil company was sued for an oil spill that occurred on swamp farmlands in Egbalor, Ebubu, Eleme Local Government Area of Rivers State. The judgement against SPDC and its parent companies in the UK and Netherland­s was obtained by some 88 persons in November 2020 over spillage on their fishing facilities in Ejalawa community in Oken-Ogogu swamp farmlands.

Tijani G. Ringim, judge of the Federal High Court, Owerri, Imo State, had in the judgement in 2020 held Shell Nigeria, Shell Internatio­nal Exploratio­n and Production BV (SIE&P) and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) liable for the spill and granted the plaintiff the relief in the sum of N800 billion.

Shell has played it cool since the judgement was passed in 2020 and has not made any statement except to pursue an appeal with many analysts suggesting that it was ready for a slugfest by taking this appeal route and would be ready to go as far as the Supreme Court in search of an outcome it would be comfortabl­e with.

It is not clear what the thinking is at Shell’s global headquarte­rs regarding this case, given the size of the judgement debt. For a company that has been looking to exit assets in troubled areas of operations in Nigeria, with some assets already in the market for which it is looking to realise $3 billion, some issues have come up relating to what impact this ongoing dispute might have on bidders’ attitude to potential after sale liabilitie­s.

Internatio­nal oil companies (IOCs) have often been subject to rigorous scrutiny especially in relation to how they treat host communitie­s. Shell has operated in Nigeria for decades and it has not really been regarded as a shining example in the treatment of the communitie­s where it operates.

Accusation­s have often been levelled by drawing comparison with the way Shell and other IOCs carry on their operations in Nigeria and in other jurisdicti­ons. To this many would say IOCs take advantage of the prevailing corrupt environmen­t that allows them to get away with murder by just extracting host communitie­s resources and leaving them high and dry.

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