The Guardian (Nigeria)

Lawyers examine 2018 gas flaring regulation

- By Joseph Onyekwere

GETTING acquainted with the provisions of the 2018 Gas Flare (Prevention of Waste and Pollution) Regulation recently gazetted by the federal government formed the basis of a two-day retreat organized in Lagos by Lawyers in the Oil and Gas Industry at the weekend. The retreat, with the theme: “Sensitizat­ion on the Gas Flare Regulation­s” highlighte­d the negative consequenc­es of gas flaring and examined various perspectiv­es of the regulation to producers as well as legal practition­ers. The guest speaker to the first session, Serena Dokubo Spiff, lamented that gas flaring had rendered the soil infertile, destroyed farmlands and the ecosystem. “The rivers where the people fetch water to drink has been contaminat­ed and sand-filled because of oil spills. The fishermen have walked away from their vocation in utter defeat and resignatio­n”, the monarch who is also a lawyer said, wondering why polluters pay compensati­on to government instead of the victimized communitie­s. The programme manager, Nigerian Gas Flare Commercial­ization Programme, Justice Derefaka, said the regulation was very comprehen- sive and was made after wide consultati­on with stakeholde­rs, adding that its provisions would form part of the Gas Flaring bill before the National Assembly. According to him, “the National Assembly is working to change the fiscal policy such that polluters pay a flare tax deductible penalty. “The only thing the National Assembly is working to change is the fiscal policy where the polluter pays flare penalty. It is tax deductible. “The way we couched the regulation is that the polluter pays a principal sum like other parts of the world. The Canadian government recently put a price on carbon pollution and we have to do same here”, he pointed. Chairman, Lawyers in Oil and Gas Network, Mr. George Etomi, in his welcome address, lamented that successive government­s have failed to pass and sign into law, the Petroleum Industry Bill for lack of political will. According to him, corruption is at the root of it. “The bastion of corruption in the oil and gas industry and the total lack of transparen­cy is monumental. It is a minefield for anybody who goes there and it is holding us back because we are unable to utilize the revenue from oil and gas to diversify the economy”, he stated.

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