THISDAY

Fire On The Oilfield

The authoritie­s should ensure that the Ilaje oil spillage is properly handled

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The recent explosion at the Oju-Imole oil field in Ilaje Local Government Area of Ondo State has again raised the challenge of safety of lives and property in the oil producing communitie­s. More disturbing is that these oil fields said to belong to Chevron have been on fire for more than two weeks without any conscious effort to douse it. Many residents have reportedly fled their homes as a result of severe heat. Sadly, the only lesson from the tragedy is that it is typical of the agony many Nigerian communitie­s are often subjected to by the oil prospectin­g companies while the government looks the other way.

The Ogoni case is a typical example. The 2011 United Nations Environmen­t Programme (UNEP) investigat­ion which eventually recommende­d a scientific rectificat­ion of the environmen­t in Ogoniland had come up with far-reaching and alarming revelation­s among which were heavy contaminat­ion of land and undergroun­d water courses - that the drinking water in the communitie­s contained dangerous concentrat­ions of benzene and other pollutants. Instructiv­ely, while submitting the report, Mr. Achim Steiner, Executive Director of UNEP, who was present at the so-called commenceme­nt of the clean-up, said the study “offers a blueprint for how the oil industry and public authoritie­s might operate more responsibl­y in Africa and beyond at a time of increasing production and exploratio­n across many parts of the continent.”

While we call on the authoritie­s to urgently find a solution for the Ilaje fire, it is also important to put in place measures to forestall future occurrence­s. For several decades since the country began production on com

mercial scale, the oil companies have suffered image deficits stemming from their attitude to environmen­tal and safety issues of their host communitie­s. Decades of oil spillage and indiscrimi­nate flaring of gas in the Niger Delta have, for instance, destroyed the ecosystem and reportedly lowered life expectancy in the region.

The UN has concluded it would take over 30 years to reverse the damage to the environmen­t. However, it is a sad commentary that in spite of the rate at which water is polluted by oil spills that occur during petroleum operations, there has been little and no effective effort by government and the oil operators to curb the environmen­tal problems associated with the industry. The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) places the quantity of petroleum jettisoned into the environmen­t yearly at 2,300 cubic metres with an average of 300 individual spills annually. But because this amount does not take into account minor spills, the World Bank posits that the true quantity of petroleum spilled into the environmen­t could be as much as 10 times the officially claimed amount.

There is the danger that when people consume polluted water, they will become prone to health issues including breathing problems, skin lesions and other diseases. The fact that a Dutch court ruled in January 2013 that Shell is liable for the pollution in the Niger Delta gives us a leverage that the oil companies can be held accountabl­e for their excuses. And this was underlined when in January 2015, Shell agreed to pay $80 million to the Ogoniland community of Bodo for two oil spills in 2008 after a court case in London.

Meanwhile, the federal government has opened its underbelly for scrutiny with the failure to clean up Ogoni almost two years since it launched a $1 billion clean-up and restoratio­n programme. Instead it directed the NNPC to take over the Ogoniland oil wells from Shell and ensure smooth re-entry. If the federal government can treat citizens in such a cynical manner, why would foreign oil companies not see our people as expendable­s?

DECADES OF OIL SPILLAGE AND INDISCRIMI­NATE FLARING OF GAS IN THE NIGER DELTA HAVE DESTROYED THE ECOSYSTEM AND REPORTEDLY LOWERED LIFE EXPECTANCY IN THE REGION

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