• ‘IOCs, independent producers
concealed quantities of spill 1,596 different times’
• Stakeholders seek environmental remediation fund, halt on divestment
• Local producers fingered in rising cases, 247,527 barrels poured into inland
waters since 2016
• ‘Ororo oil well in Ondo spilling crude since 2020’
Over 36.1 million liters of crude
oil, enough to fill about 1,090 oil tankers, has been spilled on water,
farmland and Nigeria’s seas in the oil-rich Niger Delta by oil companies,
especially Shell, Nigerian Agip Oil Company Limited (NAOC) and the Nigerian
National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL).
The spill, which occurred between
2016 and 2023 as per data obtained from the Nigerian Oil Spill Monitor
domiciled with the National Oil Spill Detection and Rescue Agency showed that
cases of spill and pollution of water as well as land may be going from bad to
worse.
Despite the rapid push to save
biodiversity, over 75 per cent of the spills went directly into the sea, swamp
and land to worsen biodiversity and take away the livelihood of thousands,
especially farmers and fishermen, who are already facing poverty and climate
crisis as 25 per cent of the oil spill destroyed inland water that communities
rely on for drinking.
This comes amidst divestment plans
by oil companies and rising legal battles between communities and oil firms as
the implementation of the recommendations of the United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP) report on the clean-up of Ogoniland remained elusive.
While Nigerian oil companies are
moving in to acquire assets of multiple nationals, which may include their
liabilities, the development has thrown up several legal battles with some
stakeholders asking for a stronger policy that would address environmental
concerns.
While Shell, NOAC, Chevron and
other multinationals are topping the chart from NOSDRA’s data, independent oil
companies like Aiteo, Seplat, Midwestern, First E&P, Eroton and others who
are moving in to take over divested assets are being fingered by stakeholders
for rising spills.
Some stakeholders accused the
government of complicity knowing well that NNPC has shares and revenue across
oil blocks.
In barrels, the spill in 2023 stood
at 12,274; it was 45,836 in 2022. In 2021; the spill was 22,318; it was 21,110
in 2020 and 39,345 in 2019. It stood at 28,827 in 2018; it was 35,076 in 2017
and 42,741 in 2016.
Within this period, 247,527 barrels
of oil worth $19.8 million were spilled, notwithstanding the amount of money it
will cost to clean up the environment.
While about 246,927 barrels of the
spill in the period went into open sea, swamp and land, over 600 barrels
according to NOSDRA went into streams and Rivers, where communities source
water for consumption.
Besides, over 502 of the spill
sites over the eight years were not visited by any joint investigator as the
oil companies, going by NOSDRA data, failed to release information, especially
the number of spills in over 1,596 different cases.
In 2023, the country recorded the
highest level of spill as the cases stood at 912, it was 628 in 2022, 407 in
2021, 440 in 2020, 729 in 2019, 715 in 2018, 603 in 2017 and 686 in 2016. This
brought the cases to about 5,120 within eight years.
Coming at a time when stakeholders
expected an improvement through the regulatory instruments in the Petroleum
Industry Act and the creation of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory
Commission (NUPRC), in liters, the oil operators in 2023 polluted land and
water with 1.9 million liters, it was 7.2 million liters in 2022, 3.5 million liters
in 2021, 3.3 million and 6.2 million liters in 2020 and 2019. In 2018, the
volume of pollution was 4.5 million liters; it was 5.5 million liters in 2017
and 6.7 million liters of wasted crude in 2016. This brings the oil spill
within the period to about 36.1 million liters.
In 2023, there are around 912
publicly available oil spill records with 36 of the oil spill sites not visited
by a joint investigation team while 441 of the cases had no estimated quantity
of oil spilled provided by the companies, an indication of weak regulations and
attempts by the oil companies to look away from the impacts of pollution amidst
existing climate change and rapid push for divestment.
The federal government-owned NOSDRA
admitted that in 2023 alone, two major oil spills sent over 250 barrels of
crude oil into inland waters, while over 2,500 barrels of crude oil were
spilled on land, swamp, shoreline and open sea. There were another nine medium
oil spills (25-250 barrels spilled into inland waters, or 250-2,500 barrels
spilled on land, swamp, shoreline and open sea) while there were 430 minor oil
spills (up to 25 barrels spilled into inland waters, or 250 barrels spilled on
land, swamp, shoreline and open sea).
NOSDRA said 351 of these were under
10 barrels in size as 465 oil spills could not be categorized.
In 2022, there are around 628
publicly available oil spill records for the period. About 25 of these oil
spill sites were not visited by a Joint Investigation team and about 219 of
these had no estimated quantity of oil spilled provided by the companies.
During this period, 45,836.935
barrels of oil (7,242,235.793 litres) were spilled, translating to around 229
oil tanker trucks at full capacity.
Four major oil spills sent over 250 barrels of crude into inland waters, or
over 2,500 barrels spilled on land, swamp, shoreline and open sea).
Also, about eight medium oil
spills, ranging from 25-250 barrels of crude spilled into inland waters, or
250-2,500 barrels spilled on land, swamp, shoreline and open sea).
During the year, there were 374 minor
oil spills which saw up to 25 barrels spilled into inland waters, or 250
barrels spilled on land, swamp, shoreline and open sea as 279 of these were
under 10 barrels in size while 232 oil spills could not be categorized.
In 2021, there were around 407
publicly available oil spills but 32 of the oil spill sites were not visited by
a Joint Investigation team as 135 of these had no estimated quantity of oil
spilled provided by the company.
NOSDRA showed that 22,318.108
barrels of oil (3,526,261.11 liters) were spilled in the year, translating to
around 112 full oil tanker trucks.
Over 75 per cent of the spill polluted the sea, swamp, land water and farmland
while 141 oil spills could not be categorized.
In 2020, the oil companies littered
the earth in the Niger Delta region with 3.3 million liters of crude oil in
around 440 publicly available oil spills and failed to provide an estimated
quantity of oil spilled in 90 cases even as 36 of these oil spill sites were
not visited by a Joint Investigation team.
While it will take over 106 oil
tanker trucks to evacuate this level of the spill, over 90 per cent of the
spill endangered life and biodiversity across communities and sea and about 10
went directly into the water the communities consume across the oil-rich
region.
In 2019, there were 729 publicly
available oil spills, 70 cases were not visited and 195 situations where the
oil companies concealed information on the estimated quantity of oil spills.
In 2018, there were around 715
publicly available oil spills which resulted in the spilling of 4.5 million liters
of oil even though the oil companies 159 times concealed information on the
spill.
While there were around 603
publicly available oil spills in 2017, 72 of these oil spill sites were not
visited by a Joint Investigation Team and at 181 of the oil companies did not
release information on the spill even as 198 oil spills could not be categorized.
In 2016, there were around 686
publicly available oil spills where oil companies spilled 6.7 million liters of
crude oil. About 80 per cent of the crude went into the farmland, swamp and sea
and about 20 per cent flowed into land water.
Executive Director, the Health of
Mother Earth Foundation, Nnimmo Bassey, worries about the under-reporting of
the spill, stressing the lingering opacity of the sector and the metering
challenges in the oil sector.
Insisting that if the amount of
crude oil extracted is unknown, it is equally impossible to say exactly how
much oil is spilled, Bassey said some oil spills go on for over 38 days without
any effort to tame the spill.
According to him, the estimate by
NOSDRA is at best a note indicating the never-ending alarming trend, adding
that unfortunately, the PIA falls short of making suitable provisions for
tackling oil spills.
“The PIA criminalizes communities by holding them liable for pipeline rupturing
and vandalism. This unjust piece of legislation is blind to the fact that
communities are not the policemen of the petroleum sector.
“The fact of the massive rogue
behavior in the oil fields where thieves siphon and load crude in ocean plying
vessels cannot be attributed to local communities. These illicit acts are prone
to cause spills and leakages. But we should also remember that oil spills can
happen due to many factors including equipment failure, operational failure,
bombing or burning of stolen crude by security forces, third party
interferences and through outright oil theft including illegal refining,”
Bassey said.
Bassey said it is alarming that the
Ororo 1 oil well off the coast of Awoye, Ondo, has been burning and spilling
crude oil since it exploded in April 2020, almost four years ago.
He noted that divestment without
accountability and responsibility is unacceptable especially with continued oil
spilling and gas flaring.
Bassey noted that the Nigerian
government needs a clear policy and regulatory guidelines for international oil
companies seeking to divest, stating that they should first clean up, remediate
and restore the environment that they have ravaged.
“They should be required to pay
adequately for their environmental savagery, be required to properly
decommission and close off abandoned wells, and fully compensate communities
for the drastic harms they have suffered for six and a half decades,” Bassey
said.
The Leader of the Alliance for the
Defence of Eleme, Johnson Emere Mba-Ngei whose community is currently
challenging some oil companies in court said it is alarming that oil companies
have been concealing oil spills, stressing that the looming specter of
divestment showed that some oil companies are neglecting spills.
“As they plan to abandon their
onshore assets and sell them off, it’s clear that they must be held accountable
for the irreversible damage they have inflicted on our environment and economy.
“We cannot afford to stand idly as
our land is ravaged and our livelihoods destroyed. It’s time for action, and
that action begins with legal recourse against these corporate giants. We must
demand that they restore the environment to its original state, ensuring that
future generations inherit a world free from the scars of greed and
exploitation,” Emere Mba-Ngei said.
According to him, the complicity of
the Federal Government and regulatory agencies was questionable, stressing that
from Oloibiri to Nembe to Eleme to Bonny, the evidence of negligence is
glaring.
Executive Director of the
Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria, Chima Williams said
NOSDRA’s data is only conservative and does not show the true situation of the
depth of the spill.
Williams said the Nigerian
government must immediately put an environmental remediation fund in place to
deal with rising spills, adding that NOSDRA is at the mercy of the oil
companies due to financial constraints.
“As it is right now, while we blame
NOSDRA, the government needs to provide capacity that will enable them to work
independently. If we have the environmental remediation fund, NOSDRA will be
able to work independently,” he said.
According to him, most of the
independent oil companies in Nigeria cannot stop most of the spills, which he
said are traveling faster into regions that do not even have oil fields.
Williams, a legal practitioner said
the government must not allow oil companies to leave without cleaning up,
adding that communities must also come together to demand environmental
justice.
“Our environment must be put in
order. Our people should be able to farm and fish. Cleaning up and remediation,
government and communities must not allow oil operators to divest,” he said.
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