Home Business & EconomyBAYELSA: Cleanup of oil pollution would cost $12b – Report

BAYELSA: Cleanup of oil pollution would cost $12b – Report

by Godswill Ikemefuna
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INVESTIGATORS stated yesterday that the cleanup of decades-long oil contamination and restoration of environmental health in just one of Nigeria’s crude-producing states, Bayelsa, will cost at least $12 billion.

They warned in the long-awaited report that Bayelsa state, which has a population of about two million people, “is in the grip of a human and environmental catastrophe of devastating proportions.”

Bayelsa, located in the Niger Delta region, is where oil was discovered for the first time in Africa in the 1950s, and where firms Shell and Eni have operated for decades.

“Once home to one of the largest mangrove forests on the planet, rich in ecological diversity and value, the region is now one of the most polluted places on Earth,” the report said.

“At least $12 billion” is needed to “clean up the soil and drinking water, reduce the health risk to people and restore mangrove forests essential to stopping floods.”

The four-year investigation was carried out by the Bayelsa State Oil and Environmental Commission — an international panel of experts and prominent figures who worked at the request of the local government.

It called on Shell and Eni, whose local subsidiaries still operate in the region, to pay a share of the cost.

“We are asking Shell’s new CEO Wael Sawan, before selling off Shell’s remaining onshore oil assets, to commit immediately to paying their share of the $12 billion bill,” said the commission’s chairman, John Sentamu, a member of Britain’s House of Lords and former Archbishop of York.

In a written statement to AFP, Shell said it had not seen the report and could therefore not respond to its conclusions at this time.

Eni also said that it had not been consulted about the report and rejected allegations of “environmental racism” made by the commission.

In response to AFP’s request for comment, Eni said it “conducts its activities according to the sector’s international environmental best practices, without any distinction on a country basis.”

Both companies have blamed most oil spills on sabotage and theft.

“Regardless of the cause of a spill, we clean up and remediate areas affected by spills originating from our facilities,” a Shell spokesperson said.

Eni also said the company “undertakes to remedy in all cases” when spills occur.

The report is based on almost 2,500 pieces of evidence, including 500 interviews and the analysis of 1,600 blood samples collected from locals.

Throughout the years, “as much as one and a half barrels of oil has been spilled in Bayelsa for every man, woman, and child living in the state today.”

According to the analysis, the Niger Delta has experienced the equivalent of the Exxon Valdez disaster every year for the past 50 years.

The 1989 ship catastrophe spilled over 11 million gallons (42 million liters) of crude oil off Alaska’s coast.

The analysis highlighted the potentially far-reaching health consequences of oil and gas emissions.

“Highly toxic contaminants that cause burns, lung problems and risk of cancer are widespread,” it said.

One sample of groundwater contained toxic chemicals present at more than a million times safe limits.

The researchers blamed the problem on “the systemic failings of international oil company operators, with the complicity of Nigeria’s political classes and a dysfunctional Nigerian regulatory state.”

According to the paper, the amount paid by businesses should be based on the volume of oil pumped since commercial exploitation began and “perhaps weighed to reflect the company’s pollution record.”

“The enormous suffering caused by oil pollution in my kingdom pokes me, chokes me, and stares me in the face every day,” said King Dakolo, a traditional ruler and chief in Bayelsa, in testimony to the commission.

“There is talk of paying for climate loss and damage amongst world leaders. Oil companies could start by accounting for the damage done in my state.”Bayelsa

The report comes just days after the UK Supreme Court declared that it was too late for a group of Nigerians to sue Shell over an offshore oil disaster in 2011.

The oil behemoth, which made its highest-ever annual profit this year, is facing new legal battles in the United Kingdom, including one against 50,000 Nigerian claimants suing over other oil spills.

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