A Nigerian tries to separate crude oil from water in a boat at the Bodo
waterways polluted by oil spills attributed to Shell equipment failure
August 11, 2011. The Bodo community in the oil-producing Niger Delta
region sued Shell oil company in the United Kingdom, alleging that
spills in 2008 and 2009 had destroyed the environment and ruined their
livelihoods. The UN released a report this month saying decades of oil
spills in the Nigerian region of Ogoniland may require the biggest
cleanup ever undertaken, with communities dependent upon farmers and
fishermen left ravaged. (Pius Utomi Ekpei/AFP/Getty Images)
When he was a child, Tonye Emmanuel Isenah saw men in the Niger Delta
who were 70 and even 80 years old. But these days, he said, people just
don’t live that long.
Isenah is now the deputy leader of the state assembly in Bayelsa
State, part of Nigeria’s oil rich Niger Delta region — a land that for
decades has suffered annual devastating oil spills. Experts say the yearly spills are each comparable to the Exxon Valdez spill. And the environmental degradation is causing the local people to become ill and die at earlier ages.
“At the age of 45, people are beginning to have strokes,” he said. “I used to see people that lived up to 70 years and beyond.”
Life expectancy in Nigeria now hovers above 50 years, nearly 20 years
below the world average, but Isenah says that in the Niger Delta, the
life span is shorter. Isenah’s assertion that pollution in the Niger
Delta is weakening the people, is as obvious to any observer as the oil
that coats the mangrove roots in the creeks.
Nigeria is Africa’s largest oil producer, exporting about 2.5 million
barrels of oil a day, almost entirely from the Niger Delta. It is the
United States’ fifth largest oil supplier and the proceeds from sales of
crude oil made up 80 percent of Nigeria’s national revenue and nearly
all its foreign currency earnings.
But on the banks of the delta, locals say the oil has brought them
nothing but suffering and things are getting worse. Last year, Royal
Dutch Shell in Nigeria, the country’s largest oil company recorded twice
as much spilled oil than the year before, with 6,000 tons of oil dumped
into the delta due to operational failures, up from 2,900 tons the year
before. This figure doesn't include spills from other major oil companies, like Chevron, Exxon-Mobile and Total, or from oil theft and illegal refineries.
Oil floats on the delta’s waterways killing
and contaminating the plants and animals in one of Africa’s most
bio-diverse regions. Along the banks of the creeks, muddy fishing
villages are slick with oil that washes ashore. Villagers say they drink
and bathe in the oily waters and as a result, children are dying of
diseases.
The pollution and lack of attention to it is fueling anger among the
people of the Niger Delta. Militant rebels charge that their grievances
have not been addressed since the 2009 amnesty deal and some are
threatening to fight again if the government does not clean up the area
and make it place where people can live safely.
Last year, the United Nations Environment Program conducted a study
of an oil spill in the Niger Delta and found some water with 900 times more carcinogens
than what is safe. With almost no hospitals in the creeks and wooden
dugout canoes being the common mode of transport, parents say sick
children often cannot live long enough to get help.
Like the rest of her family, Decent Victor fishes for a living and
dries the fish into flakes to sell. She said it can take five to six
hours to paddle to the nearest hospital.
“If you see a 10-year-old child getting a sickness, you carry the boy
to the hospital,” she said. “But before getting to Warri the child
dies.”
Fishing is almost the sole economic activity for many villages in the
Niger Delta and locals say they now catch six to eight times less fish
than they did a few years ago — barely enough to sell. Officials and oil
companies do not deny that people are suffering from the oil drenching
their land, but responsibility for cleaning up is elusive. Officials say
they are currently conducting studies and will order companies to
compensate people in villages devastated by spills, if they can prove
the oil in the village came from the company in question.
A week doesn’t go by without a report of an oil spill, said Warri
head of the National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency, Benjamin
Olubunmi Akindele. He said his office does not have the means or the
mandate to clean them all up.
“It is the job of the polluter to clean up the spills, not the
agency,” he said. Oil companies, however, lay blame on the government,
saying insecurity in the region makes clean-ups difficult.
The companies also blame many of the oil spills on attacks on their
pipelines by local oil thieves. Shell says more than 75 percent of all
oil spills in the delta between 2006 and 2010 were caused by illegal refining and sabotage.
Village leaders say if the dangers in the water were not enough, the
air is also increasingly dangerous to breathe. Gas flaring — a process
in which natural gas associated with crude oil pumping is burned — has
been declared illegal by many Nigerian lawmakers over the years, but the
fires still burn every day, all day and all night.
Oil companies say they are working to reduce continuous flaring, with Shell reporting a 60 percent decrease over the past nine years. The company said it is currently implementing a $5 billion program to reduce flaring and gather more of the natural gas for power.
Felix Fawei, a community leader on the banks of the delta said fumes
from the flares sicken locals, forcing many to flee from their villages
into the cities. “Sometimes you’ll see that the water is very bright
even though this area is very dark,” he said. “This in an environment
that is not safe to live.”
This is sickening to watch and read about, especially after the BP incident. These companies never want to take responsibility, especially in second and third world countries. It makes me sick. These people didn't deserve this, contamination of their land.
ReplyDelete-Sharone Tal
I agree completely. Oil companies are after profits and will rape and pillage to get them.
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