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‘Clean up Ogoni before selling $2.4bn onshore assets environmentalist warns Shell’

 

By Nathaniel Zacchaeus, Abuja

The National Coordinator, Centre for Peace and Environmental Justice (CEPEJ) Chief Mulade Sheriff, has asked the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDC) to conclude the multi-million dollar Ogoni clean-up project before leaving the onshore oil and gas sector.

Sheriff stated this yesterday while addressing journalists in Abuja.

He said he was speaking on behalf of other environmental rights activists in the Niger Delta on the need to save the region from further degradation as a result of oil spills, illegal bunkering and oil theft.

The SPDC recently announced that it would soon conclude nearly a century of operations in Nigerian onshore oil and gas.

The firm said it agreed to sell its subsidiary to a consortium of five mostly local companies for up to $2.4bn.

The British-owned energy giant has been involved in Nigeria’s oil and gas business since the 1930s.

Stakeholders in the oil-rich region have accused it of numerous onshore oil spills as a result of theft, sabotage, and operational issues that led to costly repairs and high-profile lawsuits.

The firm has since 2021, been making moves to sell its Nigerian oil and gas business, but said it would remain active in Nigeria’s more lucrative and less problematic offshore sector.

But Sheriff said yesterday at the news conference that environmentalists and stakeholders of the Niger Delta had agreed to stop the SPDC from selling its multi-billion dollar assets until it concluded the Ogoni clean-up project.

He said, “We have only one option, we are calling on the Federal Government to do the needful but if the government fails, we will institute a suit restraining the sales of those assets.

“We have already commenced the process. Because, until these things are done, we will not allow Shell to exit our land until the proper clean-up is done.

Take for example, Oloibiri was the first land that produced a commercial quantity of oil for Nigeria in 1956, today, Oloibiri is history.

“There is nothing there again, the people are in abject poverty. The traditional occupations of the people, fishing and farming have been eroded.

“So, what do you expect? The continuous destruction of confiscated vessels by the Nigerian security agents and destroyed them openly, is against the ethics of environmental best practices.

“We have told the Federal Government and we have also called on the security agents for the past eight years and when you apprehend any vessel or local canoe, take these things to the Nigerian refineries.

“We have Port Harcourt refinery, Warri refinery, why must you destroy these, if the government or the security agents are not involved? We see this as the destruction of evidence.

“They don’t even feel or consider the well-being of the people, even if you are not from that part of the region, you should have feelings for these people who are known to be fishermen, farmers and you destroy their ecosystem, destroy their environment what do you expect?

“That is why we said that today, the only means of survival in the Niger Delta is illegal bunkering which youths have turned to and which is not good for the nation. The second option is militancy. That is the only means of employment.”

Sheriff said the people of Niger Delta will continue to commend the United Nations, whose report gave that opportunity for the clean-up of Ogoni land.

He said, “I can tell you authoritatively that that clean up to many of us, who are environmentalists, is political. There’s nothing tangible on the ground to write about.

“You can only see the clean-up exercise and the process on the document. On the land of Ogoni, there’s nothing much. To many of us, we can describe it as a failed project to some extent.

“It will interest you to know that in the Niger Delta, there more areas that are more polluted than Ogoni land but the good thing is that the people of Ogoni took it upon themselves and have been able to push their case to the international level, and that is why we are talking about Ogoni.

“There are areas that are more destroyed as a result of exploitation and exploration activities in the Niger Delta,” he added.

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