Four oil spill sites in Nigeria
identified by the UN, which Shell has claimed to have had cleaned up by
contractors since 2011, are still polluted, says a report by Amnesty.
One of these sites, the Bomu manifold close to the village of Kegbara
Dere in Ogoniland, is Nigeria’s oil central: five major northbound
Shell pipelines join four southbound ones which together carry 150,000
barrels of oil a day to the huge oil export terminal at Bonny
Back in 2010, Unep inspectors said, “Nothing appears to have been
done about the pollution,” and urged an immediate decontamination of the
Bomu manifold along with 60 other heavily polluted sites in Ogoniland,
all of which, they said, had been left untouched or only cursorily
cleaned up by Shell and other oil companies since the 1970s.
Earlier this year Amnesty International revisited the Bomu manifold
three times and found the site still massively contaminated, despite
claims from Shell and the Nigerian government’s watchdog pollution body
that it had been cleaned up satisfactorily in 2012.
“Water containing oil … flows along the path of the Shell pipelines.
At places there are pools of oil. Some soil is black and hard. The three
fish ponds, owned by a local family, are covered in a thick oily sheen,
and show no signs of life. The spills … have contaminated fields and a
neighbouring forest and have spread down into the Barabeedom swamp,”
says Amnesty, working with the Port Harcourt-based Centre for Environment, Human Rights and Development (CEHRD).
The joint report is published to coincide with the 20th anniversary
of the execution of nine Ogoni leaders, including the writer Ken Saro-Wiwa. Amnesty alleges that in some cases, contractors employed by Shell admit simply to burying the pollution.
“This is just a cover up. If you just dig down a few metres you find
oil. We just excavated, then shifted the soil away, then covered it all
up again,” one contractor employed by Shell told Amnesty. The report
concerns sites at Bomu Manifold, Boobanabe, Barabeedom swamp and
Okuluebu. It says: “Claims by Shell that it has cleaned up heavily polluted areas of the Niger delta
are blatantly false. The only plausible explanations for why the four
sites could still be polluted, four years after Unep found high levels
of contamination at each of them, are that no remediation was carried
out, or remediation was carried out but was ineffective, or that other
spills have occurred since then.
“In two of the four cases explanation one is ruled out by Shell
itself. The company has publicly stated that the sites were cleaned up.
In those two locations, explanation three [that there was subsequent
re-contamination from spills after 2011] is also not possible.
“All four sites remain visibly contaminated, even though Shell says
it has cleaned them. The investigation demonstrates this is due to
inadequate clean-up, and not new oil spills,” says the report.
Amnesty says its investigators sought meetings with and wrote to both
Shell and the government’s oil spill regulator, the National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency (Nosdra), seeking an explanation.
The Guardian
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