Whistle blowers plead with current regime to help fight the issue of pollution in Nigeria's restive Niger Delta oil producing Zone
UNEP Report: ERA/FoEN, Groups Urge
Buhari to Tackle Oil Pollution in Niger Delta
On the occasion of the fourth year commemoration of the release of
the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) Assessment of Ogoniland (4
August 2015), the Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria
(ERA/FoEN) and other groups have called on the administration of General
Muhammadu Buhari to tackle the myriads of environmental challenges besetting
the Niger Delta.
ERA/FoEN, Amnesty International, Centre for Environment,
Human Rights, and Development (CEHRD), Friends of the Earth Europe and the
National Coalition on Gas Flaring and Oil Spills in the Niger Delta (NACGOND)
urged Buhari to tackle oil pollution and corporate impunity that has plagued
the Niger Delta for decades.
In the letter the groups said: “We are pleased that in its first
one hundred days your administration has raised this important issue and
convened a stakeholder meeting on 28 July between the government, UNEP, the oil
industry and representatives of affected communities. We hope that this meeting
signals the start of a meaningful process to implement UNEP’s recommendations.
“
UNEP’s scientific study exposed the large-scale, continued
contamination of the water and soil in Ogoniland, and the serious threat this
poses to human health. In one case, UNEP found that a community drinking well
was polluted with benzene, a cancer causing substance, at levels 900 times
above the World Health Organisation guideline.
The report presented to the Goodluck Jonathan administration on 4
August 2011, also confirmed that the oil company Shell has systematically
failed to adequately clean up pollution for which it is responsible. UNEP found
that Shell’s clean-up methods in Nigeria, and the maintenance of its
infrastructure, do not meet international best practice or even comply with the
company’s own standards.
UNEP
recommended the establishment of an Ogoniland Environmental Restoration
Authority tasked with overseeing a clean-up operation, funded by an initial $1
billion contributed by the oil industry and the Nigerian government. It also
recommended strengthening regulation of the industry, monitoring public health,
and emergency measures to address the grave risks faced by the people of
Ogoniland from contaminated water. In addition, UNEP made clear that Shell must
overhaul its remediation procedures in Nigeria so that clean-up of oil spills
is effective.
However, four years on these recommendations remain almost
entirely unimplemented while the people of Ogoniland and the wider Niger Delta
are forced to live with the devastating effects of oil pollution. For 50 years,
pollution from the oil industry has damaged the health, the livelihoods, and
the environment of the people of the Niger Delta.
The groups urged the Buhari administration to make the
implementation of the UNEP report a priority, even as they specifically
demanded the:
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Saturday, 8 August 2015
UNEP Report: ERA/FoEN, Groups Urge Buhari to Tackle Oil Pollution in Niger Delta
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