Environmental conservation has been a big debate in all countries around the world. Nigeria one of Africa’s largest countries situated in West Africa is among the countries which are blamed for contaminating environment through petroleum processing in which communities in Ogoniland became the victims.
In Ogoniland, Oil exploration
commenced in the 1950s handled by Shell
Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC).
In spite of its great success in
oil production, Nigeria
on the other side has been facing consequences on environmental
conservation.
Tensions arose between the
native Ogoni people
of the Niger
Delta and petroleum industry in the 1990s claiming very little money earned from oil and the environmental damages caused by Shell's practices.
Ogoni community was the pioneer of different movements raised in Nigeria in 1993 by organizing large protests "the Movement for the Survival
of the Ogoni People (MOSOP)" against Shell and the
government often occupying the refineries.
On early 2011 Amnesty International and Friends of the Earth International
contested the claims by Shell that up to 98% of all oil spills in Nigeria
were due to sabotage. A UNDP report states that
there have been a total of 6,817 oil spills between 1976 and 2001 which account
for a loss of three million barrels of oil of which more than 70% was not
recovered.
Spills in populated areas often
spread out over a wide area through contamination of the groundwater
and soils during petroleum operations in Nigeria. The consequences were the
slow poisoning of the waters, fish population, destruction of vegetation and
agricultural land and a large number of accidents, fires and explosions on
refining sites claim dozens of lives every year quite apart from the
longer-term health effects of ingestion, absorption and inhalation of
hydrocarbons.
People in the affected areas
complain about health issues including breathing problems and skin lesions. Many have lost basic human rights such as health, access to food, clean water
and an ability to work.
At the request of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria, the United Nations Environment Programme UNEP has
conducted an independent assessment of the environment and public health
impacts of oil contamination in Ogoniland in the Niger Delta and options for
remediation. The study in Ogoniland,
Nigeria covers
thematic issues of contaminated land, groundwater, surface water and sediments,
vegetation, air pollution and public health.
UNEP discovered that Shell and
other oil firms systematically contaminated a 1,000 sq km (386 sq mile) area of
Ogoniland in the Niger
delta with disastrous consequences for human health and wildlife.
Pollution from over 50 years of
oil operations in the region has penetrated further and deeper than many may
have supposed showing that communities have faced a severe health risk, with
some families drinking water with high levels of carcinogens.
In at least 10 Ogoni communities
where drinking water is contaminated with high levels of hydrocarbons, public
health is seriously threatened. In one community at Nisisioken Ogale in western
Ogoniland families are drinking water from wells that is contaminated with
benzene.
The oil industry has been a key
sector of the Nigerian economy for over 50 years, but many Nigerians have paid
a high price.
Some areas, which appear
unaffected at the surface, are in reality severely contaminated underground and
action to protect human health and reduce the risks to affected communities
should occur without delay.
UNEP report suggested that the
environmental restoration of Ogoniland could prove to be the world’s most
wide-ranging and long term oil clean-up exercise ever undertaken if
contaminated drinking water, land, creeks and important ecosystems such as
mangroves are to be brought back to full, productive health. It may require the
world’s biggest ever clean-up that could take 20-30 years.
The UN Environment Programme also
called for the oil industry and the Nigerian government to contribute $1
billion to a clean-up fund for the region that has been devastated by oil
pollution.
The clean-up of
Ogoniland will not only address a tragic legacy but also represents a major
ecological restoration enterprise with potentially multiple positive effects
ranging from bringing the various stakeholders together in a single concerted
cause to achieving lasting improvements for the Ogoni people.
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