Shell must decommission old assets before Nigeria exit- Report
A report on the
environmental impact of the activities of multinational oil companies in
Nigeria has noted that Nigeria needs to ensure that Shell safely
dismantles its old infrastructure or pays to remove them from the Niger delta
before its exit.
Shell is set to exit from
Nigeria’s onshore oil and gas operations after agreeing in January to sell
the business to a consortium of five mostly local companies for $2.4 billion.
The deal is the latest by
an international oil company seeking to divest from Nigeria's troubled onshore
oil sector. But the cost of dismantling old assets could leave the country with
environmental degradation, says the report by the not for profit Centre for
Research on Multinational Corporations (SOMO).
"The big issue is
that Shell is leaving onshore Niger delta and leaving behind potentially a
massive bill for (clean up)," SOMO's executive director, Audrey Gaughran
said.
When it announced the
deal in January, it said the Renaissance consortium would take over
responsibility for dealing with oil spills in the delta which Shell has long
maintained are mostly due to theft of oil and interference with pipelines.
Layi Fatona, vice
chairman of ND Western, one of the five companies in the Renaissance
consortium, did not comment directly on the issue or how much it had budgeted
to clean up, but disclosed that the grouping will follow the country's legal
requirements.
Gbenga Komolafe, head of
Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission, told Reuters that oil majors
would need to show compliance with rules on decommissioning among others before
they are granted consent to exit.
He did not name Shell and
the regulator declined to comment on whether the oil major or other companies
have complied with the rules. The government has indicated that it would not
block the Shell deal.
Communities in the delta
are also demanding environmental restoration or compensation from Shell for
land damaged by historical oil spills.
"We depend on
farming and fishing, but now our lands and rivers have been destroyed. If they
leave without healing the soil, how do we survive?," says 61-year-old
farmer Ayibakuro Warder, from Ikarama community in Bayelsa state.

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