The Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria
Limited (SPDC) on Wednesday said it has spent over N23 bn in development of its
host communities in Bayelsa in the past 13 years.
The oil firm noted that the sum was has so far been
deployed since it adopted the Global Memorandum of Understanding (GMoU)
template.
The GMoU model places the choice of community projects
on the people while the company provides the funding and necessary mentoring.
SPDC General Manager External Relations,
Mr Igo Weli, told newsmen in Yenagoa on Wednesday that the amount represented
about half of the company’s GMoU spend in its host communities in the Niger
Delta since 2006..
According to
him, a total of N44.36 billion has been disbursed to the 39 active GMoU
clusters in Rivers, Delta, Bayelsa and Abia States in the last 13 years.
Weli was represented by SPDC’s External
Relations Manager, Corporate Lands Management, Trevor Akpomughe.
He spoke at the media launch of the 2019 edition of
the Shell in Nigeria Briefing Notes, an annual publication detailing the
activities of the business interests of the energy firm in Nigeria
Shell companies include the Shell Petroleum
Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC), the Shell Nigeria Exploration
and Production Company (SNEPCo), Shell Nigeria Gas and the Nigeria Liquefied
Natural Gas.
“The SPDC JV GMoU development model
gives communities a highly-valued opportunity to decide and implement projects
and programmes that have a lasting impact on their lives.
“The priority of projects in Bayelsa State is as set
by the active 14 GMoU clusters in the state and they include roads, community
centres, health projects and empowerment initiatives,” he said.
According to Weli, SPDC had also made a
lot of social investment in Bayelsa, particularly in education, health and
entrepreneurship.
“Our various enterprise development programmes have
produced over 332 entrepreneurs in Bayelsa State, most of whom have become employers
of labour themselves.
“SPDC’s flagship youth enterprise
development programme, LiveWIRE, reached 285 beneficiaries in Bayelsa State in
2018, with beneficiaries given entrepreneurial training and start-up grants.
“To date, the LiveWIRE programme has trained 7,072
youths across the Niger Delta and provided business start-up grants to 3,817
young people,” Weli stated..
Weli said that apart from university
scholarships to Bayelsa State indigenes,182 pupils from public primary schools
in the state have benefitted from the Cradle-to-Career programme which gives
fully-funded sponsorship to top secondary schools in Nigeria.
Weli described the SPDC-sponsored
Oloibiri Health Programme in Bayelsa as part of the company’s effort to
strengthen health care in the community that hosted the company’s first oil
well six decades ago.
According to him, between 2016 and 2018, the programme
delivered household health services to nearly 13,000 persons in more than 3,100
homes across nine communities in Ogbia area of Bayelsa.
Weli said security remained a major
challenge as a result of continued crude oil theft and vandalism of oil and gas
facilities in parts of the Niger Delta.
“Illegal crude oil refining and third-party
interference are the main sources of pollution in the Niger Delta today.
“Third party interference caused close to 90% of the
number of spills of more than 100 kilograms from the SPDC JV pipelines in 2018.
“Crude oil theft on SPDC’s pipeline network resulted
in a loss of about 11,000 barrels of oil a day and the number of
sabotage-related spills of more than 100 kilograms in volume in 2018 increased
to 111 compared to 62 in 2017.” He said.
On the companies policy on host
communities He said:: “Our support for development in the Niger Delta is more
than a business strategy.
“It is a demonstration of our commitment to the
well-being of our hosts.
“That commitment remains unshaken, but it cannot
prosper in an atmosphere of rancour, violence and endless acrimony.
“SPDC continues to collaborate with local community
leaders, traditional rulers and state governments in the Niger Delta to
implement several initiatives and partnerships to raise awareness on the
negative impact of crude oil theft and illegal oil refining” Weli said
No comments:
Post a Comment