Environmentalist
links dead fishes to toxic chemicals from Shell, urges NOSDRA to sit up
Mr Furoebi Akene, an Environment on Sunday
attributed the dead fishes littering the Niger Delta coastline to discharge of
toxic chemicals from Shell’s operations at Forcados oil export terminal.
Akene who spoke in Yenagoa in reaction to
NOSDRA’s position that it found no oil spills linking the massive death of
fishes floating near the Atlantic coastline in Delta,Bayelsa, Rivers and Akwa
Ibom.
He said that while he agrees that the dead
fishes were not caused by oil leakage as found out by NOSDRA, the disclosure
was capable of misleading conclusions as the investigation results were being
awaited by stakeholders.
Akene, Chairman, Board of trustees of the
Centre for Environmental Preservation and Development (CEPAD) alleged that
Shell Petroleum Development Company discharged toxic materials in the Atlantic
off Delta coastline at Ogulagha.
“It has also become a common knowledge that, the
Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited SPDC discharged sludge mixed
with chemicals into the waters of the Atlantic Ocean.
“The discharge through one of their waste disposals
pipes from the Forcados Terminal around Ogulagha and that it was not oil spill
from any of the trunk line pipes conveying crude oil from the Forcados terminal.
“The conspiracy between SPDC and NOSDRA which
has become very strong since the DG of NOSDRA is making all efforts to down
play the act and divert attention.
“It is heart breaking and surprising that the
Federal Government Regulation Agency , the National Oil Spill Detection and
Response Agency (NOSDRA) is just waking up with a press release.
“The
NOSDRA Director-General himself Mr. Idris Olubola Musa acted belatedly almost
three months since the incident happened around the end of January 2020, haven
earlier given the excuse that the COVID-!9 was a hindering him.
“Not only the belated nature of the response
but the premature position while the results are awaited is intended to shield
or conceal the real cause of the matter, the facility that caused it and the
owners of the facility.
“This is quite unfortunate of a regulation agency.
We are using this medium in appealing to NOSDRA to for once do the right thing
as they are statutorily mandated to do.
“In the same vein we are urging the Governments
of the affected states of Delta, Bayelsa, Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Ondo and their respective National Assembly members
and State Assembly members to rise up to their responsibilities to pursue this
matter to its logical conclusion for the lives of their citizens,” Akene said.
In a reaction, Mr Idris Musa,
Director-General of NOSDRA dismissed the claims and restated the committeemen
of the spill agency to its mandate and a more strigent regulation of the maritime
domain within Nigerian territorial waters.
Musa said that NOSDRA was coordinating a
muli-agency investigation aimed at unraveling the cause of the reported massive
death of fishes within the nation’s territorial waters and was looking beyond
the oil spill.
He explained that other regulatory agencies
with mandates of safety in the maritime space were deploying their expertise in
the ongoing investigation assuring that the process was being carried out with
best practices.
“The event of the death of fishes in large
numbers make it expedient to look beyond oil spillage as the likely cause death of fishes in such large numbers
as we found no trace of leakage to link with the dead fishes.
“The Agency proceeded to collect samples of
water, sediments and some of the dead fish for laboratory testing. In doing so
the agency brought onboard other relevant agencies of government that have
mandate on our territorial waters.
“Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety
Agency (NIMASA), Nigerian Instutue of Oceanography and Marine Research (NIOMR),
Federal Institute of Fisheries Research.
“Also included is the National Environmental
Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA) for an all hands on deck
assessment of the possible cause or causes of death of the fishes in such large
numbers,” Musa said.
The NOSDRA Chief Executive said that the
results of ongoing laboratory analysis would be compared with results from the
participating agencies to proffer an effective solution and ensure a more
stringent regulations in future.
He said it was situations like this that
informed the agency’s limitations to the use of chemical dispersants in the
water bodies near human settlements and assurd that NOSDRA remained committed
to a sustainable environment.
Public Affairs officials of Shell declined comments
when contacted for a reaction on the allegations of discharging toxic chemicals
from its operations.
An email request for comments to the oil firm
on April 7 has yet to be responded to.
No comments:
Post a Comment