The National Oil Spills Detection and Response Agency
(NOSDRA) has said that it found no oil leaks linked to the massive death of fishes
that float and litter the Atlantic coastline across Niger Delta region.
The agency said it 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
industry..
Mr Idris Musa, Director-General of NOSDRA said in a statement
availed to newsmen on Thursday that investigation was already ongoing despite
the COVID-19 lockdown.
Musa explained that officials of NOSDRA deployed from the
agency’s office in Warri, Yenagoa and Port Harcourt have conducted site visits
to the Atlantic coastline in Delta, Bayelsa and Rivers to collect water and
fish samples tor tests.
“The National Oil Spills Detection and Response Agency
(NOSDRA) carried out a reconnaissance of
the area in Delta where we first got the report through a member through a
member of a Non-Governmental Organisation.
“There was no incident of oil spill within the area of
reported dead fishes, notwithstanding that a few dead fishes were seen along
the shoreline.
“The event of recent days where 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.
“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.
“In particularly the Nigerian Maritime Administration and
Safety Agency (NIMASA), Nigerian Instutue of Oceanography and Marine Research
(NIOMR),Federal Institute of Fisheries Reaserch.
“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 profer 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.
The Bayelsa Government on Tuesday, urged residents to
abstain from harvesting, processing, eating or selling dead fishes currently
littering the Atlantic ocean coastline in the state.
The advice was coming more than one month after reports of
massive death of fishes floating near the shoreline across the Niger Delta
was deposited on the coastline by tidal waves.
It would be recalled that residents along Koluama, Ekeni, Ezetu,
Fishtown, Foropa, Sangana axis of the Atlantic coastline in Bayelsa, had
reported sighting dead fishes littering the shoreline, since the middle of
March.
Some of the residents said the incident became obvious since
March 15 and had yet to abate, fueling fears of pollution of the country’s territorial
waters as a result of the dead fishes.
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