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Shell oil spill hits community in Nigeria’s Bayelsa state

A leak from an oilfield operated by Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) at Aghoro community in Bayelsa discharged some 1,114 barrels of crude oil into the environment.
 
The leakage of 1,114 barrels of SPDC’s Bonny light crude stream had adversely impacted the fishing vocation of residents who had withdrawn from fishing to pave way for clean up
 
The resulting oil spill impacted and polluted an estimated area of 113.03 hectares, according to a joint Investigation Visit (JIV) report released in Yenagoa.
It would be recalled that a disagreement in the areas impacted by the leak had stalled the release of the Joint Investigation Visit (JIV) report of the oil spill.
 
Community leaders, who participated in the JIV to determine the cause of the spill reportedly refused to sign the report.
 
The refusal was attributed to wide
disparity between the impacted areas claimed by Shell and the community,
but Mr Bamidele Odugbesan, Media Relations Manager at SPDC said that
the grey areas had been sorted out.
 
The report indicated that only 247.5 out
of the 1,114 of SPDC’s crude blend has been recovered at the spill site,
while the remaining is yet to be accounted for.
 
According to the spill incident report,
the oil leak was reported on May 17 but the joint visit could not be
immediately conducted until June 23.
 
The report said the spill was caused by
equipment failure resulting from weak integrity on the 24 inch Trans
Ramos Pipeline giving rise to cracks on the pipeline at Aghoro, Ekeremor
Local Government Area of Bayelsa.
 
Representatives of the host community,
National Oil Spills Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA), Bayelsa
Ministry of Environment and SPDC who conducted the investigation agreed
on the findings and signed the report.
 
Repair work on the leaking pipeline was underway while recovery of spilled oil from the site is still ongoing.
 
Reacting on the development, Odugbesan
regretted incessant spills on the Trans Ramos Pipeline, saying that
although the May 17 spill was traced to equipment failure, other leaks
were predominantly caused by sabotage.
 

 

“The rate of spills on the Trans Ramos
Pipeline is very worrisome, for instance between April and May, 26 spill
incidents were reported on that line and out of these, 18 of them were
caused by sabotage, eight were operational,”
he said.
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