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Nigeria fines Shell N800 billion for Bonga oil spill – Official.

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oil spill in Bonga

oil spill in BongaThe oil spill in Bonga occurred in December 2011.
The National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency, NOSDRA,  has   imposed a $5 billion dollars (about N800 billion) fine on Shell  Petroleum and Development Company, SPDC, for the 2011 Bonga oil spill  incident.
The Director-General, Peter Idabor, said this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria in Abuja on Tuesday.
Mr. Idabor also said that the agency had started studying the Post-Impact Assessment Report on Bonga oil spill.
“Compensation really derives after you have done a post-impact  assessment,” he said. “After you have done evaluation of the place and  mapped out places affected by the spill, then you can now say this
one  take three naira; this one take N100; it is different from fine.”Bonga oil spill2
The official added that “So, just last week, they formally announced  to us that the post-impact assessment report is ready; which we are  studying now.
“The House of Representatives has asked NOSDRA as the lead agency in  oil spill, to contact other stakeholders including the communities, to  see how we can study the report.
“We will then recommend compensation based on the report of the post-impact assessment.’’
He said that NOSDRA faulted SPDC for not providing immediate relief  to the affected communities, whose livelihoods were affected by the  disaster.
The director-general said that the fine would serve as a deterrent to  other firms that would treat activities which deplete the environment  with levity.
“The kind of impunity Shell and its allies have demonstrated so far  in the Niger Delta area in the past should be addressed if the future  and people of Nigeria and the environment are to be protected,” he said.
He said that the oil spill, which occurred in December 2011 and  spread over 100 nautical miles from the ocean, deprived fishermen in the  affected areas of Bayelsa and Delta of their means of livelihood.
“They could not go there to fish; nets that they normally put in  water ways were stained and people lost their means of livelihood.
“Even the fishes themselves, because of the chemical, migrated from the crude oil.
“The overall impact was for that chemical to have entered the  Atlantic Ocean; it must have killed millions of fish and other living  organisms,” he said.

Mr. Idabor said that the spill which did not result from sabotage or vandalism would take a long time to get cleared.
A separate government agency, the Nigerian Maritime Administration  and Safety Agency, NIMASA, had also asked Shell to pay $6.5 billion  (about N1 trillion) as compensation to the victims of the spill.
It is not yet clear if Shell would pay the levies or would challenged the directives in court.
Meanwhile, Barrisua Deezim, an Ogoni in Rivers, has urged NOSDRA to  extend its efforts and to respond to other communities in the Niger  Delta region affected by oil exploration activities.
Mr. Deezim also called on security authorities to intensify efforts to check the activities of illegal refineries in the area.
Oil spill in the Niger Delta region is mostly caused by oil bunkering,’’ he said.
(NAN)
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