guardian.co.uk,
John Vidal, Environment editor, Thursday 22 December 2011
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| An oil spill on the shores of the Niger Delta swamps. Shell has said the recent oil spill is likely to be worst in a decade. Photograph: Pius Utomi Ekpei/AFP/Getty Images |
Nigerian
coastal and fishing communities were on Thursday put on alert after Shell
admitted to an oil spill that is likely to be the worst in the area for a
decade, according to government officials..
The company
said up to 40,000 barrels of crude oil was spilled on Wednesday while it was
transferred from a floating oil platform to a tanker 75 miles off the coast of
the Niger delta.
All
production from the Bonga field, which produces around 200,000 barrels a day,
was last night suspended. "Early indications show that less than 40,000
barrels of oil have leaked in total. Spill response procedures have been
initiated and emergency control and spill risk procedures are up and
running," said Tony Okonedo, a Shell Nigeria spokesman.
Satellite
pictures obtained by independent monitors Skytruth suggested that the spill was
70km-long and was spread over 923 square kilometers (356 sq miles).
But a
leading Nigerian human rights group said Shell's figures about the quantity of
oil spilled or the clean-up could not be relied on. "Shell says 40,000
barrels were spilled and production was shut but we do not trust them because
past incidents show that the company consistently under-reports the amounts and
impacts of its carelessness," said Nnimmo Bassey, head of Environmental Rights Action, based in Lagos.
"We
are alerting fisher folks and coastal communities to be on the look out. It
just adds to the list of Shell's environmental atrocities in the Niger
delta."
The spill,
one of the worst off the coast of Nigeria in 10 years, is particularly
embarrassing for Shell, coming only four months after a major UN study said it
could take Shell and other oil companies 30 years and $1bn to clean spills in
Ogoniland, one small part of the oil-rich delta. The company also admitted
responsibility in August for two major spills in the Bodo region of the delta
that took place in 2008, but has yet to pay compensation.
Shell,
which works in partnership with the Nigerian government in the delta, claims
that 98% of all its oil spills are caused by vandalism, theft or sabotage by
militants and only a minimal amount by deteriorating infrastructure. But
this is disputed by communities.
Yesterday
Shell said it had also closed a Gulf of Mexico deep drilling operation after
spilling 319 barrels of contaminated fluids.

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