International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B7. Istanbul 2004
undiscovered gas potential of about 100 tcf, making Nigeria one
of the world's leading gas producers. The government is making
efforts to re-channel these flared and largely untapped resources
to several areas of usage.
2.0 Causes of Oil Spillage
In Nigeria, fifty percent (5096) of oil spills is due to corrosion,
twenty eight percent (28%) to sabotage and twenty one percent
(21%) to oil production operations. One percent (1%) of oil spills is
due to engineering drills, inability to effectively control oil wells,
failure of machines, and inadequate care in loading and unloading oil
vessels.
Thousands of barrels of oil have been let loose into the environment
through our oil pipelines and tanks in the country. This loss is as a
result of our lack of regular maintenance of the pipelines and storage
tanks. Most pipelines from the flow stations are obsolete. By
international standards, oil pipes ought to be replaced after 15 to
20 years, but most pipelines in use are 20 to 25 years old, making
them subject to corrosion and leakage. Some of these pipes are
laid above ground level without adequate surveillance, exposing
them to wear and tear and other dangers (Oyem, 2001). About
40,000 barrels of oil spilled into the environment through the
offshore pipeline in Idoho.
Sabotage is another major cause of oil spillage in the country.
Some of the citizens of this country in collaboration with people
from other countries engage in oil bunkering. They damage and
destroy oil pipelines in their effort to steal oil from them. Pirates
are stealing Nigeria's crude oil at a phenomenal rate, funneling
nearly 300,000 barrels per day from our oil and selling it illegally
on the international trade market.
Illegal fuel siphoning as a result of the thriving black market for
fuel products has increased the number of oil pipeline explosions
in recent years. In July 2000, a pipeline explosion outside the city
of Warri caused the death of 250 people. An explosion in Lagos
in December 2000 killed at least 60 people. The NNPC reported
800 cases of pipeline vandalization from January through October
2000. In January 2001, The Nigeria lost about $4 billion in oil
revenues in 2000 due to the activities of vandals on our oil
installations.
Nigeria lost about N7.7 billion in 2002 as a result of vandalisation
of pipelines carrying petroleum products. The amount, according
to the PPMC, a subsidiary of NNPC, represents the estimated
value of the products lost in the process. The Nigerian
government and oil companies say up to 15 percent of the
country's two million barrels per day oil production is taken
illegally taken from pipelines in the Niger Delta and smuggled
abroad.
2.1 Review of Oil Spill Incidents in Nigerian
Oil spill incidents have occurred in various parts and at different .
times along our coast. According to the Department of Petroleum
Resources (DPR), between 1976 and 1996 a total of 4647
incidents resulted in the spill of approximately 2,369,470 barrels
of oil into the environment. Of this quantity, an estimated
1,820,410.5 barrels (77%) were lost to the environment.
Available records for the period 1976 to 1996 indicated that
approximately 6%, 25%, and 69% respectively, of total oil spilled
in the Niger Delta area, were in land, swamp and offshore
environments. Some major spills in the coastal zone are the
GOCON's Escravos spill in 1978 of about 300,000 barrels,
SPDC's Forcados Terminal tank failure in 1978 of about 580,000
barrels and Texaco Funiwa-5 blow out in 1980 of about 400,000
barrels. Other oil spill incidents are those of the Abudu pipe line
in 1982 of about 18,818 barrels, The Jesse Fire Incident which
claimed about a thousand lives and the Idoho Oil Spill of January
1998, of about 40,000 barrels. The most publicised of all oil spills
in Nigeria occurred on January 17 1980 when a total of 37.0 million
litres of crude oil got spilled into the environment. This spill
occurred as a result of a blow out at Funiwa 5 offshore station. The
heaviest recorded spill so far occurred in 1979 and 1980 with a net
volume of 694,117.13 barrels and 600,511.02 barrels respectively.
3.0 IMPACTS OF OIL SPILLAGE ON THE
ENVIRONMENT
Little is known about the effects of petroleum pollution on
shoreline communities (Garrity and Levings, 1990; McGuiness,
1990; Burns et al, 1993; Gesamp, 1993). Major oil spills heavily
contaminate marine shorelines, causing severe localised
ecological damage to the near-shore community.
Ever since the discovery of oil in Nigeria in the 1950s, the
country has been suffering the negative environmental
consequences of oil development. The growth of the country's oil
industry, combined with a population explosion and a lack of
environmental regulations, led to substantial damage to Nigeria's
environment, especially in the Niger Delta region, the center of
the country's oil industry.
Oil spills pose a major threat to the environment in Nigeria. If not
checked or effectively managed, they could lead to total
annihilation of the ecosystem, especially in the Niger Delta where
oil spills have become prevalent. Life in this region is
increasingly becoming unbearable due to the ugly effects of oil
spills, and many communities continue to groan under the
degrading impact of spills (Oyem, 2001).
In the Nigerian Coastal environment a large areas of the mangrove
ecosystem have been destroyed. The mangrove was once a source
of both fuel wood for the indigenous people and a habitat for the
area's biodiversity, but is now unable to survive the oil toxicity of
its habitat. The oil spills also had an adverse effect on marine life,
which has become contaminated; in turn having negative
consequences for human health from consuming contaminated
seafood. Oil spill has also destroyed farmlands, polluted ground and
drinkable water and caused drawbacks in fishing off the coastal
waters.
Oil spills in the Niger Delta have been a regular occurrence, and
the resultant environmental degradation of the surrounding
environment has caused significant tension between the people
living in the region and the multinational oil companies operating
there. It is only in the past decade that environmental groups, the
Nigerian federal government, and the foreign oil companies that
extract oil in the Niger Delta have begun to take steps to mitigate
the damage. Although the situation is improving with more
stringent environmental regulations for the oil industry, marine
pollution is still a serious problem
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