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 Oil spills: Environmentalists, regulators visit Bayelsa impacted Communities

Oil spills: Environmentalists, regulators visit Bayelsa impacted Communities

THE NATION

Bayelsa State government officials, regulatory agencies, environmentalists and representatives of impacted communities have begun preliminary investigations into the January 16, 2021 oil leak near Funiwa offshore facilities in Koluama with their visits.

Recall that fishermen around the Atlantic Ocean coastline had on January 17 sighted and reported an oil leak suspected to be from the Funiwa fields in Koluama, Southern Ijaw Local Government Area of Bayelsa State following the leakage of the previous day.

However, the operators of the nearby Funiwa field denied responsibility for the leakage.
Chevron, First Exploration and Production (First E& P) and Conoil Producing Limited have operations near the spills’ location.

An environmentalist and Head of Field Operations, Environmental Right Action, Mr Alagoa Morris, who was on the entourage, explained that the visit was not the statutory Joint Investigative Visit (JIV) that usually follows a spill.

Morris said that the trip could not be a JIV as none of the oil companies operating in the area was represented, adding that it was a fact-finding mission to assess the level of impact on the people and environment.

“The visit was an assessment trip to see things and suggest the way forward given the fact that no oil company has owned up. It cannot be a JIV because no oil company was represented so we shall submit an interim report to guide further action,” Morris said.

Also, Mr Kiwei Emmanuel, Youths President of Koluama 1, one of the worst-hit areas by the spill, said that the team was made up of officials of Bayelsa Ministries of Environment, Mineral Resources as well as Senior Special Assistant to Bayelsa Governor on Oil and Gas.

According to him, the regulators, Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) and National Oil Spills Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA) took samples from the sediments at the coastline for laboratory tests to trace the source of pollution.

Emmanuel said that members of the team also saw heaps of fishing nets, fishing gear and accessories destroyed by the oil leak and traced the spread of the crude along the coast into the creeks and mangrove vegetation.

It was gathered that the National Oil Spills Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA) had summoned all the oil firms operating in the shallow waters near Koluama in Bayelsa in a bid to identify the source of the leaks which had polluted the area.

Director-General, NOSDRA, Mr Musa Idris, had said in a telephone interview that the spill regulatory agency would dispatch its officials to the incident site.

Efforts to speak with Bayelsa Commissioner for the Environment, Mr Isemea Gbarambiri, on why the oil firms operating in the area were not on the trip and what the state government had done to cushion the effect of the incident on the predominantly fishing residents were unsuccessful.

Several telephone calls to his mobile phone were unanswered and he has yet to reply to a text message requesting a response.

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