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Archive for April, 2011

Shell breaks promises again and increases gas flaring in Nigeria

Posted by jinn on 26th April 2011

Shell breaks promises again and increases gas flaring in Nigeria, Environmental Rights Action (Friends of the Earth Nigeria) Press Release, posted Thursday, 21 April 2011 11:31


Despite promises made by Shell since the 1990s to stop flaring the ‘associated’ gas released in oil production in Nigeria, the oil concern flared more gas in 2010 than it did in 2009 in the West African country. This has come to light from the sustainability report brought out by Shell last week.

According to its own figures, Shell flared over 30 per cent more gas in 2010 than in 2009. This, according to them, was mainly due to increased production in Nigeria and new activities in Iraq.

Nnimmo Bassey, director of Friends of the Earth Nigeria and chair of Friends of the Earth International, said:

“Shell has been flaring gas in Nigeria since 1958. Though gas flaring has been illegal, to them it is a standard industry practice. They continue to reap obscene profits from the oil fields of Nigeria at the expense of the lives and the livelihoods of the poor people. While they speak from both sides of their mouths we see that they are increasing the volume of gas flared and are thus intensifying their poisoning of the environment and the peoples of the region. They engage in this unacceptable and illegal activity just for the maximisation of their profits. Gas flaring is an act of ecocide and everyone should join us to demand that Shell stops this madness.”

Gas flaring has serious negative impacts on the health of local residents and on the environment – while the flared gas could simply be captured and used as natural gas, to the benefit of local people who often do not even have electricity in their houses.  In 2007 Shell promised that it would stop flaring gas in Nigeria in 2009.

The meaningless promises and violations of environmental and human rights by the Dutch oil giant are a concern of the Dutch Parliament as well. In January of this year, it held a hearing on the conduct of Shell in Nigeria, were parliamentarians criticised the needless practice of flaring.

Shell’s sustainability report is available here.
An overview of the promises made by Shell to stop flaring gas is available here.

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SEC delays implementation of new law designed to shed light on oil companies overseas dealings

Posted by jinn on 21st April 2011

Libya: The Resource Curse Strikes Again, by Sen. Dick Lugar and Sen. Benjamin L. Cardin, Huffington Post,  posted: 04/20/11 03:44 PM ET

The civil war in Libya, and the consequent spike in world oil prices, has cast a bright light on three important truths about global energy: first, Europe and the United States are increasingly dependent on oil imports from unstable regions; second, in many oil-rich countries, corruption and mismanagement of petroleum revenues can leave the population impoverished, as is so evident in the pictures from Libya; and third, oil revenues can embolden despots and lead to instability, which directly affects the national interests and economic growth of oil importing countries.

In recent years poor, unstable countries have become a major source of minerals and energy for the developed and developing worlds alike. Sub-Saharan African oil exports, for instance, have grown by 40 percent since 2000, and Europe now gets more than 20 percent of its imported oil from Africa. The U.S. imports more oil from Africa than it does from the entire Persian Gulf.

This has spurred strong economic growth in some developing nations, but often the growth has been uneven, with many resource-rich countries succumbing to corruption and political instability. Too often, oil money intended for a nation’s poor ends up lining the pockets of the rich or is squandered on showcase projects instead of productive investments.

This phenomenon, known as the “resource curse,” affects the consuming as well as producing countries. It exacerbates poverty which can be a seedbed for terrorism. It empowers autocrats and dictators like Gaddafi, and, as we are painfully experiencing now, it can roil world petroleum markets. Increasingly, the economic and energy security of Europe and the United States is tied to stability and sustainable growth in developing regions.

Recognizing this link, the United States last year took an important step toward combating the resource curse with the enactment of new disclosure requirements for oil, gas and mineral companies.

The legislation we authored, part of the financial reform bill, requires all petroleum producers and mining companies listed on U.S. stock exchanges to report their payments to each of the countries where operate. This includes a number of large foreign firms with securities listed in the United States.

This simple measure, supported by investors such as Calvert Investments and civil society groups such as Oxfam, Global Witness, and Bono’s ONE campaign, imposes little burden on the petroleum and mining industries, but will over time have profound and far-reaching implications for transparency and accountability.

In recent years, a number of international actors — including responsible oil and mining companies and citizens groups — have begun to tackle the resource curse problem by calling for greater disclosure and accountability of revenues through voluntary participation in the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative. An Oslo-based international organization, EITI requires member countries and the companies they host to publish payments and receipts, and to have the results audited and certified.

The voluntary EITI approach has been enthusiastically endorsed by the World Bank, the IMF, and the G-20 group of major economies. Our legislation will help bring transparency to countries that remain outside the EITI system. As Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told Congress last month, such legislation can have “a very powerful effect, not just improving transparency about the resources these countries have available, but in improving the odds that they’re used for the benefit of their people.”

The next step is to make such U.S.-style disclosure the global norm. This would add more firms to the list of major U.S., European, Latin American and Asian companies already covered, and add muscle to the worldwide fight against corruption.

We therefore applaud the recent announcement by the British, French and German governments that they will support mandatory extractives disclosure at the European Union level. Officials at the European Commission are working to prepare the necessary legislation, but are eager to see the final rules from our own Securities and Exchange Commission to avoid creating incompatible regulations.

Unfortunately, the SEC has already missed the law’s April 15 deadline to publish the final regulations, and has indicated they may not be ready until December. Such a delay is cause for concern, and we have asked the agency for a precise timetable.

Europe’s support also reflects the growing consensus that transparency of payments to countries is materially important for investors. Last year, the Hong Kong Stock Exchange began obliging new applicant mineral companies to disclose payments to host-country governments, and the International Accounting Standards Board is considering making such reporting standard.

When energy supplies are endangered by political manipulation, terrorism, or depleted resources, American national interests are threatened, as are Europe’s. Our energy challenges are shared among nations, and their resolution requires both domestic action and international cooperation. A concerted global effort, led by Europe and America, to end the secrecy that often surrounds energy development is a good place to start.

Senator Richard G. Lugar (R-Indiana) is the Ranking Member of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and Senator Benjamin L. Cardin (D-Maryland) is the Chairman of the U.S. Helsinki Commission.

Follow Sen. Dick Lugar on Twitter: www.twitter.com/senatorlugar

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Restraint urged amid Nigeria election unrest

Posted by jinn on 19th April 2011

Restraint urged amid Nigeria election unrest, Amnesty International

18 April 2011

The Nigerian military must not use excessive force to quell riots and demonstrations taking place around the imminent announcement of presidential election results, Amnesty International said today.

“We are extremely concerned about the escalation of violence in northern and central Nigeria by protestors and urge the Nigerian authorities to ensure that excessive force is not used against protesters,” said Tawanda Hondora, Amnesty International’s deputy director for Africa.

“Political leaders on all sides must act responsibly and tell their supporters to stop all acts of violence and human rights abuses.”

Rioting and violent attacks have been reported in the north and centre of the country, including Kaduna, Kano, Gombe, Adamawa, Bauchi and Plateau states and the Federal Capital Territory.

“The security forces’ response to this unrest must not lead to further human rights violations. The police and military must respect human life and use proportionate means to police demonstrations,” said Tawanda Hondora.

Presidential poll results show incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan is set to win.

Amnesty International issued a report last month highlighting how hundreds of people have been killed in politically-motivated, communal and sectarian violence across Nigeria ahead of presidential and parliamentary polls.

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Protests in North as Nigerian Incumbent Leads in Vote Tally

Posted by jinn on 18th April 2011

Protests in North as Nigerian Incumbent Leads in Vote Tally, by ADAM NOSSITER, The New York Times, published: April 18, 2011

Amid violent protests from his main opponent’s supporters, the incumbent Nigerian president, Goodluck Jonathan, appeared set for an easy election victory after a weekend poll judged by analysts to be perhaps the country’s fairest ever.

Battles broke out between protesters and soldiers in Nigeria's northern city of Kano on Monday as President Goodluck Jonathan appeared headed for an election victory. Image credit: Seyllou Diallo/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Mr. Jonathan, a mild-mannered former vice president and zoologist, was leading his opponent, the former military ruler Muhammadu Buhari, by over 10 million votes, or around two-to-one, according to a leading civil-society group which based its analysis on results from the country’s top electoral body.

While analysts applauded an absence of the kind of fraud, ballot stealing and violence that have plagued elections since the country’s return to democracy 12 years ago, Saturday’s vote was darkened by what has happened since.

In the northern city of Kano, thousands of youths carrying blades, daggers and sticks marched through the streets on Monday, setting bonfires, tearing down billboards belonging to Mr. Jonathan’s party and burning the house of the former speaker of the lower house of the Nigerian parliament. They shouted, “Only Buhari!”

Mr. Buhari, whose mid-1980s military regime was noted for its stern repression of dissent, was refusing to accept the result Monday afternoon, and his supporters had taken to the streets in northern Nigerian cities to protest, set alight tires and burn down buildings and houses linked to Mr. Jonathan’s ruling People’s Democratic Party.

The results split along regional, religious and ethnic lines, with Mr. Jonathan scoring big totals in the largely Christian south and southwest, and Mr. Buhari leading in the Muslim north of Nigeria.

In Kaduna, there were numerous deaths, and mosques, churches and houses of PDP members were burned down. A police station was also attacked, said Shehu Sani, a leading Nigerian human rights activist who lives there and whose organization has representatives all over the city. He said the electoral commission headquarters in Kaduna had also been burned down by a pro-Buhari mob.

“They are moving street by street, house by house, looking for ruling party members,” Mr. Sani said. “I am holed up in the house here. I can see the smoke, and I can hear the gunfire. There is a state of confusion everywhere,” Mr. Sani said.
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WikiLeaks cable: Politicians, military – not militants – behind most Nigeria oil thefts

Posted by jinn on 14th April 2011

WikiLeaks cable: Politicians, military – not militants – behind most Nigeria oil thefts — By: Jon Gambrell, The Associated Press, The Canadian Press – ONLINE EDITION, 04/11/2011

LAGOS, Nigeria – Politicians and military leaders — not militants — are responsible for the majority of oil thefts in Nigeria’s crude-rich southern delta, according to a U.S. diplomatic cable quoting a Nigerian official and released by WikiLeaks.

bunkering

Smoke rises from an illegal crude oil refinery site in an Ogoni community in Nigeria's Niger Delta July 7, 2010. REUTERS/Akintunde Akinleye

A member of a government panel on troubles in nation’s Niger Delta implicated Shehu Musa Yar’Adua, a general whose brother became president, and former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar as being the biggest forces behind the thefts, the cable claims. Those thefts also fuel arms sales to the restive region while causing environmental damage and cutting production in a nation crucial to U.S. oil supplies.

“It is in the interests of these people to make it appear that the Niger Delta problem is intractable,” the Jan. 2009 cable quotes panel member Tony Uranta as saying. “As a result, they prop up the militants, including some who have an ideological basis for their actions.”

Abubakar, who ran unsuccessfully this year as a presidential candidate in a ruling-party primary, denied the allegations Monday.

“Atiku said this is a recycled old tale told again and again by business rivals unable to match the business success,” a statement issued to The Associated Press read. “Atiku is unaware of any links that the late General Yar’Adua had with bunkering and he believed absolutely that this is false accusation.”

Yar’Adua, who served as second-in-command of the country’s military government in the late 1970s, died in prison in 1997 after being arrested for criticizing military dictator Sani Abacha. His brother, the President Umaru Yar’Adua, died in May 2010.

The diplomatic cable quotes Uranta as blaming “no more than 15 per cent” of oil thefts on militants operating in the delta, a tropical maze of creeks and waterways about the size of South Carolina. Instead, politicians, retired admirals and generals and others in the country’s elite profit from the thefts. Typically, thieves solder or cut into oil pipelines running through the mangrove swamps of the delta. Some refine the crude into kerosene or diesel in crude refineries, while other oil sails out to foreign ports for sale.

“Uranta claimed that the late Shehu Musa Yar’Adua, the president’s brother, had been the ‘biggest’ bunkerer,” the cable reads, using the local term for oil thieves. “When he died, his holdings were taken over by his brothers but managed on their behalf by his close personal friend, former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar.”

The large-scale theft, compounded by anger over unceasing poverty and pollution in the delta despite 50 years of oil production, led to an uprising of militants in the region beginning in 2006. Military-grade weapons funneled into the region, turning gunrunners into militant leaders who espoused political ideas — but kept their eyes on the profits from stolen oil.

While much of the violence calmed after a 2009 government-sponsored amnesty program, oil thefts continue unabated in the region. Uranta also blamed retired military leaders for taking part in both oil theft and the arms trade. A February 2009 cable quoting Dimieri von Kemedi, a youth leader in the delta, also blames soldiers on the ground in the region.

“The military wants to remain in the Niger Delta because they profit enormously from money charged for escorting illegally bunkered crude and from money extorted in the name of providing security on the roads,” the cable reads.

“The … foot soldiers are not the only ones who profit; the commissioner of police, the director of the State Security Service (and) the military all line up at the governor’s door asking for ‘favours,’ Kemedi said.”

The cables also suggested militants received foreign military training and that the Israeli military equipped and trained some government soldiers.

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Next Problem for Oil: Nigerian Elections

Posted by jinn on 5th April 2011

Next Problem for Oil: Nigerian Elections, by JERRY A. DICOLO, The Wall Street Journal, APRIL 4, 2011

NEW YORK—Elections in Nigeria this month are sneaking up on the oil market.
[NIGERIA]

The civil war raging in Libya and unrest across the Middle East pushed oil to triple digits in recent weeks. But the threat of disruptions to Nigeria’s 2.2 million barrels a day of crude output has barely factored into prices, despite a history of attacks on the West African nation’s oil infrastructure during election season.

Failed Parliamentary Elections Nigeria, Security men awaiting deployment as at 10 am in Eket, April 2 2011, photo credit: Sahara Reporters

“It’s not on the market’s radar,” said Barclays Capital oil analyst Amrita Sen.

Nigerians will vote for their president, representatives to their national assembly and governors of the country’s 36 states over the next four weeks, but there have already been problems. On Saturday, Nigeria postponed parliamentary elections due to failed logistics, and on Sunday pushed back all votes one week.

Police, military and other security agencies are being deployed nationwide after political rallies turned violent over the past month. And rebel groups have already acted.

More than 10% of U.S. oil imports come from Nigeria, according to Department of Energy, so any supply drops would be taxing for U.S. energy consumers data. In January, the U.S. imported 968,000 barrels a day from the country, making Nigeria the fourth-largest oil supplier after Canada, Saudi Arabia and Mexico.

Prices rose to 2½-year highs just below $108 a barrel Friday, following a 17% rise in oil prices in the first quarter amid worries about unrest in the Middle East.

In Nigeria, a blast on March 16 rocked an oil facility run by the subsidiary of Italian energy major Eni SpA. The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, a militant umbrella group, claimed responsibility and pledged
further action.

The attack is a reminder of the supply disruptions that came with Nigeria’s 2007 elections. Attacks on the country’s oil infrastructure stopped the flow of as much as one million barrels a day of oil, forcing customers to scramble for supplies and leaving oil consumers wary of buying Nigerian crude for fear of future disruptions.

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