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Thursday, December 23, 2021

Nembe Oil Spill: Federal agencies, Bayelsa govt clash

While regulatory agencies of the federal government opined that the leak was an act of sabotage, the Bayelsa government is cautioning against hasty conclusions.

• December 23, 2021
Nembe Oil Spill
Oil spillage used to illustrate the story

Representatives of some federal agencies and the Bayelsa State government have differed on the cause of the November 5 oil spill at Oil Mining Lease (OML) 29 at Nembe Bayelsa.

The accident seriously polluted the Santa Barbra River and Nembe Creeks.

While regulatory agencies of the federal government opined that the leak was an act of sabotage by yet-to-be-identified elements, the Bayelsa State government is cautioning against hasty conclusions.

On Wednesday, Joint Investigative Visit (JIV) to ascertain the cause, volume and impacted areas resumed following a visit by the Minister of State for Environment, Sharon Ikeazor.

The JIV is a statutory probe that follows every reported leak incident.

The JIV is usually convened by the operator of the leak facility and it comprises representatives of the oil firm, affected communities, regulators and state ministry of environment.

Representatives of the National Oil Spills Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA) and the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) told newsmen after the visit that they traced the leak to sabotage.

Ismail Baba-Ahmed, NOSDRA’s representative on JIV said based on his experience in fluid mechanics and interactions with well head experts who plugged the leak, only vandalism could have caused the spill.

He said the threading on the wellhead casing from where the valve was removed was not worn out, a development that suggests that the leak was not caused by pressure.

Adetoyibo Adeyemi of NUPRC agreed with NOSDRA that physical examination of the failed well head indicated that the pressure from the oil well was not sufficient enough to blow it.

Enai Reuben, Head of Pollution Control, Bayelsa Ministry of Environment, however, told newsmen that the inspection was inconclusive because the JIV team could not see the exact point of the leak.

Therefore, Mr Reuben said, it would be inaccurate to draw conclusions on the cause of the spill.

“It will be inaccurate to draw conclusions without seeing the leak point.  In an investigation it is called evidence-based conclusion”, he said.

He wondered why the well head could not be preserved for evaluation after the leak was stopped.

The leak which was reported on November 5 was plugged on December 8, while 16,280 barrels of crude and crude sediments were recovered from the incident site. 

(NAN)

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