Connect with us

Oil & Energy

Energy Conservation: Lessons For Posterity

Published

on

Kozo community, a coastal habitation in Bodo,  Gokana  Local Government Area of Rivers State once hosted over four thousand inhabitants that earned their livelihood, predominantly from the natural  treasures of the area.
The teeming inhabitants of the coastal settlement were mostly fishermen and women who eased out their daily existence on the natural ambience of the area which satisfied their craving for game and stalking for daily survival.
This was indeed their most cherished possession and inheritance.
Today the once thriving rural economy is extinct. The barest shred of human existence is gone.
The inhabitants have been rendered homeless and have migrated out of their abode in search of a new home and alternative means of livelihood.
They are the victims of reckless oil exploratory activities which has brought colossal damages to the natural environment, stripping the people of their means of livelihood.
A visit to Kozo community recently revealed the extent of devastation of the natural environment. There was visibly no sign of life but desolation.
The sprawling creeks where the fishermen launched their daily expedition was laden with thick layers of spilled crude oil.
The mangrove reserve that harboured the sea shell food was completely burnt off.
A former resident of the displaced community, Mr Peter Ledisi, who now lives in Bodo Town, in Gokana Local Government Area, told The Tide correspondent that he was born in Kozo community and grew up in the area until the sad experience of oil pollution displaced his family.
Ledisi, who is now 37 years old said his parents took care of him and his siblings through the proceeds of fishing  but today life has become so difficult for the family as their means of livelihood is destroyed.
“That place you see (Kozo community) used to be our home for the past decades, we grew up there and pursued life with happiness, we were contented with what the simple life we lived, we enjoyed fishing and swimming in the clean rivers because it provided fun for us and filled our desire and passion for game and we also made money from it. To we have been displaced out of our home by oil pollution and life is so difficult,” he lamented.
Another displaced inhabitant of the community, Miss Tornubari Sakpugi told The Tide correspondent in an interview that life has become so unbearable for her as a result of the pollution and eventual displacement of the natural environment.
Sakpugi, a fish seller said her bussines has collapsed as her customers can no longer go on their fishing expedition due to the pollution of the rivers.
“I used to buy fish in larger quantities from fisherman and sell, the bussines helped me a lot and I was able to provide for my needs, but today things are very hard for me, it’s a very sad experience for you to move out of a place where you earn a living  without any alternative means of livelihood, we want the polluted area to be cleaned so that we can return home. They are talking about UNEP report, but we have not seen any development, the damage is too much,” she declared.
The story of Kozo community is similar to that of other oil bearing communities in the Niger Delta. These communities suffer wanton depletion of their natural environment and resources through oil spillages and gas flaring.
The land, plants, animals and marine life are badly impacted through the resultant pollution, making life meaningless for the inhabitants of the affected areas.
Fishermen at some major water fronts in Port Harcourt also have similar story to tell. Iyalla, a fisherman who reside at lbadan water front in Part Harcourt, told The Tide correspondent during a visit to the area that fishing bussines is no longer lucrative compared to the past.
Asked the reason for the decline in the bussines, Iyalla, a middle aged man said the river has been contaminated with spilled crude from oil bunkering.
He said years back fishermen did not have to go to the deep sea before they were rewarded with good catch.
But today, he said they have to paddle hard and wander up sea amidst wreckages of boats and badges and sometimes return home with little or no catch.
He explained that illegal refining of crude oil and activities smear the rivers with wasted crude, making bloated dead fishes to float on  top of the rivers.He added that;  “ The fish we catch these days are tasteless because of the pollution of the rivers. “
Experts have however identified this trend as an indication of the total lost of aquatic life which is the hallmark of coastal habitation.
A Chemical Engineer, Prof Ujile Uwajiogag said the burning of our natural reserves, especially through the “cooking of oil” put.  the lives of the present generation and that of posterity at risk.
Speaking in an interview with The Tide, the  Professor of Chemical Engineering at the  Rivers State University, disclosed that it takes over 50 years for a polluted site to regain it lost reserves.
Using the experience of the Nigeria Civil war as an example, the University teacher said, the bombing of oil facilities in the Niger Delta during the war left in its wake devastating effects on the creeks and coastal channels of the  region.
He said after 50 years of the war, nothing has grown in the impacted sites rather the flourishing mangrove is replaced by nypa palm that has no economic value.
“The indulgence of criminal elements in the cooking of crude oil is very destructive to our ecosystem and also has health implications. Research has shown that illegal bunkering will increase cancer in the Niger Delta. What is the sense in taking a few components of products and wasting the rest on aquatic life? Our environment was preserved and bequeathed to is by our forebears, but today we are destroying it. Uninitiated  to the wonders and possibilities western technologies, they lived longer and happier than the  present generation, the  average life span of a Niger Delta person is 50 years, this is indeed pathetic. “
In the views of an Environmental Sociologist, Dr Steve Wodu, said, human insensitivity to the protection of his natural environment has worsened the  problems of environmental degradation. To him, some of man’s actions are tempered insanely on ignorance or delibrate obstinacy billed to ruin his very existence;
“Otherwise what could be the rationale behind the indiscriminate burning of natural energy reserves or bad sanitation habits and waste disposal” he asked rhetorically.
The Environmental Sociologist pointed out that; “a new era of posterity can only blossom when we begin to treat our environment with the same sanctity with which we treat our lives.”
The Director Institute of Conflict  and Gender Studies, University of  Port Harcourt, Prof Fidelia Allen also on the need for conservation of natural energy reserves without gross abuses.
Prof Allen, who is an environmental crusader, said a blighted environment  portrayed the nakedness of our civilisation and human orgy for self destruction.
He advocated for effective environmental awareness campaign to curtail;  “the ethical violation of environmental rights and enhance a healthy and sustainable environment in the Niger Delta”
He added that to achieve a better objective in environmental management, “the exploitation of resources, the direction of investment, the orientation of technological development and institutional change should be in harmony to enhance both present and future potentials to meet human needs and aspirations.”
The University Don called on multinationals operating in the Niger Delta to carry out their activities with a sense of social responsibility by adopting international best practices and save the Niger Delta environment from further destruction.
He described the Ogoni clean up exercise as critical to the eventual remediation of other impacted sites in the Niger Delta, and called on all affected stakeholders to  expedite action to make the clean up exercise a success.
Also, as part of its advocacy campaign for better environmental management in the Niger Delta, the Nigeria Association of Women Journalists(NAWOJ) recently expressed its deepest concern over depletion of the Niger Delta energy reserves.
Speaking at a public function organized by the Rivers State Chapter of NAWOJ, the State Chairperson, Mrs Lilian Okonkwo said reckless exploratory activities in the Niger Delta has exposed the inhabitants, especially women to complex environmental and health issues for which they are not equipped to contend with.
She called on the federal government to; “ensure speedy clean up of the Niger Delta as well as implement existing environmental legislation and  plan  for a low carbon energy system and economy”
The NAWOJ boss also emphasised the need to review obsolete laws in the Nigeria oil and gas sector to address issues of gas flaring and indiscriminate dumping of industrial wastes prevalent in the Niger Delta.
Realising the importance of the natural environment, the American  novelist, Henry Beston warned; “ do not do  dishonour to the earth lest you dishonour the spirt of man.”
The implication of Beston’s warning is that by destroying his natural environment,  man sets  to consume himself in an inescapable catastrophe, the possibilities of which are too obvious to be ignored.
However, the production and consumption of energy is today a major indicator of the modernisation process.
Our modern civilization is fueled by energy sector, particularly oil and gas, and this involves exploratory activities, attendant  pollution problems and significant local and global implications.
It is therefore suicidal to see that the very natural ingredients that nourishes our lives are washed away in the name of technology or industrialization.
It is left for us therefore to heed to  Beston’s warning or perish.

 

 

Taneh Beemene

Continue Reading

Oil & Energy

FG, MEMAN Chart Ways To Safe Petroleum Products Delivery

Published

on

The Federal Government and key Petroleum Products marketers have proposed new measures to help curb rising cases of road accidents involving petrol tankers.
This followed recent incidents of road accidents resulting in cremation of hundreds of lives and causing extensive damage to properties.
Speaking at the Discourse organised by Mejor Energy Marketers Association of Nigeria (MEMAN) in Lagos, Thursday, with the theme “Improving Safe Transportation of Petroleum Products”, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Oil), Heineken Lokpobiri, noted with dismay the number of casualties the country recorded recently due to tanker accidents.
Lokpobiri stressed the need for an  enhanced training for tanker drivers, installation of detection leak devices  as well as other safety systems that can assist drivers.
He called on Marketers and Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) to strengthen collaboration with stakeholders, especially in the training of tanker drivers.
On his part, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Gas), Ekperikpo Ekpo, reaffirmed government’s commitment to providing enabling environment to ensure safety of petroleum products transportation.
Ekpo, who was represented by Engr. Abel, said consideration should be given to more safety means of transporting products like the pipelines and railway line.
He stressed the need for better training for drivers and implementation of safety regulations within the industry.
Earlier, Chairman, MEMAN, Huub Stokman, said the Association has elaborate training manual for members truck drivers.
Stokman insisted that more training programmes and consistent adherence to safety measures would help to curb road accidents involving tanker drivers.
Also speaking, the National President, Nigerian Association of Raod Transport Owners (NARTO), Yusuf Lawal Othman, called for support.

Continue Reading

Oil & Energy

Benue To Pioneer Gas Production From Coal – NGEP 

Published

on

The Chairman, National Gas Expansion Programme (NGEP), Prof. Mohammed Ibrahim, has said that the production of coal bed methane, an unconventional form of natural gas extracted from coal, is set to begin in Benue State.
Prof. Ibrahim staed this while addressing newsmen at the end of a joint meeting of the National and State gas expansion committees with Benue State Governor, Hyacinth Alia.
He said the Federal Government is committed to expanding gas availability in Nigeria for domestic use and mobility.
Ibrahim added that extracting gas from unconventional coal sources rather than traditional hydrocarbon reserves is a way to boost gas availability.
“Essentially there are four areas of implementation that the committee has identified. One is to pioneer the production of gas from what you call coal bed methane, which means that Benue is going to pioneer in the country the production of gas not from conventional hydrocarbon, but from non-conventional coal just so that the nation will have an alternative source to gas availability”, he said.
Also speaking, the Chairman, Benue State Gas Expansion Programme, Dr. Emmanuel Chenge, said the gas expansion initiative would contribute to the economic transformation of Benue State.
“The good news is that Benue is set to join the league of gas-producing states and if we are conversant with what being a member of the gas-producing state is, it shows that Benue State will start getting derivatives from that sector of the economy”, Dr Chenge stated.
The National Gas Expansion Programme (NGEP) was established to boost the exploration and utilisation of gas in Nigeria and make Nigeria a gas-based industrial nation by increasing the use of gas for transportation, cooking, and industrialization.

Continue Reading

Oil & Energy

NNPC Debunks Explosion Claim In Warri Refinery

Published

on

The Nigeria National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) has said there was no explosion at the newly refurbished Warri Refining and Petrochemical Company (WRPC).
NNPCL’s Chief Corporate Communications Officer, Olufemi Soneye, made this known in a statement issued on Friday night.
Soneye said reports claiming that there was an explosion at the Warri refinery were false and should be ignored and disregarded by the public.
According to him, the refinery was undergoing routine maintenance.
His statement read, “NNPC Ltd. wishes to clarify that there was no explosion at the Warri Refining and Petrochemical Company (WRPC). Any reports suggesting otherwise are completely false.
“On January 25, 2025, operations at WRPC Area 1 were intentionally curtailed to carry out necessary intervention works on select equipment, including field instruments that were impacting sustainable and steady operations.
“These intervention works are essential to ensure the production of on-specification finished and intermediate products, particularly Automotive Gas Oil (AGO) and Kerosene (Kero).
“The routine maintenance is progressing as planned, and Area 1 will be back in operation within the next few days.
“Despite ongoing interventions, over the past 11 days, AGO loading has been maintained at an average of eight trucks per day, with a sufficient supply available to sustain ongoing truck load-out operations”.
Soneye added that the NNPCL was committed to ensuring an uninterrupted supply of petroleum products from the refinery.
He said the company “appreciates the patience and cooperation of all stakeholders as it completes these essential maintenance activities”.

Continue Reading

Trending