Odahiekwu Ogunde
Bayelsa State Governor, Senator Douye Diri, on Friday, lamented what he described as the “deliberate despoliation of the Niger Delta environment” by oil companies operating in the region.
Diri expressed displeasure over the decade-long environmental injustice in the region, saying the situation was made worse by the unfair derivation sharing formula of the Federal Government to the oil-producing states.
He said the sharing formula did not reflect the sufferings of the people and the damage to the region’s environment.
The governor made this known during an online global conference entitled, “The Impact of the Coronavirus Pandemic on the Flora and Fauna of the Niger Delta” to mark this year’s World Environment Day.
The conference, hosted by the Bayelsa State Ministry of the Environment, had discussants at the same time in Yenagoa, Benin and Abuja.
In a statement, his Acting Chief Press Secretary, Mr Daniel Alabrah, quoted the governor, who was represented by his deputy, Senator Lawrence Ewhrudjakpo, as saying that the region had continued to be degraded by activities of multinational oil companies.
He said the Niger Delta people had been short-changed from the proceeds of its rich and vast resources not only by the Federal Government but also by the oil firms.
Diri said, “When other countries were recording reduction in oil activities, green house emission, pollution and gas flaring, the reverse was the case in Bayelsa State as it recorded death of a lot of fishes during this coronavirus period in Akassa, Koluama, Agge and other states in the region.
“We are calling for joint action from governors of the Niger Delta states in the struggle for a cleaner environment. Our administration has resolved to take the issues of the environment as key in the state.”
He advocated the planting of trees by all Bayelsans, which, according to him, would allow the flow of oxygen across the streets and towns of the state.
He also called on the people not to contribute to the environmental genocide in their localities but to shun illegal refining of crude products and embrace intellectual approach in the agitation for the clean-up of the region.
Speaking earlier, Chairman on the occasion, the Ibenanaowei of Ekpetiama Kingdom, King Bubaraye Dakolo, Agada IV, said according to research, 100 million barrels of crude oil and about 20 trillion standard cubic feet of gas were being released into the aquatic environment of the Niger Delta.
Dakolo called on governments across the board to do more than engage in rhetoric on matters of the environment and frontally drive all genuine efforts for the restoration and restitution of the region’s flora and fauna.
In his lecture, Dr Pereowei Subai, a senior lecturer with the state-owned Niger Delta University, highlighted the implications of the theme on the environment, and noted that the wealth of the region should not be confined to oil alone but that there should also be investment in agriculture and aquaculture.
Subai proffered short and long term solutions to the environmental challenges of the region, which include increased public awareness and the setting up of environmental litigation at the state level as well as strict liability for pollution damages.
The Chief of Staff, Government House, Yenagoa, Chief Benson Agadaga, in his remarks, suggested that the report and recommendations of the Archbishop of York, Dr. John Sentamu-led Bayelsa Oil and Environmental Degradation Commission on the effects of oil pollution in the Niger Delta be looked into and implemented.
Vice Chancellor of the Bayelsa Medical University, Prof. Ebitimitula Etebu, who was a panelist, advocated that urgent action be taken by the state Ministry of Environment and other relevant agencies to replenish the ongoing deforestation in the Niger Delta as well as establish natural parks as part of the efforts toward sustaining the biodiversity.
In his contribution, arenowned environmental activists, Nnimmo Bassey and Morris Alagoa, posited that the Niger Delta people, whose lifespan has been reduced to 41 years, were made susceptible to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The panelists said Bayelsa was the most polluted state in the Niger Delta arising from daily spillage of crude oil and decades of gas flaring, and called for a full-scale environmental remediation.
Speaking earlier, chairman on the occasion, the Ibenanaowei of Ekpetiama Kingdom, King Bubaraye Dakolo, Agada IV, said according to research, 100 million barrels of crude oil and about 20 trillion standard cubic feet of gas were being released into the aquatic environment of the Niger Delta.
Dakolo called on governments across the board to do more than engage in rhetoric on matters of the environment and frontally drive all genuine efforts for the restoration and restitution of the region’s flora and fauna.
In his lecture, Dr Pereowei Subai, a senior lecturer with the state-owned Niger Delta University, highlighted the implications of the theme on the environment, and noted that the wealth of the region should not be confined to oil alone but that there should also be investment in agriculture and aquaculture.
Subai proffered short and long term solutions to the environmental challenges of the region, which include increased public awareness and the setting up of environmental litigation at the state level as well as strict liability for pollution damages.
The Chief of Staff, Government House, Yenagoa, Chief Benson Agadaga, in his remarks, suggested that the report and recommendations of the Archbishop of York, Dr. John Sentamu-led Bayelsa Oil and Environmental Degradation Commission on the effects of oil pollution in the Niger Delta be looked into and implemented.
Vice Chancellor of the Bayelsa Medical University, Prof. Ebitimitula Etebu, who was a panelist, advocated that urgent action be taken by the state Ministry of Environment and other relevant agencies to replenish the ongoing deforestation in the Niger Delta as well as establish natural parks as part of the efforts toward sustaining the biodiversity.
In his contribution, arenowned environmental activists, Nnimmo Bassey and Morris Alagoa, posited that the Niger Delta people, whose lifespan has been reduced to 41 years, were made susceptible to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The panelists said Bayelsa was the most polluted state in the Niger Delta arising from daily spillage of crude oil and decades of gas flaring, and called for a full-scale environmental remediation.