Nigerian agency ‘failed completely’ to tidy up oil damage despite financing, leaked files declare
As it passed above the Niger Delta in 2021, a satellite took an image. It showed acres of land, scraped bare. The site, outside the city of Port Harcourt, was on a cleanup list kept by the United Nations surroundings Programme, supposed to be restored to green farmland as the Delta was before thousands of oil spills turned it into a byword for pollution. Instead the land was left a sandy “moonscape” unusable for farming, according to U.N. documents.
That failed cleanup was not an exception, records obtained by The Associated Press display. Previously unreported investigations, emails, letters to Nigerian ministers and minutes from meetings make obvious that elder U.N. officials were increasingly concerned that the Nigerian agency in expense of cleaning up crude oil spills has been a “total setback.”
The agency, known as Hyprep, selected cleanup contractors who had no relevant encounter, according to a U.N. review. It sent soil samples to laboratories that didn’t have the equipment for tests they claimed to perform. Auditors were physically blocked from making sure work had been completed.
A former Nigerian minister of the surroundings told the AP that the majority of cleanup companies are owned by politicians, and minutes display similar views were shared by U.N. officials.
It wasn’t supposed to be this way.
There have been thousands of crude oil spills in the tidal mangroves and farmlands of the Niger Delta since oil drilling and production began in the 1950s. Reports and studies document what is widely known here: People often wash, drink, fish and cook in contaminated water.
Spills still occur frequently. The Ogboinbiri throng in Bayelsa state suffered its fourth spill in three months in November, harming farm fields, streams and the fish people depend on.
“We bought the land in 2023; we have not harvested anything from the farmland; both the profits, our gain, everything is gone,” said Timipre Bridget, a farmer in the throng. “No way to survive with our children again.”
Many of the spills are caused by lawbreakers illegally tapping into pipelines to siphon off crude oil they procedure into gasoline in makeshift refineries.
After a major U.N. survey of spills more than a decade ago, oil companies agreed to make a $1 billion cleanup startup apportionment for the worst affected area, Ogoniland, and Shell, the largest private oil and gas corporation in the country, contributed $300 million. The Nigerian government handled the funds and the U.N. was relegated to an advisory role.
To oversee the work, the government created the Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation assignment, or Hyprep. It first addressed sites that were supposed to be straightforward to tidy, like the one outside Port Harcourt. Then it would shift on to complicated ones, where oil had sunk more deeply into the ground.
But a confidential investigation by U.N. scientists last year found the site outside Port Harcourt was left with a “complete absence of topsoil” and almost seven times more petroleum in the subsoil than Nigerian health limits.
The corporation that performed that work has since had its agreement revoked, Nenibarini Zabbey, the current director of Hyprep, who took over last year, told the AP.
The head of operations when the agreement was awarded, Philip Shekwolo, called allegations in the U.N. documents “baseless, mischievous and cheap blackmail.”
Shekwolo, who used to head up oil spill remediation for Shell, said by email he knows more about tackling pollution than any U.N. specialist and insists the cleanup has been successful.
But the documents display U.N. officials raising the alarm about Hyprep with Nigerian officials since 2021, when Shekwolo was acting chief.
A January 2022 U.N. review found that of 41 contractors allowed to tidy up spill sites, 21 had no relevant encounter. Not one was judged competent enough to handle more polluted sites.
They include Nigerian construction companies and general merchants. The websites of two construction firms, for example, Jukok International and Ministaco Nigeria, make no mention of pollution cleanups.
In the minutes of a conference with U.N. officials and Shell, Hyprep’s own chief of communications, Joseph Kpobari, is shown to have said impoverished cleanups happen because his agency hired incompetent companies. The U.N. delegation warned that despite their inadequate work, these companies were being rewarded with contracts for tougher sites.
Zabbey denied in an email this admission took place. The cleanup of the straightforward sites was not a setback, he insisted, because 16 out of 20 had now been certified as tidy by Nigerian regulators and many returned to communities. Hyprep always complied with guidelines when issuing contracts, Zabbey said, and their monitors were U.N.-trained.
Two sources close to the cleanup efforts in the Delta, speaking anonymously for terror of deficit of business or employment, said test results held up by Hyprep as proof of cleanup could not have been real because when officials visited the laboratories, they found they did not have the equipment to perform those tests.
In a note to its customers, one laboratory in the U.K. frequently used by Hyprep acknowledged its tests for most of 2022 were flawed and unreliable. The U.K. laboratory accreditation service confirmed the lab’s authorization to carry out the tests was suspended twice.
Zabbey defended the cleanup agency in a statement to the AP, saying it monitors contractors more closely now. Labs adhere to Nigerian and U.N. recommendations and are frequently checked, he said, and the U.N. could have trained local lab staff if it chose to.
The U.N. cited another issue — contractors were allowed to assess pollution levels at their sites. No government agency was setting a baseline for what needed to be cleaned up at oil-damaged sites. This meant companies were monitoring their own advancement, effectively handed a “blank check,” U.N. elder assignment Advisor Iyenemi Kakulu is recorded as having said in minutes of a conference in June of last year between the U.N., Hyprep and Shell.
The U.N. warned the Nigerian government in an assessment in 2021 that spending at the cleanup agency was not being tracked. Internal auditors were viewed as “the foe” and “demonized for doing their job.” Shekwolo’s predecessor as head of Hyprep blocked recent monetary controls and “physically prevented” auditors from seeing if work had been performed properly before paying contractors, according to the U.N. assessment.
Zabbey said this too, has changed since that assessment: The audit throng is now valued, he said, and accounts are now audited annually, although he provided only one audit cover note. In it, the monetary reporting firm asked what steps had been taken to “correct the identified weaknesses.”
Shekwolo referred the AP to the office of Nigeria’s president, which did not respond to a request to display how funds are being spent. surroundings Minister Iziaq Salako’s office declined an interview.
Sharon Ikeazor was born in Nigeria, educated in Britain, and spent decades as a lawyer before entering politics. In 2019, she was appointed surroundings minister of Nigeria. She was well aware of Hyprep’s alleged failings and determined to address them.
“There wasn’t any proper remediation being done,” she told the AP in a phone interview. “The companies had no competence whatsoever.”
In February 2022, she received a note from elder U.N. official Muralee Thummarukudy, with what experts declare is unusually powerful language in diplomacy. It warned of “significant opportunities for malpractice within the agreement award procedure,” in the Nigerian oil cleanup work. Ikeazor removed Shekwolo as acting chief of Hyprep the next month, explaining that she believed he was too close to the politicians.
The “majority” of cleanup companies were owned by politicians, she said. The few competent companies “wouldn’t get the large jobs.”
One of Shekwolo’s roles, Ikeazor said, was to deem who was competent for agreement awards. Ikeazor said Shekwolo’s former employer Shell and the U.N. warned her about him, something Shekwolo says he was unaware of.
When she hired a recent chief of Hyprep was, she had him review every suspect agreement awarded over the years and investigate the cleanup companies.
“That sent shockwaves around the political class,” said Ikeazor. “They all had interests.”
“That was when the battle started,” she said.
It was a short battle, and she lost. She was replaced as surroundings minister and Shekwolo was rehired. He had been gone for two months.
Shekwolo says the only politicians he was close to were the two surroundings ministers he served under. He was never given a rationale for his removal, he said, and suggested Ikeazor simply didn’t like him.
Last year, the U.N. surroundings Programme broke ties with the Nigerian oil spill agency, explaining its five-year consultancy was over. The last back ended in June.
Ikeazor said the real rationale U.N. pulled out was frustration over corruption. The two sources close to the assignment concurred the U.N. left because it couldn’t continue to be associated with the Nigerian cleanup organization.
Zabbey responded that he believes the U.N. merely changed its goals and moved on.
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Associated Press reporter Taiwo Adebayo contributed from Abuja, Nigeria.
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