Court documents revealed by Amnesty International today
expose the fact that Shell has repeatedly made false claims about the
size and impact of two major oil spills at Bodo in Nigeria in an attempt
to minimize its compensation payments. The documents also show that
Shell has known for years that its pipelines in the Niger Delta were old
and faulty.
The potential repercussions are that
hundreds of thousands of people may have been denied or underpaid
compensation based on similar underestimates of other spills.
The
irrefutable evidence that Shell underestimated the Bodo spills emerged
in a UK legal action brought by 15,000 people whose livelihoods were
devastated by oil pollution in 2008. The court action has forced Shell
to finally admit the company has underplayed the true magnitude of at
least two spills and the extent of damage caused.
“Amnesty
International firmly believes Shell knew the Bodo data were wrong. If
it did not it was scandalously negligent – we repeatedly gave them
evidence showing they had dramatically underestimated the spills,” said
Audrey Gaughran, Director for Global Issues at Amnesty International.
“Shell has refused to engage with us and only now that they find themselves in a UK court have they been forced to come clean.”
Shell’s
joint investigation report for the first oil spill in the Bodo area of
the Niger Delta claims only 1,640 barrels of oil were spilt in total.
However, based on an independent assessment published by US firm
Accufacts Inc., Amnesty International calculated the total amount of oil
spilt exceeded 100,000 barrels. Shell denied this and repeatedly
defended its far lower figure.
In the court documents
Shell admits its figure is wrong in both this case and a second spill,
also in 2008, in the same area. The admission throws Shell’s assessment
of hundreds of other Nigeria spills into doubt, as all spill
investigations are conducted in the same manner.
“For
years Shell has dictated the assessment of volume spilled and damage
caused in spill investigation reports, now these reports aren’t worth
the paper they’re written on,”said Audrey Gaughran.
“These spill investigation reports have cheated whole communities out of proper compensation.”
The
reports, known as “Joint Investigation Visit” reports, decide whether a
community gets any compensation and the amount they receive. They also determine the extent of the clean-up required.
The
people of Bodo have been able to take legal action in the UK. However,
the vast majority of the hundreds of thousands of people in the Niger
Delta who suffer oil spills from Shell’s operations will never have this
opportunity to challenge the oil giant.
“Pollution
from Shell’s operations has wrecked people’s homes, farms and fishing
waters – their ability to send their children to school and put food on
the table,” said Audrey Gaughran.
Shell’s admission
makes clear the Joint Investigation Visit forms – which record the cause
of the spills in addition to the volume and impact – cannot be used as
credible sources of information.
“Shell will no doubt
continue to defend its abysmal record in Nigeria by more misdirection,
blaming spills on oil thieves. But the basis for these claims are the
Joint Investigation Visit forms – which Shell must now admit are
entirely unreliable,” said Audrey Gaughran.
The court
documents also show for the first time that Shell knew for years that
its oil pipelines were in very poor condition and likely to leak. The
court papers include an internal memo by Shell based on a 2002 study
that states “the remaining life of most of the [Shell] Oil Trunklines is
more or less non-existent or short, while some sections contain major
risk and hazard”.
In another internal document dated 10
December 2009 a Shell employee warns: “[the company] is corporately
exposed as the pipelines in Ogoniland have not been maintained properly
or integrity assessed for over 15 years”.
“It’s
outrageous that Shell has continued to blame the vast majority of its
spills on saboteurs while knowing full well how bad a state its
pipelines were in,” said Audrey Gaughran.
“After these revelations, the company stands completely discredited.”
Shell
has consistently maintained that for the first Bodo spill only 1,640
barrels of oil were spilt and for the second only 2,503 (approx. 4,000
barrels for both). This is based on what was recorded in the Joint
Investigation Visit reports. Amnesty
International has repeatedly challenged Shell’s figures and supplied
the company with photographic, satellite and video evidence showing that
the data on the JIV reports for Bodo were incorrect.
Shell,
however, has continued to defend its figures. For example in a letter
to the UK Financial Times in March 2012 the Managing Director of Shell
Nigeria “admitted liability for two spills of about 4,000 barrels in
total, caused by operational failures”.
Responding
specifically to evidence published by Amnesty International in 2012
which showed the first Bodo spill was under-estimated, Shell told the UK
Guardian newspaper: “[The JIV] process … was employed with the two
spills in question, and we stand by the findings [of 1,640 barrels].”
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