Global Community Monitor
 
 

7. Nigeria

Lots of oil, brutal executions, and a polluted country.


NIGERIA . . . .

We depend on fishing and farming, and to take that away from us — it’s genocide. If you take away our land, and then you pollute the water and so on, it’s just saying we don’t have any right to live.

-Ken Saro-Wiwa

The Niger River Delta, on the southwestern coast of Nigeria in western Africa, is a vital and life-sustaining natural resource. Sprawl-ing over a 70,000 square-kilometer region five degrees north of the Equator, it not only drains the Niger and Benue rivers, but also embraces the largest wetland in Africa and one of the continent’s largest stands of coastal mangrove forest. Its web of streams, freshwater swamps, and coastal barrier islands make it one of the richest biological areas in the world. Its fertile soils have supported the cultivation of rice, sugar cane, cassava, palm oil, yams and beans for decades.

Thanks in part to its rich mangrove breeding grounds, it has more freshwater fish species that any other coastal system in West Africa. But the Niger Delta is rich in something else too — oil. For beneath the surface, within what are termed "relatively simple geological structures" are estimated proven oil reserves of 22.5 billion barrels. Although the majority of the oil deposits found in the Delta are considered small — each with 50 million barrels or less — at least 250 of them have been identified and opened, with another 200 yet to be mea-sured.

And the Niger Delta’s crude is good crude — the kind oilmen love — with a low sulfur content and a light, flowable viscosity. But that’s not all. Nigeria also has natural gas. With proven reserves estimated at 124 trillion cubic feet, it is the world’s ninth largest source. But it is the oil that has created the most promise and the most peril. Royal Dutch Shell has been involved in Nigeria longer than any other major oil company. Its roots go back to the country’s time as a British colony, and to 1937 when the Colonial Mineral Ordinance gave Shell D’Arcy exclusive exploration and prospecting rights.


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