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Eugene

(61,894 posts)
Tue Jan 6, 2015, 09:33 PM Jan 2015

Shell, villagers agree to $83.5 million for huge oil spill

Source: Associated Press

Shell, villagers agree to $83.5 million for huge oil spill

AP foreign, Wednesday January 7 2015

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Oil giant Shell has agreed to pay a Nigerian fishing community 55 million pounds ($83.5 million) for the worst oil spill ever suffered in that country.

Wednesday's agreement ends a three-year legal battle in Britain over two spills in 2008 that destroyed thousands of hectares (acres) of mangroves and the fish that sustained villagers of Bodo, in southern Nigeria.

London lawyers Leigh Day say it "is thought to be one of the largest payouts to an entire community following environmental damage."

Shell says it always wanted to compensate the people of Bodo fairly. But the company originally offered the entire community just 4,000 pounds ($6,000).

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Read more: http://www.theguardian.com/world/feedarticle/11721057

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Shell, villagers agree to $83.5 million for huge oil spill (Original Post) Eugene Jan 2015 OP
Shell To Pay $84 Million for Nigerian Oil Spills: 'Inadequate for Damage Done' adirondacker Jan 2015 #1

adirondacker

(2,921 posts)
1. Shell To Pay $84 Million for Nigerian Oil Spills: 'Inadequate for Damage Done'
Wed Jan 7, 2015, 06:08 PM
Jan 2015

Lawyers say the settlement is unprecedented, but locals point out: 'The fishermen cannot hope to return to fishing in the Bodo rivers and creeks because of the depth of hydrocarbon pollution resulting from the oil spills.'
by
Deirdre Fulton, staff writer

Royal Dutch Shell, the oil corporation responsible for two massive oil spills that devastated a small Nigerian community more than six years ago, has agreed to an unprecedented $84 million settlement with residents of the Bodo fishing village—an amount locals fear still won't go far enough to repair the ecological and economic damage wrought by leaking pipelines and pollution.

As a result of the settlement, announced Wednesday, each member of the community—which sits in amidst mangrove swamps, creeks, and channels that are the perfect breeding ground for life-sustaining fish and shellfish—will each receive about 600,000 Nigerian Naira (about US$3,327) paid into their individual bank accounts over the next few weeks. An additional $30.2 million, approximately, will go toward community infrastructure such as health facilities, schools, and a clean water supply.

The organization said in a statement: "When compared to what polluting oil companies pay elsewhere for their ecological crimes, HOMEF sees the compensation which will amount to about N600,000 for each of the plaintiffs with the balance going for community projects—school blocks and health centres—as inadequate for the severity of damage done."

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HOMEF director Nnimmo Bassey added:

The fishermen cannot hope to return to fishing in the Bodo rivers and creeks because of the depth of hydrocarbon pollution resulting from the oil spills. Although the amount being offered each fisherman is better than the pittance that Shell initially offered to pay, this can hardly purchase a good fishing boat and equipment necessary to return to the fishing business that the people know best—that is if they chose to move to other communities with cleaner waters in which to fish. Sadly, although the Bodo pollution also damaged the Goi community waters that community continues to languish in abject neglect without remedy.

Audrey Gaughran, director of global issues at Amnesty International, echoed that sentiment. "While the pay-out is a long awaited victory for the thousands of people who lost their livelihoods in Bodo, it shouldn’t have taken six years to get anything close to fair compensation," she said. "In effect, Shell knew that Bodo was an accident waiting to happen. It took no effective action to stop it, then it made false claims about the amount of oil that had been spilt. If Shell had not been forced to disclose this information as part of the UK legal action, the people of Bodo would have been completely swindled."
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http://www.commondreams.org/news/2015/01/07/shell-pay-84-million-nigerian-oil-spills-inadequate-damage-done

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