The
Department of
Petroleum Resources (DPR) grants licenses to oil companies to build and
operate
petroleum products' storage tank farms in Ijegun, less than two
kilometers from
Navy Training School, which houses the biggest military armoury in West
Africa, in a deal, which experts say placed Lagos, Nigeria's commercial nerve center, on keg of gunpowder. LEGENDARY ENERGY JOURNALIST, Adeola Yusuf reports.
Lagos map |
Governor Babatunde Fashola of Lagos State |
An epithet written on the
mass grave of not less 100 people who were burnt to death on May 15, 2008
appears boldly on a mausoleum at the junction of Ijegun to welcome any visitor
to the sleepy town. This faded green-and-white painted plaque reads: “Here lies
the body of victims of the Ijegun fire outbreak which occurred on Thursday, May
15, 2008. May your innocent lives, including children scampering for safety,
perished in the pipeline fire outbreak, rest in perfect peace.” Ijegun has
arguably witnessed high rate of pipeline fire/explosion in Nigeria but the
hapless town may be in for the mother of all disasters.
Fuel storage tank farms
are springing up in this town, less two kilometres from Naval Training School,
Satellite Town in Lagos, which house the biggest military armory in the entire
West Africa sub-region.
Findings by Daily Independent revealed that the fuel storage facilities, built by Star downstream company have begun operation, while Deepwater, another downstream oil company has started construction of its tank farms at the site.
Seven other companies who have allegedly been licensed by the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) will deploy construction engineers to site.
The statistics by Daily Independent shows that more than 2, 200 people have been killed by pipeline fire since 2000 in Nigeria, the world's eighth largest oil exporter and Africa's top producer.
Findings by Daily Independent revealed that the fuel storage facilities, built by Star downstream company have begun operation, while Deepwater, another downstream oil company has started construction of its tank farms at the site.
Seven other companies who have allegedly been licensed by the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) will deploy construction engineers to site.
The statistics by Daily Independent shows that more than 2, 200 people have been killed by pipeline fire since 2000 in Nigeria, the world's eighth largest oil exporter and Africa's top producer.
Sitting on keg of gun powder
Abdullahi Sobola PhD, a
chemical engineer and lecturer at the Lagos State University told Daily
Independent that both the tank farm and the armory storage facilities for
products have high chemical compositions.
“Although I do not know
the grade of explosive at the armory, all we know is that explosives just like
petroleum products have high combustion rate due to their high level of
chemical compositions. It may be very wrong to site the two within close
proximity,” he said.
This and other anomalies
are usually detected and avoided through the globally accepted Environmental
Impact Assessment (IEA).
The purpose of the
assessment is, according to Sobola, to ensure that decision makers consider the
ensuing environmental impacts when deciding whether to proceed with a project.
“The International
Association for Impact Assessment (IAIA) defines an environmental impact
assessment as "the process of identifying, predicting, evaluating and
mitigating the biophysical, social, and other relevant effects of development
proposals prior to major decisions being taken and commitments made."
“EIAs are unique in that
they do not require adherence to a predetermined environmental outcome, but
rather they require decision makers to account for environmental values in
their decisions and to justify those decisions in light of detailed
environmental studies and public comments on the potential environmental
impacts of the proposal,” he said.
The chemical scientist
said: “EIAs began to be used in the 1960s as part of a rational decision making
process. It involved a technical evaluation that would lead to objective
decision making. EIA was made legislation in the US in the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) 1969.
“It has since evolved as
it has been used increasingly in many countries around the world. As per Jay et
al.(2006), EIA as it is practiced today, is being used as a decision aiding
tool rather than decision making tool. There is growing dissent on the use of
EIA as its influence on development decisions is limited and there is a view it
is falling short of its full potential.There is a need for stronger foundation
of EIA practice through training for practitioners, guidance on EIA practice
and continuing research.”
Safety, security at risk
Commodore Richard Okeke,
a retired Commodore of the Nigerian Navy disclosed while fielding questions
from Daily Independent near his Satellite Town home that the safety and
security of people around the area within 40 kilometers-range are at great
risk.
The Security expert who
doubled as the Chairman, Security committee for Satellite Town Central
Residents Association (STCRA) said while addressing newsmen at the federal
civil servants club, Satellite Town that five (5) out of twenty (20) Local
government in Lagos-Ajeromi-Ifelodun, Apapa, Alimosho, Amuwo odofin, Oshodi
Isolo local governments may be sweep out of the map of the state with this
impending catastrophe.
“This has a very damaging
high security implication,” he said.
Although the Commander of
the Nigerian Navy School, Ojo, Commodore SAG Abbah could not be reached for
comment, a top-raking Naval officer who craved anonymity in a chat with Daily
Independent when our correspondent visited the Naval Training School in Ojo
disclosed that the Naval authorities is "deeply concern about this great
threat and I can tell you that the Chief of Naval Staff has informed the
minister of Defence on this aberration."
We don’t want to die,
Residents cry out
Already, retired elder
statesmen and federal civil servants who are residents of the 44 government,
Company and Private estates, and 77 closes around the area on Tuesday cried out
to the federal and Lagos state government to swiftly avert the impending
calamity.
The residents alleged
shoddy deals in the issuance of license by DPR. They wondered why the statutory
Environmental Impact Assessment (IEA) was not conducted before the licenses to
build tank farms were issued.
Rising under the auspices
of the Satellite Town Central Residents Association (STCRA), the residents
called on the Department of Petroleum resources to immediately withdraw the
licenses given for these tank farms.
President of the
association, Felix Egbamuno told Daily Independent that the residents who have
served Nigeria in different capacities as well as other Nigerians are sitting
on undeserving get of gun powder.
"The global standard
is that tank farm or any fuel storage facility should be cited 25 nautical
miles away from the armament depot. But our case here is pity-evoking, tank
farms are built less than two kilometers from the biggest armament in West
Africa here at the Navy Training School, Ojo," he said while addressing a
press conference.
Clad by his vice
President, Mazi Tony Ohakwe, Chairman Board of Truste (BOT), Rufus
Ogunedojutimi, Publicity Secretary, Aron Ukodie and the Financial Secretary,
Adeyinka Adewale, Egbamuno said: "Residents of this area who are retired
Permanent Secretaries, retired Managing Directors of government agencies and
parastatals as well as other Nigerians are alarmed by the installations of
Petroleum Tank Farms in the residential area of Ijegun, which is contagious
with Satellite Town. Nine Petroleum Tank Farms are said to be licensed for
operation in the area and three of them are being built while one has been in
operation."
He continued: "These
are serious threats to life and property as one accidental fire outbreak can
completely eliminate the community.
"We therefore use
this medium to appeal to Lagos state and federal government to urgently review
the licenses for these Tank Farms operation to avert dire consequences to our
lives, property and environment," he said.
The traditional ruler of
Ijegun, Oba Nureini Akinremi, is obviously in support of efforts to ensure that
the community no longer witnesses any fire disaster in spite of its proximity
to fuel pipelines, the tank farm and the armory at the Navy Town.
While absolving his
people of complicity in several pipeline vandalism, which led to huge
explosions and fire in Ijeododo community, Akinremi told Daily Independent in
his palace that he was not aware of any environmental Impact Assessment for the
Tank farm.
Deaths of their
neigbours, countrymen
At least 100 people were
killed and scores injured when fuel from a pipeline ruptured by a bulldozer
caught fire and exploded on Thursday May 15, 2008 in Ijegun, Lagos, the Red
Cross said.
Observers note that the
country has experienced a catalogue of pipeline explosions with dire
consequences.
For instance, on October
18, 1998 a pipeline explosion occurred in the sleepy community of Jesse in Delta
State, killing more than 1, 000 people and earning it the infamous number one
spot for such disasters in the country.
In the Jesse tragedy,
only a few of the victims were recognisable and their bodies released to their
relations. The rest were given a mass burial.
The Abule Egba pipeline
explosion in Lagos on December 26, 2006 remains number two as it claimed close
to 500 lives. It also destroyed one sawmill, several buildings and vehicles
because the flare-up occurred within the city.
A year after, December
2007 to be precise, several people were burnt to death while scooping fuel from
a vandalised pipeline at Ojo creeks in Lagos.
Although the lagoon into
the sea washed many victims of the Ojo inferno, the number of victims who were
given a mass burial over a period of one week was close to 250.
On16 December 2010 Ijegun
witnessed another pipeline explosion in which about 10 people were feared dead
and about 17 declared missing. The explosion occurred in Idu, a few kilometres
from Ijegun, where about 100 died in a previous oil fire.
Pipeline vandals ambushed
three NNPC engineers and technicians of the Pipelines and Products Marketing
Company, PPMC, deployed to effect repairs on the vandalised products pipeline
in Arepo Village were on September 9, 2012 ambushed, shot and killed.
On Saturday, January 11,
at least 10 suspected vandals were, feared dead in another explosion that
rocked the NNPC, pipeline at Arepo village, Owode, Ogun State. Daily
Independent gathered that the explosion came following a fire, which was
sparked off by some vandals who stormed the creeks, by boat to siphon fuel from
the NNPC pipeline.
The fireball in the 2008
pipeline explosion engulfed homes and schools at Ijegun village in the Lagos
district of Alimosho, and many of the dead, who included schoolchildren, were
killed in the ensuing stampede as people fled in panic from the flames.
"About 100 people
have so far been confirmed dead from the fire. We have so far rescued more than
20 people with injuries and taken them to hospital for treatment," a Red
Cross official at the scene told Reuters.
The disaster was the
latest in a series of pipeline explosions or blazes caused by damage or theft
which have killed more than 1,200 people since 2000 in Nigeria, the world's
eighth largest oil exporter and Africa's top producer.
The pipeline rupture at
Ijegun, a village about 50 km (30 miles) from the centre of the sprawling
coastal city of Lagos, occurred during work to build a road. A bulldozer moving
earth struck the pipeline buried beneath the surface.
"I was returning
home when I suddenly saw sparks of fire from where the grader (earth-mover) was
working," local resident John Egbowon said.
The fuel leaking from the
broken pipe caught fire and exploded, sending people fleeing in panic."
"It was like hell
was raining down on us, then everybody started running in different
directions," Egbowon said.
At least 15 homes were
burned. More than 20 charred vehicles caught in the fire were visible
afterwards in the street, as firefighters and volunteers tried to douse the
flames with sand and water after the explosion.
Witnesses said that even
after the main explosion, the ground around the fire was so hot that shoes
melted.
Abandoned in panic,
discarded school bags and sandals littered the compound of one school whose
pupils had fled. A group of women wailed in grief nearby.
A network of oil and fuel
pipelines criss-crosses parts of Nigeria and explosions and fires that kill
many are frequent.
In the creeks of the
Niger Delta, the country's main oil producing zone, the pipelines are also the
target of sabotage attacks by local militants seeking greater control over oil
revenues and more development for their impoverished region.
Previous accidental
pipeline blasts in Nigeria have been caused by vandals who drilled holes in the
feeder lines, used to distribute mainly imported fuel, in order to steal petrol
for sale on the black market.
Despite the country's oil
wealth, most Nigerians live on less than $2 per day and many are prepared to
take huge risks to obtain free fuel.
At least 45 people were
burnt to death last December in another village on the outskirts of Lagos when
fuel they were stealing from a buried pipeline went up in flames.
One year earlier, 250
people were killed in another pipeline fire in a different area of Lagos.
In such situations, a
small number of organized thieves usually drill a hole in a pipeline, but as
word spreads others come and try to steal the fuel and fire often breaks out.
DPR’s graveyard silence
The Department of
Petroleum Resources (DPR), an agency saddled with the responsibility to grant
license to build and operate tank farms has, however kept a graveyard silence
over the issue.
Spokesperson for the DPR,
Belema Osibidu, a Deputy Director, Public Affairs department of the agency did
not pick calls made to her phone on Tuesday.
“(I) Will get back to
you” was the content of a reply she sent on Wednesday as a response to an
earlier text message sent on Tuesday to her to get the side of her agency.
But a source at the
Department who “does not have power to talk to Press,” and therefore carved
anonymity told Daily Independent that investigation on the matter showed that
“powerful people” have hands in the tank farm. He refused to answer question
posed to mention names of the powerful people.
But he stated that the
agency has commenced investigation to actually unravel whether the tank farms
owners have authentic license or not.
NNPC blames Pipeline
fire on vandals
Group Managing Director
of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Andrew Yakubu had
outline vandalism as parts of the crisis confronting his leadership at the NNPC
blaming this for series of pipeline fire incidents in the country.
``We had over 774 break
points within three months from August to October 2012 from Atlas Cove to
Ilorin depot. Between Atlas Cove and Mosimi depot, we recorded 181 break
points, from Mosimi to Ibadan, we had 421 ruptured points and from Mosimi to
Ore, we recorded 50 vandalized points. Also between Ibadan and Ilorin we had a
total of 122 break points,’’ the GMD stated.
Understanding
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)
An environmental impact
assessment (EIA) is, according to Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, an
assessment of the possible positive or negative impact that a proposed project
may have on the environment, together consisting of the environmental, social
and economic aspects.
EIAs have often been
criticized for having too narrow spatial and temporal scope. At present no
procedure has been specified for determining a system boundary for the
assessment. The system boundary refers to ‘the spatial and temporal boundary of
the proposal’s effects’. The applicant and the lead assessor determine this
boundary, but in practice, almost all EIAs address the direct, on-site effects
alone.
However, as well as
direct effects, developments cause a multitude of indirect effects through
consumption of goods and services, production of building materials and
machinery, additional land use for activities of various manufacturing and
industrial services, mining of resources etc. The indirect effects of
developments are often an order of magnitude higher than the direct effects
assessed by EIA. Large proposals such as airports or ship yards cause wide
ranging national as well as international environmental effects, which should
be taken into consideration during the decision-making process.
Broadening the scope of
EIA can also benefit threatened species conservation. Instead of concentrating
on the direct effects of a proposed project on its local environment some EIAs
used a landscape approach which focused on much broader relationships between
the entire population of a species in question. As a result, an alternative
that would cause least amount of negative effects to the population of that
species as a whole, rather than the local sub-population, can be identified and
recommended by EIA.
There are various methods
available to carry out EIAs, some are industry specific and some general
methods:
Industrial products - Product
environmental life cycle analysis (LCA) is used for identifying and measuring
the impact on the environment of industrial products. These EIAs consider
technological activities used for various stages of the product: extraction of
raw material for the product and for ancillary materials and equipment, through
the production and use of the product, right up to the disposal of the product,
the ancillary equipment and material.
Genetically modified plants
- There are specific methods available to perform EIAs of genetically modified
plants. Some of the methods are GMP-RAM, INOVA etc.
Fuzzy Arithmetic - EIA
methods need specific parameters and variables to be measured to estimate
values of impact indicators. However many of the environment impact properties
cannot be measured on a scale e.g. landscape quality, lifestyle quality, social
acceptance etc. and moreover these indicators are very subjective. Thus to
assess the impacts we may need to take the help of information from similar EIAs,
expert criteria, sensitivity of affected population etc. To treat this
information, which is generally inaccurate, systematically, fuzzy arithmetic
and approximate reasoning methods can be utilised. This is called as a fuzzy
logic approach.
At the end of the
project, an EIA should be followed by an audit. An EIA audit evaluates the
performance of an EIA by comparing actual impacts to those that were predicted.
The main objective of these audits is to make future EIAs more valid and
effective. The two main considerations are:
scientific - to check the accuracy of predictions and
explain errors.
management- to assess the success of mitigation in reducing
impacts.
Some people believe that
audits be performed as a rigorous scientific testing of the null hypotheses.
While some believe in a simpler approach where you compare what actually
occurred against the predictions in the EIA document.
After an EIA, the
precautionary and polluter pays principles may be applied to prevent, limit, or
require strict liability or insurance coverage to a project, based on its
likely harms. Environmental impact assessments are sometimes controversial.
Last line
The primary intention of
sitting these tank farms in Ijegun is for business therefore the lives of
helpless Nigerian should not be traded for money. Considering the huge losses
induced by pipeline fire, especially as regards lives, the government through
the NNPC and the DPR, should relocate the tank farms. Failure to do this will
present government as a penny wise pound-foolish.
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