War on Water: A Clash over Oil, Power and Poverty in the Niger Delta

Print

By Audrey Anne Parker

Circle of Blue
April 2009

A fierce armed clash between an aggressive guerrilla militia and the Nigerian military over control of Nigeria's oil wealth is forcing thousands of residents to evacuate their homes and trek through one of the world's largest wetlands, now monumentally contaminated with oilfield wastes.

The fighting began two months ago, pressed by militants frustrated with how Nigeria's oil wealth is hoarded by the wealthy and the government. And while the central issues are greed, poverty, power and pollution, the principal victims are the tens of thousands of Niger Delta residents whose lives are endangered not only by the fighting, but also by the toxins, industrial wastes and oil-slicks that are poisoning their drinking water and contaminating the fish they rely on for food.

"It always ends up that the people get caught in the middle. These small villages in the creeks, they're under threat from both sides," said Ed Kashi, photographer of Curse of the Black Gold: 50 years of Oil in the Niger Delta and for National Geographic who has closely studied the region. "There's no good guys, here. They're all bad guys, just varying degrees from different perspectives."

 

A Flood of Refugees

According to international news accounts, thousands of residents have fled the Niger Delta on foot in fear of either side mistaking a civilian boat for the opposition. Some have made it across Africa's largest wetland to neighboring cities, well out of the way of the military's indiscriminate helicopter gunfire and torching raids on communities believed to be harboring rebels.

Others less fortunate are still trapped in the series of canals and tributaries that cross the Niger Delta - sleeping in oil contaminated mangrove swamps without shelter, medical care, food or water. The military has restricted access to the region to flush insurgents out of their stronghold. The only way in or out of many villages in the Niger Delta is by open boat. The transportation embargo is choking bottled water supplies - a necessity in a region where water is undrinkable because of indiscriminate industrial practices.

There are no heroes in the fight, say residents and authorities. The militant group Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) is calling its latest attacks on multinational oil companies like Shell, Chevron, and Agip, "Hurricane Moses." Surely referencing the biblical phrase, "Let my people go," the self-proclaimed freedom fighters have declared an "all out war" aimed at procuring rights for the 30 million impoverished people in the Niger Delta - 70 percent of whom are living on less than $1 per day.

 

War Accelerates Contamination

But many observers say MEND's strategy and tactics - blowing up pipelines and destroying equipment - are exacerbating the environmental damage already in progress and making it harder for the very people MEND claims to protect.

Members of the militant group MEND patrol the water of the Niger Delta. The river and streams serve as the primary fighting ground for the group. Photo by Ed Kashi. Click image to enlarge.

Since May 13, the Nigerian government has charged the Joint Task Force (JTF), a special branch within the military, with securing the region. The government forces are firing on some homes and burning others as they attempt to root out rebel forces.

"It is the equivalent of gang warfare over turf and control, and instead of crack cocaine it's oil, and instead of being on the main streets of a city, it's out on rivers and creeks on small boats," Kashi said.

Nigeria is Africa's largest exporter of crude oil, and as recently as 2008 produced 2.1 million barrels per day - seventh in the world - according to the Energy Information Administration, a unit of the U.S. Department of Energy. OPEC estimates Nigerian oil reserves at 36.22 billion barrels and the industry makes up 95 percent of the country's exports, 80 percent of its budgetary revenue, and around 40 percent of its GDP. Income from the 2.1 million barrels of oil that Nigeria exports daily is controlled by the federal government, and only 13 percent is distributed to and split between the nine oil producing states in the Niger Delta.

Nothing Trickling Down

Despite an estimated $600 billion in oil revenue since its discovery in 1956, the money does not appear to be economically trickling downstream. Many villages in the area do not have electricity or running water. A recent report by Chevron found that per capita income in Nigeria reached $294 a year in 2007. Living standards for most Nigerians are no better today than they were in the 1960s, at the start of the Niger Delta oil boom.

"When you have the backdrop that there is so much wealth being generated from this area, that is where, to me, the criminality is unacceptable. Where is it all going?" Kashi asked.

Since its formation in 2006 MEND has taken more than 200 oil workers hostage and reduced Nigerian crude oil production to 1.5 million barrels per day. Sabotage in the Niger Delta oil industry has become a daily occurrence followed closely by global energy traders because of the effect on international oil prices. In the last two months alone, Shell, Chevron and Agip have shut in more than 300,000 barrels per day to prevent losses and further environmental damage.

Oil Wastes

While the world worries about the oil supply, Niger Delta residents fight for access to safe drinking water and sanitation. Oil spills were frequent before the clash. Pollution has been endemic. According to the United Nations more than 6,800 spills were recorded between 1976 and 2001. A Nigerian government study identified 2,000 contaminated sites in the region.

"Certainly, drinking water is a problem in the Niger Delta," said Peter Nwilo, of the Department of Surveying and Geoinformatics at the University of Lagos, Nigeria. "It is difficult to get water from the streams. It has to be from deep holes. It is a difficult environment in terms of water. Upland you can get streams that are clean, that you can drink, but that is not the kind of thing in the Niger Delta. Because, even if there is no oil spill, you have salt water."

One drop of oil can make up to 25 liters of water undrinkable. Last month, Amnesty International reported that residents of the Niger Delta bathe in and drink oil-contaminated water. Additionally, a half-century of petroleum pollution decimated fish populations that were the primary source of protein for these communities for generations.

According to a May 2006 joint study by the Nigerian Federal Ministry of Environment, the Nigerian Conservation Foundation and several environmental organizations, 9 million to 13 million barrels have spilled during the history of oil production in the Niger Delta - the equivalent of a spill the size of the Exxon Valdez every year for the last fifty years.

In one study on oil-spill management that Nwilo co-authored, half of the oil spills between 1976 and 1996 were due to corrosion of pipelines and storage tanks, while 28 percent were caused by sabotage. When asked how this has changed with the recent fighting, Nwilo told Circle of Blue, "Oil spills are now caused by sabotage due to militancy activities in the Niger Delta. Pollution due to corrosion has substantially reduced because the aging pipelines have been replaced."

Spills by sabotage and oil bunkering are not new concepts to the Niger Delta. Shell says that "about half [of its worldwide] total volume spilled in 2008 was caused by one sabotage incident in Nigeria, where a large pipeline was damaged by explosives."

 

Military Restrictions

While each side of this battle claims to purge the area of oil-pilfering tyrants, civilians are forced to flee their homes and wade through creeks of oil-stained waters. Amnesty International estimates hundreds of civilian casualties and thousands displaced since May, and places the blame on both the JTF and MEND. These figures cannot be verified, though, as the military is not granting the majority of humanitarian groups or the media access to the affected area.

"Nobody can get into the areas where they've been fighting in Delta State; journalists, foreigners, even locals. Therefore there is no accurate reporting of what's going on in the area that is hot with fighting," Kashi said.

Military restrictions on transportation are choking supplies of bottled water, a necessity in an area struggling from decades of pollution. "Out where the fighting is going on, there is no infrastructure," Kashi added. "It's buckets of water from the river."

"While this dance is going on," Kashi said, "this charade, this puppet show, whatever it is, some of it is quite lethal and serious. Ultimately, the people just continue to be trashed here and get no benefit or improvement in their daily lives."

For some interesting graphics, check their website: