Torture and Impunity Continue in Egypt - Amnesty    Egypt's Morsi to Participate in 21st African Union Summit    Obama Seeks End to Perpetual U.S. 'War on Terror'    Iran denies it has forces in Syria    Egypt Plans to Issue Sukuk in Early 2014    Volatile Nikkei Keeps Asian Stocks on Edge    Egypt Forms Female Police Force to Combat Violence – Paper    Polygamy – protecting, not degrading women    LEGEND BIRTH: Eric Cantona    Platini wants a European sports police force    Egypt's Morsi to participate in African Union Summit    Marginalised conscripts under the spotlight    Egypt Delays Rationing Subsidized Fuel to Build Database    Tennis: Azarenka brings new mindset to French Open    No deaths reported on US highway bridge collapse    Tsunami warning in Russia's Far East after 8.2 quake    Injured Messi included in Argentina squad    VIDEO: Treika guides Bani Yas to first-ever Gulf triumph    Egypt's Morsi wants arrest of Sinai kidnappers after hostages released    FJP and National Conscience Front criticise NSF rejection of dialogue    Ultras White Knights leader released on bail    Residents of Egypt's Damietta protest frequent power outages    Five drown in sewer in Assiut    Japanese climber, 80, becomes oldest atop Everest    Egyptian Security Staff Freed, Deal With Jihadis Seen Done – FT    Cashing in on ‘Islamic' products    Time to take the tablet    Politics with a smile    British Soldier Hacked To Death In Suspected Islamist Attack    Egypt's Pope Tawadros II heads to Vienna    Two in one    Egypt stocks slide Thursday morning as intra-day trading revived    5 killed, dozens wounded in Tripoli clashes    Egyptian firm Maridive signs $150 mn Islamic loan    France calls to add Hezbollah to 'terrorist' group    The beginning not the end    5 Robbers Sentenced To Death For Killing Egyptian Priest    Egypt to boost fuel supply to ease power shortages    Egypt's Rafah Border Crossing Re-Opens    Barakat to retire at end of season    Summer fun in the city: Nine things to do around Cairo    Local Roundup: Zamalek and Ghazl El-Mahalla qualify to second round in Egyptian Cup    Egypt''s EFG Hermes says Q1 net profit jumps 27 pct    Arabian racing takes centre stage in Toulouse    ‘I don't like cricket... I love it!'    Coin smugglers foiled at Cairo Airport    PROGRAMME: Four Countries – Four Movies, screening in Cairo    Rare "Harry Potter" first edition fetches record auction price    







Thank you for reporting!
This image will be automatically disabled when it gets reported by several people.




Your friends recommend

Shell faces $5 billion fine over Nigeria oil spill
Regulators tell parliament that oil giant should be charged for environmental damage
Published in Ahram Online on 18 - 07 - 2012

Nigerian regulators have told parliament that Royal Dutch Shell should be fined $5 billion for environmental damaged caused by an oil spill at its offshore Bonga field, one of the biggest in the history of Africa's largest energy industry.
Shell said on Tuesday there was no legal basis for the proposed fine.
The National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA) told a parliamentary committee on Monday that although last year's spill, estimated at around 40,000 barrels, was contained offshore, there was a serious environmental threat.
NOSDRA said the spill was caused by a failure in Shell's oil export hose.
"The spilled barrels impacted approximately 950 square kilometres of water surface, affected a great number of sensitive environmental resources," the NOSDRA presentation to the environment committee of the national assembly said.
"It has a direct social impact on the livelihood of people in the riverine areas whose primary occupation is fishing."
Shell said last December's spill happened while a tanker was loading oil, leading to the complete shutdown of the company's 200,000 barrel per day (bpd) Bonga facility, about 120 kilometres off the coast of the West African nation.
"We do not believe there is any basis in law for such a fine. Neither do we believe that SNEPCo (Shell Nigeria Exploration and Production Co) has committed any infraction of Nigerian law to warrant such a fine," Shell said on Tuesday.
"SNEPCo responded to this incident with professionalism and acted with the consent of the necessary authorities at all times to prevent environmental impact as a result of the incident."
Bonga accounts for around 10 per cent of monthly oil flows from OPEC member Nigeria, the continent's largest exporter of crude oil. Production restarted in January.
Oil spills are common in the mangrove creeks onshore Nigeria. Many are caused by sabotage strikes or oil thieves tapping into easily accessible pipelines. Several communities have taken Shell to court over a failure to clean up spills.
A United National Environment Programme report last year said Shell was not doing enough to clean up spills and maintenance of infrastructure was inadequate.


Clic here to read the story from its source.
Report inappropriate advertisement
Please help us to block an inappropriate advertisement by telleing what was the website it links to :





Thank you for reporting!
We will review the advertisement in order to ban it.