National Economy
Sunday, December 28, 2025
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • International Business
  • Lead-In
    • Cover
    • Investigation
  • Energy
  • Economy
    • Nigerian Economy
    • Fiscal Policy
    • Agri Business
    • Transportation
    • Industry
    • Competition
    • Homes & Property
    • Insurance
    • Companies & Markets
      • Companies
      • Capital Market
  • Tech
  • States & Politics
  • Commentary
    • Analyst
    • Business Matters
    • All Angles Considered
    • ClickSend
  • Editorial
  • Data
  • Others
    • Opinion
    • Analysis
    • Money Guide
    • Growth
    • Sport Economy
News
National Economy
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Lead-In
  • Energy
  • Economy
  • Tech
  • States & Politics
  • Commentary
  • Editorial
  • Data
  • Others

Report Exposes Reasons For Oil Corporations Divestment In Niger Delta

by Royal Ibeh
October 20, 2022
in Business, News
Oil

 

The Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) has published a policy brief on International Oil Companies Divestment in the Niger Delta & Local Communities’ Concern, exposing reasons for oil corporations divestment from Niger Delta.

This is in response to the growing number of oil corporations quitting onshore oil facilities in the Niger Delta region.

The report, which was made available to NATIONAL ECONOMY on Thursday, noted that, the term ‘divestment’ in Africa has been distorted by the fossil fuels industry and mis-presented to mean sale of toxic assets and oil facilities in environmental hotspots as against its true meaning.

In the global civil society community, divestment is the pulling out of public finance, loans, and subsidies from extractive industries, particularly oil and gas because of their contribution to environmental pollution and climate change and its impacts.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

Mbah Signs N1.62trn Enugu 2026 Budget Into Law

SERVICES, AGRICULTURE SEEN LIFTING GDP ABOVE PROJECTIONS

The climate justice community believes that, by reducing extraction by about 80 per cent, such monies running into billions of dollars will be redirected to alternatives, especially, renewable sources of energy such as solar, wind and community energy development.

The policy brief, which was made available to the relevant agencies, including the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) and the National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA), noted that, the fossil fuels industry uses the distortion of divestment to evade responsibility.

The report noted that the current divestment process is secretive and usually excludes members of host communities where industry facilities are located, while advising government to ensure that the IOCs clean up their mess and pay up before they are allowed to quit operations or sell off their onshore assets.

ERA/FoEN also urged the Nigerian government to constitute a multi-stakeholders review team on best practices in the divestment process and involve host community representatives, civil society representatives, relevant government ministries, departments, and agencies representatives in the processes.

The report urged the government to compel divesting IOCs to fulfil all their outstanding MOUs and GMOU obligations to community people and their environment before handing over assets to Domestic Oil Companies (DOCs). It asked the government to deal with the political nature of allocation of oil blocks which has been a key grievance issue in the call for resource control by many groups in the Niger Delta.

On the motivation behind the policy brief, ERA/FoEN executive director, Chima Williams, said, the Dutch Court of Appeal ruling in 2021 that Shell must pay damages to three out of the four Niger Delta farmers from communities where oil spills caused widespread pollution has set a precedent that IOCs will incur heavy costs in remediation of polluted sites and huge financial compensation hence the flurry in divestment.

Williams pointed out that ERA/FoEN held extensive consultations with communities and civil society in Bayelsa, Rivers, Edo and other states across the Niger Delta and aggregated their concerns on the divestment processes in the policy brief.

Author

  • Bukola Idowu
    Bukola Idowu

ShareTweetShare

OTHER GOOD READS

Mbah To Set Up Committee To Review Alleged Tax Increase In Enugu
Business

Mbah Signs N1.62trn Enugu 2026 Budget Into Law

2 days ago
Tourba, ThriveAgric Unveil Largest Carbon Farming Initiative
Agriculture

SERVICES, AGRICULTURE SEEN LIFTING GDP ABOVE PROJECTIONS

2 days ago
Experts See Upside To Nigeria’s GDP Growth Outlook
Business

Experts See Upside To Nigeria’s GDP Growth Outlook

2 days ago
Next Post
OilServ Canvasses Increased Local Content In $25bn Nigeria- Morocco Gas Pipeline Project

OilServ Canvasses Increased Local Content In $25bn Nigeria- Morocco Gas Pipeline Project

© 2025 | National Economy Newspaper | All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • International Business
  • Lead-In
    • Cover
    • Investigation
  • Energy
  • Economy
    • Nigerian Economy
    • Fiscal Policy
    • Agri Business
    • Transportation
    • Industry
    • Competition
    • Homes & Property
    • Insurance
    • Companies & Markets
      • Companies
      • Capital Market
  • Tech
  • States & Politics
  • Commentary
    • Analyst
    • Business Matters
    • All Angles Considered
    • ClickSend
  • Editorial
  • Data
  • Others
    • Opinion
    • Analysis
    • Money Guide
    • Growth
    • Sport Economy

© 2025 | National Economy Newspaper | All Rights Reserved