Jump to navigation

Nigeria

Pay to get out, regulator tells oil and gas giants

As multinationals retreat from the continent, Tinubu seems keen to offer incentives to domestic firms to take over their assets

Nigeria's state petroleum authority has made an unusual offer to the oil and gas giants who now want to sell up their assets in Nigeria: quick approval for the divestment plans will be conditional on the majors taking responsibility for the costs of environmental damage.

Following a meeting with a group of companies including Exxon Mobil and Shell in Abuja last week, Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) chief Gbenga Komolafe said that approval could be granted in June if the companies commit to cleaning up spills and compensating communities rather than wait for authorities to apportion blame.

The alternative, he warned, is to wait for the NUPRC to identify and assign all liabilities, potentially delaying the final approval until August.

Nigeria is witnessing an exodus of oil majors from their onshore investments, led by Shell, Total, Eni and Norway's Equinor (AC Vol 65 No 3, Shell leads oil majors' exit from the Niger Delta). President Bola Tinubu's government appears keen to offer incentives to domestic oil and gas firms to take over their assets.

Shell, the largest major player in Nigeria, announced plans earlier this year to sell its Nigerian subsidiary to Renaissance, a consortium of five mainly local firms, as part of a transition away from fossil fuels, it says.

However, environmental and human rights activists are urging the Nigerian government to withhold approval of the divestment plans, unless the oil giant does more to tackle pollution in the region caused by its activities. Last year, a report commissioned by Bayelsa State in the Niger Delta, estimated that US$12 billion would be needed to pay for over a decade of damage caused by Shell and Eni (AC Vol 64 No 11, Bayelsa commission reports).



Related Articles

Shell leads oil majors' exit from the Niger Delta

Companies accused of under-investment – arrangements on financing and liability for pollution may be contested

When the British oil major Shell announced on 16 January that it would be selling its interests in 18 oil licences in shallow water and onshore Niger Delta it raised awkward questi...


Bayelsa commission reports

The Bayelsa State Oil and Environmental Commission (BSOEC) launched its much-anticipated report on 60 years' worth of oil pollution in the state, where local companies now produce ...


Who cleans up in the Delta?

A huge payout by Shell for spilling oil will not necessarily help those who suffered from the environmental damage

On 3 August, the oil giant Shell agreed in the London High Court to settle a compensation claim for oil spills in Bodo, in the Niger Delta. This is a district with about 70,000 res...


Play the game

The United States was engaged in the ‘rendition’ of prisoners from Nigeria to the USA even before the attacks of 11 September 2001, according to US State Department cables newly re...


Protectionism and patronage

A bid by President Muhammadu Buhari to stop the smuggling of rice and petrol is turning into a cross-border political fight

Ten months after its inauguration the new integrated frontier crossing between Nigeria and Benin at Sémé Kraké on the key Lagos-Cotonou corridor was closed to most trade on the ord...