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Zonnet nieuws gelezen - 06.12.2004 12:55
Is dit nog eens axie voeren? Wie heeft een link voor mer info? Betogers bezetten drie olieplatforms in Nigerdelta Nigeria AMSTERDAM, 06-12-2004 - Honderden betogers hebben twee olieplatforms van Royal Dutch/Shell en een van ChevronTexaco in de Nigerdelta in het zuiden van Nigeria bezet. De betogers - mannen, vrouwen en kinderen uit het dorp Kuma - drongen zondag binnen. Door de actie ligt de productie op de platforms, die goed zijn voor 90.000 vaten per dag, stil. |
Read more about: vrijheid, repressie & mensenrechten wereldcrisis | supplements | | uit: The Guardian | nog meer gelezen - 06.12.2004 13:10
06 12 2004 Hier is wat x-tra nws Govt to double crude oil supply to U.S. From Madu Onuorah, (Washington D.C., U.S.A.) FROM its current moderate level of seven per cent, Nigeria has announced an ambitious plan to raise its crude oil supplies to the United States (U.S.) to 15 per cent in the next few years. Nigeria is currently the fifth largest oil exporter to the U.S. | zonnet was wat later | meer leesvoer - 06.12.2004 13:16
Nigeria: Villagers Block Access to Ruptured Oil Pipe in Delta, Says Shell UN Integrated Regional Information Networks December 3, 2004 Posted to the web December 3, 2004 Lagos Angry residents of a southern Nigerian village where a Royal Dutch/Shell oil pipeline burst, have set the spilled crude on fire, preventing repair teams from reaching the site, the company said. Shell said it first noticed leaks in its 18-inch diameter pipeline at Egbeda village in Rivers State last weekend. The pipeline is part of a key network that transports crude oil from the inland oilfields of the Niger Delta to the terminals on the coast for export. "While efforts to secure access to the spill site were ongoing, some unknown persons set fire to two leak points," Shell spokesman Don Boham said in a statement on Thursday night. He said government authorities had been notified of the problem. Oil oozing into streams rich in fish and onto farmland has been a major source of conflict between multinationals pumping the oil and people living next to the billion dollar industry. Oil spills are frequent in the Niger Delta, which accounts for most of Nigeria's exports of up to 2.5 million barrels per day. Oil companies blame many of the spills on acts of sabotage by people in the region's impoverished villages who they say are seeking to extort compensation money. But these people say the oil companies are guilty of neglect, allowing pipes to corrode. They are also aggrieved by the multinationals' refusal to pay compensation for damage to farmland and fishing waters if sabotage is found to be the reason behind the spill. Shell is currently locked in a dispute with Nigeria's federal parliament over a resolution demanding that the multinational pay US $1.5 billion to the Ijaw population of Bayelsa State to compensate them for spills and other environmental degradation caused by its oil operations in the area. The resolution approved by both chambers of the legislature, is not binding in law and John Brambaifa, who heads the senate committee on the Niger Delta, told reporters on Wednesday that Shell had formerly written to the congress and senate, rejecting this demand to pay up. Brambaifa said the letter, dated 14 November, was an affront to Nigeria's sovereignty and his committee would recommend within two weeks that the senate impose sanctions on Shell. Nigeria is the largest oil producer in Africa and Shell accounts for half its output.
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