Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    SweetCrudeReportsSweetCrudeReports
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • Oil
    • Gas
    • Power
    • Solid Minerals
    • Labour
    • Financing
    • Freight
    • Community Development
    • E-Editions
    SweetCrudeReportsSweetCrudeReports
    Home » Shell should take responsibility for oil spills, Nigerian community leader says before UK trial

    Shell should take responsibility for oil spills, Nigerian community leader says before UK trial

    February 16, 2025
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp
    *King Godwin Bebe-Okpabi of the Ogale holds a bottle with contaminated water he brought from his villages as activists protest outside the Royal Court of Justice in London, on the first day of a trial in a lawsuit against Shell on behalf of two communities in Nigeria’s oil-producing Niger Delta.

    London — Shell should take responsibility for environmental damage in Nigeria caused by oil spills, a community leader said on Thursday as a pivotal hearing in lawsuits brought against the British oil major began at London’s High Court.

    Godwin Bebe Okpabi, leader of the Ogale community in the Niger Delta, told Reuters that he was appealing to Shell’s conscience to remediate the damage, which he said had “destroyed our way of life”.

    Thousands of members of the Ogale and Bille communities are suing Shell and its Nigerian subsidiary SPDC over oil spills in the Niger Delta, a region blighted by pollution, conflict and corruption related to the oil and gas industry.

    Decades of oil spills have caused widespread environmental damage, which has destroyed the livelihood of millions in the local communities and impacted their health.

    Shell, however, says the vast majority of spills were caused by illegal third-party interference, such as pipeline sabotage and theft, which is rife in the Niger Delta.

    A Shell spokesperson said the litigation “does little to address the real problem in the Niger Delta: oil spills due to theft, illegal refining and sabotage, which cause the most environmental damage”.

    Shell’s lawyers said in court filings that SPDC recognises it is obliged to compensate those harmed by oil spills even if SPDC is not at fault, but not where it has already done so or where spills were caused by “the malicious acts of third parties”.

    In Cyprus, the ‘frying pan movement’ is turning household waste into a sustainability lesson.

    But Okpabi said Shell had made billions of dollars in Nigeria – which he called “blood money” – and had a moral responsibility to prevent and remediate oil spills.

    “As we speak, people are dying in Ogale, my community,” he said. “It is sad that Shell will now want to take us through this very expensive, very troublesome trial, claiming one technicality or the other.”

    He was speaking outside the Royal Courts of Justice in London ahead of a four-week hearing to determine issues of Nigerian law and whether SPDC can be held liable for oil spills caused by third-party interference, ahead of a further trial in 2026.

    The case, parts of which began nearly a decade ago, has already been to the United Kingdom’s Supreme Court, which ruled in 2021 that the case should be heard in the English courts.

    The lawsuit is the latest example of multinationals being sued in London for the acts of overseas subsidiaries, following a landmark 2019 ruling in a separate case.

    *Sam Tobin; Marissa Davison & Vitalii Yalahuzian; editing: Susan Fenton – Reuters

    Related News

    Amakpe Refinery Chairman sues financial firm, denies $1.46m debt claim

    Nigeria commits $50m to Wholesale Impact Investment Fund

    ‘Nigeria’s $5bn oil-backed loan from Aramco delayed by oil price drop’

    Comments are closed.

    E-book
    Resilience Exhibition

    Latest News

    Developers to add 18.7 GW of natural gas-fired capacity by 2028, EIA says

    June 12, 2025

    US crude stocks fall, gasoline and distillate inventories rise as refining activity increases, EIA says

    June 12, 2025

    Oil prices climb to 2-month high on US-China trade deal, worries about Iran supply

    June 11, 2025

    Kenya central bank lowers 2026 growth forecast to 5.4%

    June 11, 2025

    Nigeria partners Brazil to develop methanol complex 

    June 11, 2025
    Demo
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Opec Daily Basket
    • Oil
    • Power
    • Gas
    • Freight
    • Financing
    • Labour
    • Technology
    • Solid Mineral
    • Conferences/Seminars
    • Community Development
    • Nigerian Content Initiative
    • Niger-Delta Question
    • Insurance
    • Other News
    • Focus
    • Feedback
    • Hanging Out With Markson

    Subscribe for Updates

    Get the latest energy news from Sweetcrudereports.

    Please wait...
    Please enter all required fields Click to hide
    Correct invalid entries Click to hide
    © 2025 Sweetcrudereports.
    • About Us
    • Advertise with us
    • Privacy Policy

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.