正文
Nigerians Say Oil Company Left Spills Behind
Villagers in the Niger River Delta area of Nigeria say they live in unclean conditions because oil companies have not cleaned up spills.
The claims against Shell Oil Company and Italian Oil’s ENI were published in a report earlier this year by Amnesty International, a rights group.
Shell blames the pollution on oil theft and illegal refining. Shell and ENI admitted to more than 550 oil spills in the Niger Delta last year.
Documents released in a legal action in Britain showed Shell knew of pipeline problems in Nigeria. The documents said the company knew one of its main pipelines was old and dangerous.
Four spill sites in Nigeria remain polluted. Shell claimed the sites were cleaned in 2011.
Five pipelines meet at one of the sites, called the Bomu manifold. It is near the village of Kegbara Dere and is called Nigeria’s “oil central.” The pipelines carry 150,000 barrels of oil a day to an export terminal.
Rusty pumps and 50-year-old pipes increase the chance for spills. Over the past five years, the Bomu manifold site continues to be contaminated.
Shell operates almost 50 oil fields in the Niger delta. The company also owns 5,000 kilometers of pipeline. Shell’s own investigation reported 1,693 oil spills and 350,000 lost barrels of oil in the area.
I’m Christopher Jones-Cruise.
Jim Dresbach wrote this story for Learning English, using information from Amnesty.org and TheGuardian.com. Kathleen Struck was the editor.
We want to hear from you. Write to us in the Comments Section, or visit our Facebook page.
相关文章
- Pfizer Says COVID-19 Vaccine Safe for Children 5-11
- Grammar Games at Home: Simon Says
- The Children the World Left Behind
- Many Ways to Say You’re Welcome
- How to Say 'I'm Not Surprised'
- ‘Say’ Something, ‘Tell’ Someone
- Julio Iglesias Says 50-year Singing Career is 'a Miracle'
- What Baby Names Say about the United States
- Little Boy Found in Woods Says He ‘Hung Out’ with Bear
- The World Says ‘Hello’ to 2019, ‘Goodbye’ to an Unsettling Year