No cleanup, no divestment: Communities, groups protest as Shell holds AGM

While the entire leadership of Shell, including its chairman, board members, directors and stakeholders, convened in the United Kingdom for its Annual General Meeting (AGM) on Tuesday, environment focused groups and communities have staged a protest at Shell’s Lagos head office in Nigeria to demand that the company cleans up the environment of its onshore assets before divesting, among other demands.

The groups, Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA) and Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF) at the Make Big Polluters Pay Action on Shell Annual Shareholders Meeting, issued a statement accusing Shell’s shareholders of choosing the comfort of the Intercontinental London Hotel “without any regard for the dignity and sanity of people who are at the receiving end of their hazardous operations. They would rather the cozy ambience of artificial nature than care about the growing impact and problems their reckless oil extraction inflicts upon vulnerable communities in Africa and elsewhere.”

They noted in the statement made available to Nigerian Tribune that “after decades of mindless operations in the country’s Niger Delta region, is about to flee from its atrocities, leaving behind a wake of destruction – of farmlands and water bodies now contaminated with huge deposits of petroleum and of poor communities, livelihoods, and public health wrecked by years of its merciless extractive onslaught.

“To make matters worse, Shell’s plan to sell its onshore assets is a further act of mischief, especially considering that the new buyers are companies with limited capacity to manage the corporation’s extensive liabilities.

“Additionally, Shell allegedly intends to provide a loan to these buyers to help them purchase the same assets. This ploy to offload liabilities while continuing to profit from the transaction reveals the depth of Shell’s exploitation and the lengths it will go to maintain its stranglehold on Nigeria’s resources while evading accountability.”

They also noted that “We are aware that this AGM presents yet another opportunity for Shell’s managers to boast about its profits and declare its growth projections. They will undoubtedly tout their targets to become a net-zero emissions energy business destination by 2050, with the claim that this will contribute significantly to meeting the ambitious goal of the Paris Agreement aimed at limiting the rise in the global average temperature to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels.

“Yet, science has consistently debunked these hollow promises. Shell’s so-called energy transition plan is just a corporate strategy designed to delay meaningful action and deny justice to those who suffer the most from its operations. And it is for this reason that we are standing here today and again to remind the group’s global leadership of its obligations to Nigerians, especially vulnerable communities and people of the Niger Delta.

“Shell’s divestment from Nigeria does not absolve it of responsibility. The company must address the environmental destruction, human rights abuses, and social injustices it perpetrated. Before its departure, Shell must commit to implementing the reclamation measures recommended by independent environmental audits and pay adequate compensation to those who have borne the brunt of its profit-driven operations.

“In this list of oil majors hurting innocent Nigerians, Shell is not alone. A 2023 report commissioned by the Bayelsa State government reveals that over the past 50 years, 90 per cent of the toxic pollution in the Niger Delta – equivalent to at least 110,000 barrels of oil – originated from the facilities of just five international oil giants: Shell, Chevron, Eni, Total, and ExxonMobil. Despite this, Chevron is scaling up investments in the country amid the environmental crises in communities caused by its operations.”

The groups are demanding that “the Nigerian government must act responsibly, and in accordance with extant exit measures and processes to address lingering questions around the environmental audit of the corporation’s infractions, and compensation plans for affected citizens of the Niger Delta.”

whose lives have been irreversibly impacted by Shell’s extractivism, and the terms and conditions of this divestment. This includes forcing Shell to decommission its old and toxic infrastructures scattered across the region.”

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Source:

Tribune Online