Tag: Chevron

  • Chevron eyes 3.1m boepd by 2017

    Chevron eyes 3.1m boepd by 2017

    Chevron Corporation will grow its daily production to 3.1 million barrels of oil-equivalent per day by 2017, reflecting an increase of 20 per cent from that of last year.

    The company is also focusing on building its crude oil and natural gas legacy assets, a plan that needs $39.8 billion of investment in the year.

    Chevron Corporation’s Vice Chairman George Kirkland,  made this known at its Annual Meeting of Stockholders in Midland, Texas, United States, where he provided an overview of the company’s 2013 operational and social performance and future growth.

    He said the oil giant is on track to grow production to 3.1 million barrels of oil-equivalent per day by 2017, up 20 per cent from 2013, with more growth expected through the end of the decade.

    Kirkland said: “To reach this goal, the company has more than 70 projects, each with a Chevron share of more than $250 million, scheduled to start-up by the end of this decade.

    “In Australia, the Gorgon project continues to make steady progress toward first liquefied natural gas (LNG), and is 80 percent complete with start-up expected in mid-2015. Wheatstone is now almost 35 percent complete and remains on schedule for a start-up in 2016 as well as Chevron’s profitable growth plans, which focus on building legacy assets associated with crude oil and natural gas.

    “These plans include investing $39.8 billion in 2014, which represents a $2 billion reduction from 2013 spending.”

    However, the company didn’t say how these plans and investments will affect its operations in Nigeria.

    Chairman of the board/ Chief Executive Officer, Chevron Corporation, John Watson, said: “Chevron’s 2013 results demonstrate that we remain well positioned to grow profitably and continue to deliver superior stockholder value. We continue to advance key development projects, which underpin our planned growth strategy and capacity to deliver affordable energy to world markets, a cornerstone of economic prosperity.”

    He stressed the company’s 2013 financial and operational performance, highlighting earnings of $21.4 billion and return on capital employed (ROCE) of 13.5 per cent. Last year, the company marked its 26th consecutive year of annual dividend payment increases, which included last year’s dividend increase of 11.1 per cent. Chevron announced another quarterly dividend increase of seven percent in April, this year. Watson also said Chevron led its peer group in total stockholder return for the five-year period ending December 31, last year.

    Watson reiterated Chevron’s long-standing dedication to safe, reliable operations. Reinforcing the company’s commitment to process safety, he noted that Chevron’s goal remains zero incidents and ensuring that everyone goes home safely, every day. Watson also discussed the partnerships Chevron has formed to address health, education and economic development in the communities where the company operates. Over the past eight years, Chevron has made nearly $1.5 billion in social investments to local communities, he added.

    Last year, Chevron maintained an industry leading earnings per barrel average, which was nearly five dollars per barrel higher than the company’s peer group over the past three years. It has had the highest ROCE in the upstream sector since 2011, with an industry leading 17.2 per cent in 2013.

  • Chevron chief advises on Niger Delta growth

    Chevron chief advises on Niger Delta growth

    The Executive Vice President of Policy and Planning of Chevron Corporation, Rhonda Zygocki has said the only way the Niger Delta region can reach its full potential is when all stakeholders start working together in new collaborative ways to provide an integrated platform for building capacity towards conflict resolution and long term development in the region.

    Speaking during her visit to Nigeria, she said: “The Niger Delta will only reach its full potential when all stakeholders start working together in new collaborative ways to provide an integrated platform for building capacity for conflict resolution and long term development in the region.”

    Zygocki, who was in Warri, Delta State as part of her working visit to Nigeria, took time to assess the progress being made by the Niger Delta Partnership Initiative (NDPI), established by Chevron in 2010 as part of its social investment strategy in collaboration with its Nigerian affiliate.

  • Chevron leads campaign against HIV in Bayelsa

    Chevron leads campaign against HIV in Bayelsa

    Chevron Nigeria Limited (CNL) is leading a campaign to reduce the spread of the pandemic, HIV/AIDS in Bayelsa State. The company has received accolades, especially for championing a campaign tagged Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission (PMTCT) which is popularly known as PROMOT.

    Indeed, Bayelsa, the state of President Goodluck Jonathan, has a case with the virus. It has the third highest prevalence rate of HIV/AIDS in the country with 9.1 per cent after Benue State (12.7 per cent) and Akwa Ibom State (10.9 per cent). The state of Governor Seriake Dickson occupies a higher step on the ladder than Rivers State (7.1) and Delta State (4.1).

    One health expert once said sex smells in Bayelsa. What worries stakeholders, especially health experts, is not the high libido in the state but the entrenched and pervasive ignorance entrenched in most people on sex matters.

    Curiously, most people in the state still do not believe that HIV/AIDS is real. They still frown at the use of protective measures such as condom during sex. A report presented by the Director, Public Health, Ministry of Health, Bayelsa State, Dr. Wakiente Omubo, referred to the state as a priority state for HIV/AIDS control including PMTCT.

    It is one of the states that contribute 70 per cent of Nigeria’s PMTCT burden and that have been earmarked for phase one scale-up towards the elimination of mother-to-child transmission of HIV/AIDS.

    The report breaks down the percentage prevalence rate of the virus according to the eight local government areas in the state. Sagbama, the local government area of Dickson is the highest with 12.7. This is closely followed by Ekeremor, Kolokuma/Opokuma, Nembe and Ogbia which have 9.1 each. Brass has 7.6; Yenagoa, 8.7 while Southern Ijaw has the least with 3.5.

    The statistics further shows that 6,072 pregnant women are living with the virus. Yenagoa has the highest number with 1333; Sagbama, 1032; Ekeremor, 1067; Ogbia, 711; Nembe, 518; Southern Ijaw, 590; Brass, 608 and Kolokuma/Opokuma, 314.

    The spread of the virus in the state is caused by intense transactional and intergenerational sex and low condom use; high rates of sexual intercourse with multiple and older partners with low condom use rates and low personal risk perception.

    It is also reported that women in the state have poorer comprehensive knowledge of HIV, routes for mother-to child transmission, utilizing a healthcare professional in pregnancy and obtaining HIV testing and counselling.

    Apart from that, the 2010 National HIV zero-prevalence sentinel survey estimated that 98,000 women were pregnant in the state but only a quarter of them accessed ante natal care during pregnancy.

    The development prompted Chevron to partner with Pact, the state government and others to prevent mother-to-child transmission of the virus. The partnership especially with Pact started in 2012 and recently the company expanded funding for the project in a ceremony that was held in Gabriel Okara Cultural Centre, Yenagoa.

    Chevron’s Chairman/Managing Director, Mr. Andrew Fawthrop, says the company’s partnership with Pact is part of a larger, multi-organisation, $20million United Nations Millennium Goal commitment to halt and reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS by 2015.

    Fawthrop whose speech was read by the company’s Area Manager, Mr. Joe Jakpa, said the partnership had achieved many results in the state. He said it had helped to reach more than 6,500 people with critical HIV/AIDS awareness and prevention information, test more than 7000 women during prenatal care and arrange for a HIV counselling for nearly 700 people.

    He said the company’s additional $1.7million for PROMOT has raised its five-year investment in the project to $5.3million.

    “The additional funding support will facilitate the expansion of the PROMOT project to all local government areas in the state. Chevron is proud to expand our partnership with Pact to support initiatives like PROMOT.

    “This is a proven model that we are motivated to expand as we work together to deliver real, measurable results towards ending mother-to-child transmission of HIV”, he said.

    He said Chevron’s $55million investment in the Global Fund to fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria has helped millions of people in Africa and Asia since 2008. He said at the Global Funds Replenishment event which was held last December in Washington DC, the company announced its commitment to an additional $5million over two years to Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.

    “This commitment raises Chevron’s investment in the Global Fund to $60million, making the company the single largest private sector partner to the organisation.

    “Working with partners globally and at the local level, Chevron will continue to dedicate a great deal of resource capabilities and effort to support initiatives that build local capability and deliver real, lasting gains in the fight against the devastating diseases including HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria”, he said.

    The Commissioner for Health, Dr. Anapurere Awoli, said the expanded Chevron’s social investment in the state was a reminder that people should save lives by eliminating transmission of mother-to-child.

    The commissioner lamented that despite the efforts of the government, new cases of HIV infections had continued to rear their ugly heads. But he emphasised that prevention was the only to halt the spread of the virus. He said the state was in support of Chevron’s efforts to prevent the spread of the virus.

    Describing the oil company as Nigeria’s greatest trading partner, Awoli expressed optimism that the expanded programme would cover all the local government areas.

    But he added: “PMTCT is not an easy topic. It requires vocal and concerted leadership in all sectors. This campaign will have the greatest chance of success if political, traditional, faith, and civil society leaders all talk openly about deeply entrenched cultural norms, gender relationship and other challenging issues that make elimination difficult”.

    During his presentation, Omubo said the war against the virus in the state was far from over. He commended Chevron for its investments but called on other corporate entities to imitate the oil company. He said the state needed about N8billion (51.5million USD) to effectively tackle the pandemic.

    To underscore the importance of creating awareness especially on prevention of mother-to-child transmission, an entertaining and educating drama piece was presented to the audience by the state’s cultural troupe.

    Chevron also rewarded persons who have been playing crucial roles in implementing PROMOT with awards. The highpoint of the programme was cutting the ceremonial cake to launch the expansion.

  • Chevron supports  elimination of HIV transmission in Bayelsa

    Chevron supports elimination of HIV transmission in Bayelsa

    Chevron Nigeria Limited, operator of the NNPC/Chevron Joint Venture, has announced that it will commit additional N280 million in its funding support for the community-based Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission of HIV (PMTCT) project known as the PROMOT project, in Bayelsa State. This  additional commitment raises Chevron’s  five-year investment for the PROMOT Project to N873.4 million.

    The PROMOT project is sponsored by Chevron and implemented by Pact Nigeria in partnership with community based organisations (CBOs), to achieve the primary goal of educating and mobilising the population in targeted communities to reduce mother to child transmission of HIV in Bayelsa state.

    The project, which began in September 2012 with a funding of N593.2 million over three years, had in the first year, reached more than 6,500 individuals in Sagbama and Yenagoa Local Government Areas with critical HIV/AIDS awareness and prevention information, tested  more than 7,000 women during prenatal care, and arranged for HIV counseling for nearly 700 people. In addition, 147 community health workers were trained to carry out community PMTCT activities.

    The additional support will facilitate the expansion of the reach of the PROMOT project to all Local Government Areas in the state with a target of reaching at least 120,000 men and women of reproductive age. Also, the PROMOT project will train an additional 300 community health workers on community PMTCT approaches to enable them continue in creating demand for PMTCT services in existing health facilities across the state.

    According to the 2010 National HIV zero-prevalence sentinel survey, HIV prevalence in Bayelsa is the third highest in Nigeria at 9.1 per cent. It is estimated that 98,000 women are pregnant annually in the state and only a quarter of them access ante natal care (ANC) during pregnancy.  Through the PROMOT project, Chevron, Pact and other implementing partners will contribute towards the elimination of mother to child transmission in Bayelsa State for national good.

  • Court dismisses Chevron’s objections to N17.223b suit by Bayelsa communities

    Justice Ibrahim Buba of Federal High Court, Lagos, has dismissed the preliminary objections by Chevron Nigeria Limited and Fode Nigeria against a suit by some fishermen in some communities in Bayelsa State.

    In his ruling, Justice Buba said the suit was competent.

    The judge described as baseless the preliminary objections by the defendants against the claimants.

    The claimants in the suit are fishermen of Koluama 1; Koluama 2; Ekeni; Ezetu 1; Ezetu 2; Foropa; Fishtown and Ikibiri communities in Southern Ijaw and Brass Local Government Areas of Bayelsa State.

    They are asking Chevron and Fode Nigeria for N17, 222, 528, 441.00 as compensation for the losses they suffered as a result of gas blow-out that occurred on the Chevron operated KS Endeavor Rig drilling in the Funiwa 1 gas well, on the North Apoi Oil Platform on January 16 2012.

    The claimants/plaintififfs, through their counsel, Mrs. Tonbofa Eva Ashimi had alleged that Chevron’s negligence was responsible for the explosion and prayed the court to hold the oil firm liable for economic losses and environmental damages.

    They also alleged that Chevron failed to take the necessary precautions to prevent the explosion and did not adequately control it with available technology.

    Chevron, through its team of lawyers, led by Professor Tunde Fagbohun (SAN), filed an objection, challenging the competence of the suit.

    The company, in its notice of objection to the suit, argued that it did not receive any evacuation requests from the rig and that the staff aboard always maintained the power to halt all work if they truly believed working conditions were unsafe.

    Justice Buba has, however, ordered the suit to be set down for hearing while a date is to be fixed for commencement of hearing of the substantive suit.

     

  • Heavy shooting reported at Chevron $8.4bn  facility in Delta

    Heavy shooting reported at Chevron $8.4bn facility in Delta

    Panic enveloped much of the Escravos in Warri area of Delta State yesterday after armed troops stormed the Escravos Gas to Liquid facility to break up the week-long industrial action by aggrieved workers.

    It was learnt that that armed troops shot their way into the camp, which had been shut down by the angry workers since Monday morning.

    “The soldiers came yesterday(Friday) and gave us an ultimatum to open up the premises or face the consequences. They waited till about 5 pm and left. That was yesterday (Friday),” a worker said.

    “But they came back this morning (yesterday) and shot their way in. They cut the wire fence and started beating everybody with whips and the butts of guns. They were firing teargas and shooting sporadically.”

    Workers had grounded activities at the $8.4bn EGTL following disagreement with management and alleged poor working conditions.

    They complained about the health hazard of their jobs at the facility, lack of proper remuneration and poor quality food since Chevron took over the facility from the builders.

    Some workers fled the facility in boats.

  • Heavy shooting at Chevron’s $8.4bn facility in Delta

    There was panic in the Escravos in  Warri area of Delta State on Saturday morning as armed troops stormer the Escravos Gas to Liquid facility to break the week long industrial action by aggrieved workers.
    It was learnt that that armed troops shoot their way into the camp, which has been shut down by the angry workers since Monday morning.
    Panic workers at the facility told our reporter “The soldiers came yesterday and gave us ultimatum to open up the premises or face the consequences. They waited till about 5 pm and left. That was yesterday (Friday).
    “But they came back this morning and shot their way in. They cut the wire fence and started beating everybody with whips and the butts of the guns. They were firing teargas and shooting sporadically,” our source added.
    Workers had grounded activities at the $8.4bn EGTL over disagreement with management and alleged poor working conditions.
    They complained about the health hazard of their jobs at the favility, lack of proper remuneration and poor quality food since Chevron took over the facility from the builders.
    Some workers were fleeing the facility in boats at the time of this report (6amon Saturday morning.
    Sent from Samsung Mobile
  • Workers shutdown Chevron ‘ s EGTL

    Activities at the multibillion dollar Escravos Gas To Liquid facility of American oil giant Chevron Nigeria Limited in Escravos, Warri South West Local Government Area of Delta State, were shutdown by protesting workers on Monday morning.

    The $9 billion gas processing plant was recently taken over by Chevron after it was built by Southern Gas Company of South Africa and a host of other companies.

    It was gathered that the aggrieved workers were unhappy about the living and working conditions since CNL took it over in 2013.

  • Chevron’s $6m and Ugborodo’s ‘tale of two cities’

    Chevron’s $6m and Ugborodo’s ‘tale of two cities’

    In 2008, American oil giant Chevron Nigeria Limited donated $6million to Ugborodo Community in Delta State for a protracted housing project. Over five years after, there are reports of alleged misappropriation of the fund. SHOLA O’NEIL tracks the gift, concluding that a lot more is at stake.

    Tll parties in the leadership crisis of Ugborodo Community in Warri South West Local Government Area of Delta State seem to have one thing in common – they are very excited about the $16billion Ogidigben Gas Project and the Export Processing Zone.

    The Warri monarch, Ogiame Atuwatse II, praised the Federal and Delta State governments for the decision and expressed the determination of his people to give all that it takes to make the project, like the Escravos Gas To Liquid project, a success.

    Pa Jos Ayomike, a leader of the community and pioneer Secretary of the Governing Council of the Ugborodo Community Trust, at a news conference in Warri, debunked reports that the people were against the project. Conversely, he said the people were grateful for the project, which is expected to galvanise economic and social activities, not just in the state, but in the Niger Delta region.

    He said: “Ugborodo people are not fighting Delta State Government, let alone the Federal Government that we are thanking and commending for siting the Gas City in Ogidigben.”

    The two protagonists in the leadership tussles – Chief Thomas Ereyitomi and Hon David Tonwe – have also at various forums expressed similar views since the project escalated the leadership tussle in the community in recent months.

    Nevertheless, in spite of the ‘supports’ for the project, as it gathers momentum towards kick-off, the crisis in the area had increased until President Goodluck Jonathan waded into the matter, in the aftermath of the bloody clashes of early January.

    Both parties seemed to have sheathed their swords, at least their raging ‘war’ in the media, until Pa Ayomike, a renowned historian and literary critic stirred the hornets’ nest on Monday with a feisty press conference on the “Ugborodo-Gate Affair’.

    Beyond asking Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan to resign over his role in the crisis, which some reports put the death toll at 22 persons, the 87-year-old Ayomike, who interestingly is an uncle to the governor’s wife, accused Uduaghan of using his surrogates in the community to hijack the $6m donated by Chevron for the New Ugborodo Town Project.

    The ‘surrogates’ alluded to in the statement were possibly Chief Thomas Ereyitomi, leader of one of the factions, whose contentious election and recognition by Uduaghan’s government laid the foundation for the latest crisis, and his alter ego, Chief Ayirimi Emami.

    He said: “The community is resisting the imposition of these persons because Governor Uduaghan colluded with them to expropriate $6m that was sent by Chevron in the United States as contribution towards the development of the Ugborodo New Town Project. Exchanged into naira and deposited into a bank account controlled by signatories named by Governor Uduaghan, without the knowledge of the registered Trustees of Ugborodo Community, the initial deposit of N900m, fixed at a 13percent annual interest, had depleted after five years, when the account first became public!

    “His Excellency, the American Ambassador (to Nigeria) has been told of the disappearance of Chevron’s USD$6million and probably, the US State Department also is interested.”

    Niger Delta Report gathered that the New Town Project was conceived in the wake of the wanton destruction of Itsekiri communities and the oil major’s facilities during the fratricidal Warri crisis, which ended in 2004. The nearly $9bn EGTL project also increased Chevron’s stake in the area.

    The project was therefore meant to give the host communities a befitting environment, at least close to the utopian suburb where the oil firm’s employees and top management staff live nearby. The disparity between the living condition of the Ugborodo people and Chevron had been a template for measuring the ‘injustice’ of oil firms on their hosts over the years.

    Separated by just a tiny creek and a fence that is beyond a physical barrier, Arunto (Ode-Ugborodo) and Chevron yard could not be farther apart. While Chevron ‘community’ is a beautiful island in the sea, the other is withering; its shoreline losing metres of land yearly to an unfriendly incursion of the sea. On one side is neat houses, clean streets (on which heavy duty vehicles, trucks and cars cruise to and fro) and functional amenities, as well as an airfield where the company’s top shot fly in and out without coming in contact with their hosts. On the other sides, residents rely on motorcycle ploughing through dusty, sandy paths. They live in zinc and thatch houses without toilets and pipe borne water.

    Pa Ayomike told newsmen that “there is no community in Nigeria abused, cheated, maltreated and marginalised as Ugborodo. Visit there and you will be reminded of Charles Dickens’ Tale of Two Cities: the old Ugborodo is dying away while he Chevron/EGTL sector remains the Paris of Escravos.

    He queried media tags of ‘Oil Capital of West Africa’ and ‘oil-rich community in Niger Delta’ bestowed on the community, asking: “Does Ugborodo look like Austin in Texas? Does it look like any oil-producing centre in California or like Bonny or Port Harcourt (bad as things are in Nigeria)?

    It was against the background of this paradox that the plan to build 200 housing units of various 4-bedroom, 3-bedroom and 2-bedroom bungalows was conceived nearly a decade ago. The project was to be jointly financed by the Chevron and the state government.

    Ayomike and other leaders in the community, particularly members of the Tonwe-led faction, have insistently blamed Uduaghan for the failure of the project to take-off.

    Barely 24 hours after the allegation that he masterminded expropriation of the $6m, Governor Uduaghan addressed a press conference of his own at the Governor’s Office, Warri Annexe on Tuesday. He described the accusation as baseless, maintaining that “The money is intact in the bank.”

    Uduaghan came prepared. He had with him Mr Mofe Pirah, who was chairman of the Itsekiri Regional Development Council, the organ through which the money was paid, and an official of Ecobank, which swallowed the then Oceanic Bank, custodian of the fund and others.

    Udaughan explained: “The way (fund) it is arranged, Chevron has to approve the project. Chevron has to sign the cheque and Chevron has to supervise the project. The money is a fund that no single individual can withdraw.”

    Taking on the governor’s defence, Pirah, who is Commissioner in charge of the Ministry of Oil and Gas in the state, clarified that the IRDC did not receive $6m from the Chevron. Instead, he said what it got was the equivalent in naira, which was N705 million (at the rate of N117.5 to a dollar) that was deposited “directly by Chevron” into the Oceanic Bank account.

    Pirah went on to explain that the contention over the fund was Ugborodo leaders’ desire that the fund be given to them directly, against Chevron’s desire to deal with the IRDC, which is the organ through which the company engages with its host communities in development issues.

    Finally, a local branch manager of Ecobank, confirmed that the defunct Ocean Bank received N705m on 18 December, 2008, adding: “The N705m was placed in a fixed account. Today, the money is now N968,614,613.42.

    “The money is still in the bank’s possession,” the bank’s representative, who appealed that her name be kept secret, told newsmen.

    Our investigations to unravel the cause of the delay in implementing the project for which the fund was released further threw up some debates and confusion.

    Pirah explained that the project was being hampered by Chevron’s insistence that the community or the IRDC be responsible for the sand-filling of the project site. That task was rejected by the IRDC and the community.

    It was gathered that the face-off over who should fill the site was sparked off by allegations that some persons in the community sold sand deposited at the site. As a result, a Chevron source said the company was not willing to expend money on a project it had already executed.

    Further checks revealed that effort to use funds donated by CNL to the IRDC for community’s development was also rejected ostensibly because, although Ugborodo is one of the highest oil producing communities in Itsekiri area, it constitutes a fraction of the total communities in the council.

     

    As plausible as Uduaghan’s defence was, there was no assurance that it would assuage his opponents or lay the controversy to rest.

    A close aide of the governor’s told our reporter, “The issues involved are both political and personal. Political in the sense that people expect that the governor would contest the senatorial election in 2015 and they already have their preferred candidate They want to use every opportunity to rubbish him and cast aspersion to his name.

    “Personal because the governor is caught in a web of intra-family dispute that predates his marriage to Pa Ayomike’s niece. But if you look at the history of the family you will realise that the governor may not be the actual target. I cannot say more than that,” the source, who is also an Itsekiri, told NDR.

    Also, our findings also showed a disparity between the actual exchange rate used to deposit the fund and what Pa Ayomike and other Ugborodo leaders had expected. Specifically, although Pa Ayomike’s figure showed exchange rate of N150 to a dollar, the deposit was at N117.5.

    Similarly, there is a wide gulf between expectation of the community leader’s calculation of “initial deposit of N900m, fixed at a 13percent annual interest” and the N968m sum revealed by the bank.

    By Pa Ayomike’s expectation, “Simple mathematical extrapolation suggests that the balance should have been N1.4bn at this time.”

    The $6m fiasco has also opened up debates on what became of several proposed housing projects, including the state government’s N5bn housing scheme that was to be funded by the Oil Producing Areas Development Commission (DESOPADEC).

    Meanwhile, it may not be only Uduaghan, who has been put on the spot over the Ugborodo matter. The Olu of Warri, Ogiame Atuwatse II, also stoked the debate on Ugborodo crisis on Tuesday when he reprimanded Ayomike, cautioning him to stop parading himself as the leader of the community.

    The admonishment came against the backdrop of criticism of Pa Ayomike’s alleged family-centric tendencies. Some of his opponents accuse him of attempting to hijack the community for his siblings and children.

    “He nominated his son as Secretary of the Tonwe faction and when it was time for the EPZ committee, he made his younger brother the head of the committee,” a member of the Ereyitomi faction stated.

    The monarch, who led prominent chiefs to a meeting with Governor Uduaghan in Warri, slammed Ayomike over his Monday’s press conference, describing him as an impostor who does not have claim to any leadership role in the community.

    He said: “Pa Jos Ayomike, he is not the leader of that community. He is an individual of that community. We do not want a situation where Ayomike wants to draw the community backward and I want to let you (Uduaghan) know that he does not have my blessings.”

    The monarch remarked that no single individual could be bigger than constituted authority and urged the State Government to take every necessary measure to deal with the situation and restore peace to the area.

    But the second paragraph in the text of Ayomike’s press statement may as well be a befitting riposte. “Nobody is playing God in Ugborodo”, he explained.

    “Born in Ogidgben (Ugborodo) about 87 years ago, I am participating among others, young and old, men and women, expressing our grievances against the illegal and iniquitous actions the governor had meted to our community.

    “At my age, experience and exposure, I can’t allow that cheap blackmail to go unchallenged,” he said stated.

    Cry my beloved Ugborodo (Escravos?)

    Below is an abridged version of an article by Oritsegbemi O. Omatete

    Ugborodo has a rich history. It was alleged to have been founded by Ijebu fishermen who came to settle in the area. Two brothers and their five sons fanned out to form the various communities of Ugborodo. Hence we refer to ourselves as “Ikpere ale meje – Ikpere (Ugborodo) of seven sections”. Ugborodo was a thriving community with its own ruler, Olaja-ori, before the famed movement of the Iwere (Itsekiri) royal family from the Benin royal family over 500 years ago. The Portuguese had a settlement both in Warri and in the island of Ugborodo in 1588. In late 19th century, the French built a salt factory in Ugborodo. When the British arrived and learnt about this, they threw a party for all the people and during that party the factory was mysteriously blown off and so was the French presence in what became Nigeria.

    Ugborodo literarily means “Dry land in the Sea” and it was a huge island. I recall my grandmother describing how dangerous it was to move from the village to the beach after dark because large cats (probably leopards) and dangerous animals prowled at night. If they had to, people moved in a large group. I remember the Ugborodo I grew up in, with a large silk cotton tree (egungun) in its center, towering over all other trees and its huge buttress roots serving as gathering place for village elders especially during the secret masquerading season. We had to walk a long distance to get to the beach where canoes were loaded with conical nets used to catch crayfish. The village had mango trees that fruited abundantly annually to the joy of the youth. Edible fruits were everywhere in the bushes and palm fruits were harvested from there to prepare our delicious fresh crayfish banga* soups. These are all gone now along with my childhood house and neighborhood, which are at least half a kilometer in the Atlantic Ocean.

    The estuary by Ugborodo was the entrance to the Delta ports. Ships had to change pilots here before they crossed the bar. The Nigerian pilots, usually Ijaws, were ferried from Ogidigben to the ships anchored at sea. These skilful pilots took the ships across the bar. Even then one or two ran aground especially if they tried to maneuver in the deep fog. Thus, in the 1950’s and 60’s, the lighthouse and the breakwater were built on the Ogidigben side of the estuary to facilitate navigation. That was the beginning of the end of Ugborodo mainland. The breakwater turned the fury of the sea into the erosion of Ugborodo, which continues to date unabated. Ugborodo is less than a quarter of the land I remember.

    The 1950s brought another set of people, seismic exploration teams of the Shell-BP Company. They set off explosives; houses in the village shook and vibrated. The people did not know what was going on. In their superstition, they believed these foreigners were after huge reptiles that were said to protect diamonds and other precious metals. Little did they realize how correct they were. It was, indeed, something precious they found, it was liquid and black, oil. The whole area sits on oil and gas whether on land or on sea. Billions of barrels of oil have been exported yielding trillions of naira to the Nigerian coffer.

     

    Ugborodo and the Oil Boom

     

    What about the Ugborodo people, what have they received from the oil boom? First was the pollution always associated with oil exploration. The crayfish beds that provided livelihood and economic sustenance for the people disappeared. I wonder if dolphins (ubeje) that frolicked at full tide in the estuary in my youth still appear. What about the occasional manatee (ese), do they still exist? Second was the expropriation of the land with meager compensation that has sent the people into warring camps. Third, extreme poverty amidst the affluence in the rest of Nigeria brought on by the huge oil revenue. Fourth, all the oil jobs, from the highest to the lowest positions somehow, never seemed to come their way. The list continues. But worst and most damning is the surreptitious loss of their identity from Ugborodo to Escravos, the slaves!

    So what do the Ugborodo people want from the oil companies and the governments of Nigeria? Nearly two years after the attack, should houses not have been rebuilt or, in particular, the school building renovated so that the children can get back to school? The hospital took over a decade of negotiations before it was constructed, should it not have been restored two years after it was bombed instead of keeping soldiers to protect its carcass? The people need jobs and education. The building of a new Ugborodo has been discussed for at least a decade. The site was sand-filled five years ago. When will the new Ugborodo be built? Let those planning it not forget that a town has to be economically sustainable and its peoples’ history need to be preserved. But whatever else is done, please, give the Ugborodo people back their name. Ugborodo is not Escravos, the Slaves

    Is it not shocking that while the late Nigerian president-elect, Chief Abiola led the campaign for reparation for slavery and the United Nations is to hold a conference on racism, slavery and reparations in South Africa, where Nigeria, the former Slave Coast, will be represented, that we still call a river in Nigeria, Escravos, the Slaves? There is no doubt that thousands, if not millions, of Nigerians went down that river to fuel the European slave trade that built America. But should we still keep its disgraceful Portuguese name? I know as a child when we plied the river, we never called it Escravos, but called the river by its various local names.

    This much all sons and daughters of the greater Ugborodo must request immediately. Give us back our name and our identity. Why is an oil terminal or a gas plant or an airstrip or any other installation on our land being called Escravos, the Slaves? Please stop this humiliation and degradation. Whatever it takes, change the name to Ugborodo now.

     

     

  • Chevron lights up communities

    AFter years of yearning for electricity, eight communities in Bayelsa State recently heaved a sigh of relief as they now use electricity. Their tenant, Chevron Nigeria Limited, provided them with the facility. The oil-giant rescued the communities which are under the KEFFES cluster group from years of darkness.

    KEFFES is an acronym for communities where Chevron operates in Southern Ijaw and Brass local government areas of the state. It comprises Koluama I, Koluama II, Ekeni, Foropa, Fishtown, Ezetu I, Ezetu II and Sangana.

    Though the electricity is not from the national grid, the communities are happy that their tenant provided them with eight big brand new electricity generating sets to sustain the projects.

    Aside this, the communities got town halls, concrete walkways, concrete footbridges, market stalls and four-bedroom principal quarters for Community Secondary School, Foropa.

    Therefore, it was with excitement that representatives of the communities attended the Annual General Meeting of the KEFFES Rural Development Foundation (KRDF) in Yenagoa.

    The AGM was also as showcase for an opportunity for the KRDF to give a blow-by-blow account of its stewardship to all stakeholders in the communities.

    Speaking at the meeting, General Manager, Policy, Government and Public Affairs, Chevron, Mr. Deji Haastrup, said that with the success of the Global Memorandum of Understanding (GMoU) of which Chevron is the principal, the KEFFES communities would soon begin to enjoy GMoU Plus.

    He further explained that GMoU Plus was formulated to ensure the achievements of Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), operational excellence and human rights in rural communities; even as he said that the new initiative would pay attention to economic and business developments in the rural areas.

    But the chairman, KRDF, Mr. Christopher Tudor, described the projects delivered so far by the foundation as world-class. He recalled that though KEFFES was a story of a small beginning, it had become an enviable community development initiative.

    Tudor said: “The NNPC/Chevron Joint Venture-initiated GMoU and its process of implementation have proved to be most effective, transparent and accountable.

    “I, therefore, use this opportunity to appeal to all oil companies operating in the Niger Delta to emulate this process to ensure sustainable development in their areas of operation.”

    He further commended the community leaders and the royal fathers for their support and co-operation. While acknowledging the roles of youth, women organisations, community development committees, the entire people of KEFFES communities, Tudor praised Chevron for being faithful in the funding the GMoU.

    Also, Chairman of KRDF Board of Trustees, His Royal Highness Athanasius Allison, the Amananawei of Foropa Kingdom, commended the achievements of the board, describing the provision of brand new electricity generating plants as laudable.

    “Significantly, I can identify the provision of brand new electricity generating plants as a laudable milestone in power supply,” he said.

    In his remarks, the President, Ijaw Youth Council Worldwide, Mr. Udengs Eradiri, said the projects were delivered because the KEFFES cluster group chose the right leaders to lead them. He advised KRDF to take sustenance of the delivered projects serious.

    He said: “Maintaining and sustaining these various projects should be the most important of all our activities. The foundation should, therefore, place priorities on these two core areas to ensure that real values are derived and bequeathed to the participating rural communities.”

    Udengs also urged oil communities in the Niger Delta to set aside 50 per cent of oil producing communities’ monthly earnings to capacity development. He said since the communities in the region earn about N20m monthly, they should devote at least 50 per cent of such earnings to children’s education.

    He said education was important for the Ijaw youths to occupy their pride of place in the comity of nations.

    Eradiri said: “Education is the investment for capacity building. When we are educated, we will be positioned for rightful thinking, rightful activities and proper progress.

    “May I, therefore, call on the opinion leaders of Niger Delta communities to deliberate on certain percentage of the oil money to be set aside for education and consequentially capacity building.

    “By investing in education, moral and sound societal values will be added to the projects and programme delivered by KRDF and other initiatives for community development.”

    He advised youths against criminal activities, describing oil bunkering as both illegal and unhealthy. He said the negative impact of bunkering activities was highly inimical to one’s health.

    “I challenge the leadership of the Niger Delta communities; vis-à-vis government, monarchs, foundations and community leaders on the need to liberate Ijaw people through sound and total education,” he said.

    Eradiri condemned indiscipline and brigandage in the region, saying they were all acts of disregard to humanity.