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Saturday, October 1, 2011
STORY BEHIND KWARA'S OIL DISCOVERY
Aran-Orin is a sleepy community in Irepodun Local Government Area of Kwara State that stirs to life only during festive periods when the sons and daughters of the community flock back home to spend the holidays with family and relatives. But the scantily populated village caused a national stir with the recent claims by the Kwara State governor that the state government has made oil discovery in a farmland in the village.
The story of the oil find went that a farmer, Tajuddeen Babalola, after a strenuous day of hard work on his farm took his young son to the well inside the farm to drink water. But on getting home the boy developed a stomach upset. The father told worried neighbours the well from which the boy drank water and when they went to check they saw an oily substance floating at the top of the water. Suspecting something, they told the government about it and officials from the state’s Ministry of Solid Minerals came and took samples and confirmed it was crude oil.
Governor Abdulfatah Ahmad told the public gleefully: “The ministry officials did not only confirmed the substance as crude oil but identified the blend as Bonny Light, a high grade of crude oil preferred by European and American refineries due to its unique properties.”
What has yet to be confirmed though is whether the oil said to be found in the village is of commercial quantity. Just like the rest of the world, the Department of Petroleum resources (DPR) and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) got news of the oil find from the announcement of the state governor who has now extended the invitation to them to come and carry out further test at the site of the oil find.
But the mood in Alan-Orin is of hopeful optimism, more so since the oil is said to have been discovered at seven different sites. The chief of the village, His Royal Majesty, the Alaran of Aran-Orin, Oba Joseph Oyeyipo Babalola says sons and daughters of the village residing abroad and in Nigerian cities who got wind of the news through the internet have been sending congratulatory messages to him and indicating their willingness to come back home to develop the oil resources found in their village.
Even among the residents of the village, the countenance on their faces indicates that they are aware that their village has become a source of serious curiosity to the outside world. But behaving more like people guarding a secret treasure, they tell Weekly Trust that they have been under strict instruction from their elders not to say anything about the oil said to be discovered in their land. Only the Oba can talk about it.
The palace of the Oba sits on the main road linking the village to the outside. In front of the palace is a cemented stone, odu, which is a mark signifying where the first ancestors of the Oba’s family staked their claim to the land. It is a practice among the people of the community to stake their claim to the land of their ancestors with a mark. With the recent news of the oil find, the claim to the land has gone beyond the personal and ancestral to become a community-wide claim.
But instead of joy, what this has created is fears and insecurity among the residents of the village who treat any inquiry about the oil said to be found in their land with suspicion. While the Oba says the reluctance of his community to take people to the site of the oil find is for security reasons other sources say the community fears the breakout of border disputes with the neighbouring Ekiti State.
But could the Oba help confirm if the claims by the state government is true? He answers: “A year ago the discovery came when a farmer Tajuddeen Babalola was in the farm and wanted to drink water from a shallow well and discovered there were particles on the top of the water. He later went to the village to inform the people who followed him to ascertain what the substance is. On getting there they saw something that resembled engine oil floating on top of the water. Samples of the oil specimen were taken to the state Ministry of Solid Minerals. The ministry later came to rejoice with the community that it was oil that they discovered. The sample was shown to us and here it is.”
At this point the Oba raised a plastic bottle he says contains the specimen of the oil to our camera. But Weekly Trust observed that while the state government and its officials have been holding press conferences telling journalists about the oil they said they have found, when our team asked to be taken to the site of the find as a mark of proof, officials developed cold feet. At a point, photos were shown to us of the place of the alleged oil find. But when we asked if we could publish, all the commissioners, permanent secretaries, press secretaries and geologists said no. A commissioner even asked for a memo to be raised before we could publish the picture. The officials seem completely unaware or chose to ignore the Freedom of Information law passed by the National Assembly recently, even when hinted.
At the palace of the Oba when we visited was the chairperson of Irepodun Local Government who says :“I am very happy for the discovery, especially as it happened during our time. The discovery will serve as a source of employment for our teeming youths and will help to develop the community, the state and the country if used wisely.” Also hopeful of a prosperous future is the Oba who says: “The discovery will assist in giving the youths of the community employment when the exploration of the oil commences.” What is clear from statements like these is the community has started dreaming of gold even though the state government says it could not verify whether the oil it found is of commercial quantity.
It is easy to understand the source of this desperate hope once one gets into Aran-Orin. It is a deserted community with no sign of economic activity. The only sign of a market are the old women who display tokens for sale inside trays kept by the side of the road. The road leading to the community is unpaved and pork marked by erosion which makes a drive into it a slow and sometimes tortuous process. The community members are hopeful that all this is set to change with their newfound status.
But would this optimism be sustained or will this be yet another futile claim that will dash the hopes of a whole community? Weekly Trust can say that in a bid to make political capital out of the find, the state government probably never gave much thought to this when they began to broadcast the find to the world. But the hurried nature of the announcement has meant that information about the oil find was managed so shoddily that even government officials from the relevant state ministries have no clue about it until it was broadcasted. It was also the same with officials from the Federal Ministry of Petroleum and its agencies. Officials from the state Ministry of Information can only point to the governor’s statement as evidence when asked to produce one. None of them have seen the site and neither can they describe its location. Even the information unit of the Ministry of Solid Minerals could not say if they have seen the site, except for references to their geologists.
Weekly Trust made several attempts, spanning from Wednesday to Friday to government officials to make available proof of their claims, stressing all the time the signal it would send to the outside world should no such proof be proffered. But the officials kept foot-dragging and referring us from one office to the other where we got nothing.
A letter from the Commissioner of Information, Prince Olatunji Moronfoye asking the Oba to take us to the site of the alleged oil find was attended to with excuses from palace officials who say it is late even though it was just around 2 O’clock in the afternoon. A chief in the palace, Chief James Jolayemi, who is said to be the one responsible for taking people to the site said we have to come the following week even though he was noncommittal about whether we will be taken to the site if we return. Then he complains he is old and tired, having led so many people to the site that day. When we wouldn’t let down, he blurted out angrily, “Do you want me to lose my job?”
The chairman of the local government, Basirat Babalola Mohammad intervened and took us to the palace with her. We only got the sample in the plastic bottle as evidence. The site visit was still not honoured. Back in Illorin, the Commissioner of Solid Minerals, Alhaji Umar Bawa Aliu who was said to have gone to the site refused to speak or allow photographs to be tendered. That is not to say conclusively that the announcement of the oil find was a misinformation to the public by the state government. Sources say the state government might have realized too late that they have bragged too much about their find when a further test by the federal government could show the oil they found is insignificant. Besides other sources say, when they were busy holding press conferences and sending out press releases about their find, they were never counting on any journalists to hold them to their claim by asking to see the site, hence the dribbling Weekly Trust was subjected to as each government official fears the consequence of journalists access to the site.
In a way, the story of the Kwara oil find embodies the hope and the difficulties faced by communities outside the Niger Delta that oil be found on their soil too, as the resource for better or worse has come to define the politics of the nation. This quest is fed further by geological surveys which have proven that states outside the Niger Delta, especially those around the Chad Basin area have good chances of discovering crude oil. But the federal government’s efforts at wider exploration have often been bogged down by politics and general administrative incompetence.
It just might be that the Kwara State government might get the Federal Government to carry out a serious exploration of their area. And it just might be that the hopes of the people of the state will not be dashed and oil in commercial quantities might be buried deep down in their soil. The possibilities are numerous. But a bigger challenge is to convince state governments, especially those in the north who dream of striking oil that that is not the answer to their problems. Just as a government source said, “A lot of states could make money from solid minerals, which they now ignore.” As the politics of the oil search continues, this is an admonition that is hoped state governments will heed. But will they?
The discovery of crude oil in Kwara State
There has been some excitement over the recent report that crude oil has been discovered in Kwara State. The state governor, Mr. Abdulfatah Ahmed, who broke the news, said the discovery was made in Aran Orin in Irepodun Local Government Area by a farmer who found an oily substance spouting from his farm and seven other nearby sites. The farmer alerted the government of the discovery, following which geologists from the state Ministry of Industry and Solid Minerals were directed to investigate and confirm the genuineness of the finding.
According to Governor Ahmed, the geologists not only confirmed that the substance was crude oil, but were also able to identify it as Bonny Light, a high quality blend of crude oil preferred by American and European refineries. Besides, the governor said, a subsequent independent analysis by a private oil company had also confirmed the government’s findings. Further tests are now being carried out to determine if the crude oil deposit in Ara Orin is in commercial quantities. There have been some reports, however, that the concerned federal authorities have claimed ignorance of the alleged oil discovery in Kwara, thus suggesting that the state government may not have carried along the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources and its relevant departments and agencies up to this stage. Be that as it may, we think the state government’s claim should not be dismissed without investigation as untrue.
There is need, instead, for the relevant federal authorities to initiate a formal inquiry into Governor Ahmed’s claim to ascertain its veracity. Where any procedural irregularities are observed, attention should be called to them. The oil discovery in Kwara State is significant for obvious reasons, especially if it is confirmed that the deposits are in commercial quantities. That would ultimately place Kwara in the league of the nation’s oil-producing states, with the financial implications of additional revenue from the Federation Account, based on the derivation principle. At the same time, as experience in the older oil-producing communities has shown, oil exploration and exploitation activities will come with serious challenges, notably the threat of environmental pollution and the marginalization of the local communities, which may breed social tension. This is why the relevant federal authorities – the Federal Environmental Protection Agency inclusive – must take proactive steps to ensure that all necessary procedures are strictly observed in the further exploration of the alleged oil deposits in Aran Orin, Irepodun LGA of Kwara State.
A proper environmental impact assessment of further exploratory activities is required, so as to protect the environment from any preventable harm. Every necessary measure should also be put in place to safeguard the interests and rights of the local communities, in accordance with the law and industry best practices – beginning from this early state. The various tiers of government must ensure that the tragedies that have been associated with the discovery and exploitation of oil resources in the Niger Delta are not replicated elsewhere in the country, should oil be discovered in other communities.
The decades-old gas flares, the reckless pollution of the environment and destruction of the Eco-system, leaving the oil producing communities without a means of livelihood, the looting of oil-export proceeds by a conscienceless political elite (national and local), the infrastructural neglect of the oil communities and their heinous pauperization, the resultant festering of discontent in the communities and the rise of militant youths and escalation of criminal activities and general insecurity – that is a historical path that the nation cannot afford to tread again. The Kwara State Government should not only resolve that its oil resource – and indeed any other mineral resource – must not become a curse to its people, it must also take immediate action to bring its activities so far on the issue in full compliance with the extant regulations. It seems odd that the federal authorities should complain – as reported – that they are unaware of the Kwara oil discovery, considering that the subject is on the exclusive legislative list.
According to Governor Ahmed, the geologists not only confirmed that the substance was crude oil, but were also able to identify it as Bonny Light, a high quality blend of crude oil preferred by American and European refineries. Besides, the governor said, a subsequent independent analysis by a private oil company had also confirmed the government’s findings. Further tests are now being carried out to determine if the crude oil deposit in Ara Orin is in commercial quantities. There have been some reports, however, that the concerned federal authorities have claimed ignorance of the alleged oil discovery in Kwara, thus suggesting that the state government may not have carried along the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources and its relevant departments and agencies up to this stage. Be that as it may, we think the state government’s claim should not be dismissed without investigation as untrue.
There is need, instead, for the relevant federal authorities to initiate a formal inquiry into Governor Ahmed’s claim to ascertain its veracity. Where any procedural irregularities are observed, attention should be called to them. The oil discovery in Kwara State is significant for obvious reasons, especially if it is confirmed that the deposits are in commercial quantities. That would ultimately place Kwara in the league of the nation’s oil-producing states, with the financial implications of additional revenue from the Federation Account, based on the derivation principle. At the same time, as experience in the older oil-producing communities has shown, oil exploration and exploitation activities will come with serious challenges, notably the threat of environmental pollution and the marginalization of the local communities, which may breed social tension. This is why the relevant federal authorities – the Federal Environmental Protection Agency inclusive – must take proactive steps to ensure that all necessary procedures are strictly observed in the further exploration of the alleged oil deposits in Aran Orin, Irepodun LGA of Kwara State.
A proper environmental impact assessment of further exploratory activities is required, so as to protect the environment from any preventable harm. Every necessary measure should also be put in place to safeguard the interests and rights of the local communities, in accordance with the law and industry best practices – beginning from this early state. The various tiers of government must ensure that the tragedies that have been associated with the discovery and exploitation of oil resources in the Niger Delta are not replicated elsewhere in the country, should oil be discovered in other communities.
The decades-old gas flares, the reckless pollution of the environment and destruction of the Eco-system, leaving the oil producing communities without a means of livelihood, the looting of oil-export proceeds by a conscienceless political elite (national and local), the infrastructural neglect of the oil communities and their heinous pauperization, the resultant festering of discontent in the communities and the rise of militant youths and escalation of criminal activities and general insecurity – that is a historical path that the nation cannot afford to tread again. The Kwara State Government should not only resolve that its oil resource – and indeed any other mineral resource – must not become a curse to its people, it must also take immediate action to bring its activities so far on the issue in full compliance with the extant regulations. It seems odd that the federal authorities should complain – as reported – that they are unaware of the Kwara oil discovery, considering that the subject is on the exclusive legislative list.
NNPC faults Kwara’s claim on oil discovery
NNPC faults Kwara’s claim on oil discovery
By Sunday Ojeme
Sunday, 21 Aug 2011
The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation has picked holes in the claim by the Kwara State Government that crude oil has been discovered in one of the villages in the state.
The corporation said it was funny for the state government to have come out publicly to make such pronouncement when the Department of Petroleum Resources that should verify such a claim was yet to be contacted.
Speaking with our correspondent on the telephone on Friday, a source at the Public Affairs unit of the corporation said it was not the duty of government officials or individuals to make pronouncements on oil discovery when no sample had been analysed.
Group Managing Director of NNPC, Mr. Austen Oniwon
The source said, “Even if oil was actually discovered there it is not their duty to go public with such information. It is the DPR that should be contacted and then experts will be sent there to analyse the soil sample.”
Last week, the Kwara State Government announced that crude oil had been discovered in Aran Orin town in Irepodun Local Government Area of the state by a farmer.
In a statement issued by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Communications, Dr. Muyideen Akorede, the state Governor, Mr. Abdulfatah Ahmed, said the farmer discovered crude oil on his farm and seven other adjoining sites and subsequently alerted the state government.
He said geologists from the State Ministry of Industry and Solid Minerals were directed to confirm whether the substance was indeed crude oil, and if so identify the blend, which they later confirmed to be Bonny Light, the highly sought after blend by refiners.
As at Thursday, the state government had commenced the process of ascertaining the quantity of the deposit even when experts from DPR were yet to confirm the substance to be crude oil.
The state Commissioner for Information and Communications, Tunji Moronfoye, said on Thursday that the government had contacted the DPR of the Ministry of Petroleum Resources to carry out the processes to determine if the discovery was of commercial quantity.
By Sunday Ojeme
Sunday, 21 Aug 2011
The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation has picked holes in the claim by the Kwara State Government that crude oil has been discovered in one of the villages in the state.
The corporation said it was funny for the state government to have come out publicly to make such pronouncement when the Department of Petroleum Resources that should verify such a claim was yet to be contacted.
Speaking with our correspondent on the telephone on Friday, a source at the Public Affairs unit of the corporation said it was not the duty of government officials or individuals to make pronouncements on oil discovery when no sample had been analysed.
Group Managing Director of NNPC, Mr. Austen Oniwon
The source said, “Even if oil was actually discovered there it is not their duty to go public with such information. It is the DPR that should be contacted and then experts will be sent there to analyse the soil sample.”
Last week, the Kwara State Government announced that crude oil had been discovered in Aran Orin town in Irepodun Local Government Area of the state by a farmer.
In a statement issued by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Communications, Dr. Muyideen Akorede, the state Governor, Mr. Abdulfatah Ahmed, said the farmer discovered crude oil on his farm and seven other adjoining sites and subsequently alerted the state government.
He said geologists from the State Ministry of Industry and Solid Minerals were directed to confirm whether the substance was indeed crude oil, and if so identify the blend, which they later confirmed to be Bonny Light, the highly sought after blend by refiners.
As at Thursday, the state government had commenced the process of ascertaining the quantity of the deposit even when experts from DPR were yet to confirm the substance to be crude oil.
The state Commissioner for Information and Communications, Tunji Moronfoye, said on Thursday that the government had contacted the DPR of the Ministry of Petroleum Resources to carry out the processes to determine if the discovery was of commercial quantity.
Monday, 15 August 2011
KWARA State is set to join the list of oil-producing states in the country following the discovery of crude oil in Ara Orin in Irepodun Local Government Area of the state.
The discovery came as the state identified solid minerals development and mining as key sources of internally generated revenue to fund development programmes.
The state governor, Alhaji Abdulfatah Ahmed, announced the discovery in Ilorin while receiving the management of National Mirror newspapers, who paid him a courtesy visit at the Government House.
Governor Ahmed said the discovery was first highlighted by a farmer who discovered crude oil sprouting from his farm and seven other adjoining sites and alerted the state government.
Providing further clarification, he said geologists from the state Ministry of Industry and Solid Minerals were subsequently directed to confirm whether the substance was indeed crude oil and if so, identify the blend.
According to the governor, the ministry officials did not only confirm the substance as crude oil but identified the blend as Bonny Light, a high-grade of crude oil preferred by European and American refineries due to its unique properties, according to a statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Communications, Dr Muyideen Akorede.
Governor Ahmed said the find was subsequently verified through independent analysis by a private oil company which also confirmed the government’s findings.
He said further tests were being carried to determine if the crude discovered in Ara Orin was in commercial quantities, adding that the finding was a welcome boost to the state’s economy and its emerging reputation as one of Nigeria’s most conducive investment destinations.
He identified solid minerals development and mining as one of his administration’s key policy thrusts for driving development in the state, stressing that the sector had the potential to significantly boost Kwara’s internally-generated revenue by attracting foreign and indigenous investors to the state.
The governor said the Ministry of Industry and Solid Minerals had been directed to catalogue all mineral and mining sites in the state with a view to regulating the sector and effectively managing the state’s resources.
http://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gif
He identified his administration’s other strategic policy areas as commercial agriculture, human capital development, youth empowerment and social and physical infrastructure.
He said all government policies and programmes had youth empowerment at their core, adding that he had directed all ministries to ensure that all projects had the potential to generate jobs for youths in the state.
KWARA State is set to join the list of oil-producing states in the country following the discovery of crude oil in Ara Orin in Irepodun Local Government Area of the state.
The discovery came as the state identified solid minerals development and mining as key sources of internally generated revenue to fund development programmes.
The state governor, Alhaji Abdulfatah Ahmed, announced the discovery in Ilorin while receiving the management of National Mirror newspapers, who paid him a courtesy visit at the Government House.
Governor Ahmed said the discovery was first highlighted by a farmer who discovered crude oil sprouting from his farm and seven other adjoining sites and alerted the state government.
Providing further clarification, he said geologists from the state Ministry of Industry and Solid Minerals were subsequently directed to confirm whether the substance was indeed crude oil and if so, identify the blend.
According to the governor, the ministry officials did not only confirm the substance as crude oil but identified the blend as Bonny Light, a high-grade of crude oil preferred by European and American refineries due to its unique properties, according to a statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Communications, Dr Muyideen Akorede.
Governor Ahmed said the find was subsequently verified through independent analysis by a private oil company which also confirmed the government’s findings.
He said further tests were being carried to determine if the crude discovered in Ara Orin was in commercial quantities, adding that the finding was a welcome boost to the state’s economy and its emerging reputation as one of Nigeria’s most conducive investment destinations.
He identified solid minerals development and mining as one of his administration’s key policy thrusts for driving development in the state, stressing that the sector had the potential to significantly boost Kwara’s internally-generated revenue by attracting foreign and indigenous investors to the state.
The governor said the Ministry of Industry and Solid Minerals had been directed to catalogue all mineral and mining sites in the state with a view to regulating the sector and effectively managing the state’s resources.
http://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gif
He identified his administration’s other strategic policy areas as commercial agriculture, human capital development, youth empowerment and social and physical infrastructure.
He said all government policies and programmes had youth empowerment at their core, adding that he had directed all ministries to ensure that all projects had the potential to generate jobs for youths in the state.
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