Oil Pollution and Water Conflicts in the Riverine Communities in Nigeria’s Niger Delta Region: Challenges for and Elements of Problem-Solving Strategies
Publisher: Journal of Contemporary African Studies
Author(s): Abosede O. Babatunde
Date: 2020
Topics: Extractive Resources, Governance, Weapons, Waste, and Pollution
In Nigeria’s Niger Delta, oil pollution has significantly harmed the natural environment on which the local people in the Niger Delta depend for their livelihood and sustenance. The direct consequence of oil pollution is that it has led to multidimensional and protracted conflicts in oil-bearing communities. Drawing on fieldwork data, this article examines the ways in which oil pollution harms water resources and fuels conflicts in the local communities. It explores the socio-economic dynamics of the conflicts and insecurity, and how they are aggravated by the ineffectiveness of the measures adopted by the state to manage the conflicts. It argues that the role of local actors in the ecological dislocation have been downplayed and not factored into the measures devised to tackle the intractable conflicts. This article demonstrates how the network of interactions among localised, national and globalised actors aggravate environmental pollution and the complex conflicts in local communities.