After decades of plunder, oil giants are scrambling to divest from the Niger Delta.
Is this email difficult to read? View in your web browser. ([link removed])
News of the world environment
NEWSLETTER | OCTOBER 24, 2025
([link removed])
([link removed])
([link removed])
Deserting the Delta
DORIS EGBA’S STRONGEST memory of her childhood in the village of Otuabagi, in Nigeria’s Bayelsa State, is of her parents’ interminable search for arable land. “When I look back now, out of all my memories, it is the one that stands out — the fact that they were always looking for where they could grow crops just to feed us,” says Egba, who’s now a teacher in the village school.
Otuabagi, a rustic fishing village nestled within the vast network of alluvial lands, mangrove forests, and slow-moving creeks that make up the Niger Delta, is the birthplace of oil production in the country. In 1956, when Shell D’Arcy — as Royal Dutch Shell was then known — struck black gold in the region, the fortunes of Egba’s parents and their fellow villagers, who are predominantly farmers and fisher folks, took a turn for the worse. Their ancestral land, with its rich soil and plentiful water, became part of what came to be known as the Oloibiri oilfield. At least 18 of the 21 oil wells that made up the oilfield were sited in Otuabagi, mostly on farmlands, fishing ponds, and streams that had served the villagers for generations.
Over the next two decades, the oilfield would pump over 20 million barrels of crude oil, resulting in massive hydrocarbon pollution that changed Otuabagi forever. By the time Egba was born in 1980, two years after the oilfield had ceased to produce, the once-thriving fish ponds and farms had been transformed into polluted, lifeless waters and barren lands…
Shell never cleaned up the mess it made in Otuabagi. Improperly decommissioned well heads and manifolds (the assemblage of pipes, valves, and other fittings that help direct the flow of pressurized oil from wells) still litter the landscape.
Otuabagi isn’t the only village to suffer such a fate. For decades, Shell and a host of other international and domestic oil companies expanded drilling operations throughout the Niger Delta, displacing local communities and despoiling the natural environment in the process.
Now, in the face of mounting lawsuits over spills and crude theft, as well as a decline in output from the oilfields in the restive region, all of the international oil companies that plundered these lands are attempting to rid themselves of their once-lucrative-but-now-problematic assets in the Delta.
Journalist Obiora Ikoku reports on how the international oil majors — including ExxonMobil, TotalEnergies, and Shell — are scrambling to exit the Niger Delta without cleaning up their mess or compensating impacted communities.
READ MORE ([link removed])
Photo by Luka Tomac / Friends of the Earth International ([link removed])
Let’s grow the movement! Share this email with an environmentally conscious friend or colleague (or copy this easy sign-up link ([link removed])).
SUGGESTED BROWSING ()
Flight Path ([link removed])
Guided by the shift in seasons, billions of birds set off on epic voyages across the planet every autumn and spring. Follow 45 species as they journey across a changing planet in search of new opportunities. (The Guardian ([link removed]))
To Love a Swamp ([link removed])
To understand why she is so “powerfully drawn to dark, sodden landscapes,” one writer sets out to visit all five of the US East Coast’s “most legendary swamps in one languid road trip.” (Longreads ([link removed]))
What You Pass On ([link removed])
“If you must understand something to teach it, how do you pass on that which you lack the language to understand? Where others have traditions to teach, classes for their children, very old stories to tell, I have but a feeling.” (Emergence Magazine ([link removed]))
Towering Loss ([link removed])
The US Southwest’s ponderosa forests, once a “towering presence,” are well on their way to becoming one of America’s first post-climate change landscapes. A writer who has long relied on these pines for solace mourns the ongoing loss. A Southwest without them, he writes, would be like “an orchestra stripped down to a pair of violins and a kettle drum.” (Orion ([link removed]))
Did a thoughtful friend forward you our newsletter?
What a great friend! Sign up here. ([link removed])
([link removed])
Facebook ([link removed])
([link removed])
Bluesky ([link removed])
([link removed])
Instagram ([link removed])
Thanks for supporting Earth Island Journal, an independent publication of Earth Island Institute. Reader donations to our Green Journalism Fund ([link removed]) help to cover the costs of our in-depth investigative reporting on environmental issues.
([link removed])
You are receiving this email newsletter because you signed up on our website.
No longer want to receive these emails? Update your preferences ([link removed]).
Make sure we land in your primary inbox: Add Earth Island Journal to your address book.
Our mailing address is:
Earth Island Journal
2150 Allston Way Ste 460
Berkeley, CA 94704-1375
Copyright © 2025 Earth Island Journal, All rights reserved.