Nigeria lost no fewer than 3,000 barrels of crude oil to the November 15 oil spill from the offshore Egina Floating Production Storage and Offloading (FPSO) vessel of TotalEnergies, Africa Today News, New York reports.
The FPSO located 130 kilometres off the Atlantic coastline from Port Harcourt currently has capacity to produce 200,000 barrels of crude daily and can store 2.3 million barrels on board.
Director general of the National Oil Spills Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA), Mr Idris Musa, told reporters while speaking in an interview yesterday that the clean-up of the spill was still on-going.
He added that NOSDRA and TotalEnergies did not spare any effort in tackling the pollution to minimise its impact on the environment, a development that kept the spilled crude from reaching the coastline.
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‘The spill has not hit the coastline because of the effectiveness of the spills contingency plan we deployed,’ he said.
Musa explained that NOSDRA deployed high-level personnel and activated the National Oil Spills Contingency Plan to contain the spill.
‘The spill was not a minor one; it was the response strategy put in place that resulted to limited impact and we have been tracing and tracking the oil slick and supervising response efforts.
‘NOSDRA deployed personnel led by a director to the site and we have remained on the spill site as well as granting the requisite approvals to hasten the response,’ he said.
Musa explained that TotalEnergies took steps that made the response swift and effective, adding that other oil companies assisted in the response.
He stressed that spills clean-up required collaborative response of oil industry stakeholders, which, in this case, deployed aircraft, and at least five vessels in the application of 15,000 litres of liquids to clean the waters.