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Article

20 Mai 2020

Auteur:
Kelvin Ebiri & Port Harcourt, The Guardian (Nigeria)

Nigeria: Research reveals that international commodity traders are selling highly toxic fuels

‘Nigeria now dumping ground for toxic fuel’ 19 May 2020

A group, Stakeholders Democracy Network (SDN), has raised concern that international refined petroleum traders are exploiting Nigeria’s weak and poorly enforced fuel regulations to dump toxic petroleum products in the country. The group said with high levels of air pollution, such as soot and pre-existing respiratory and other health conditions in the Niger Delta, this might increase the risk that COVID-19 poses to the health of the population of the Niger Delta. The SDN Programme Manager, Florence Kayemba, said a research that was published yesterday revealed that low quality and highly toxic fuels were being sold to Nigeria by international commodity traders.

… Fuel quality tests should be carried out nationwide immediately to explore the extent of poor fuel distribution. Improved standards for fuel quality were approved in Nigeria by the Standards Organisation of Nigeria in 2017, but enforcement is evidently weak to non-existent by responsible agencies” “As the issue has reached a severe point, and with the outbreak of COVID-19, there must be no further delay in raising and enforcing existing standards across the supply chain, and for all responsible stakeholders to be held to account. To reduce the impact of the disruption this may temporarily cause to the import of refined fuels into Nigeria, there would need to be simultaneous improvements in public transport and electricity supply to reduce consumption in vehicles and generators,” she said.

“This is even more concerning at a time when Nigeria is facing an outbreak of Coronavirus. High level of air pollution and pre-existing respiratory and other health conditions may increase the risk that COVID-19 poses to the health of the population of the Niger Delta, where the majority of unofficial fuels are produced, and more widely in Nigeria where low quality fuels are also consumed.”