Showing posts with label flooding news in Nigeria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flooding news in Nigeria. Show all posts

We ‘ll ensure no flood in next 30 to 50 years


President Goodluck Jonathan has assured that his administration would take steps to avert flooding in the country in the coming 30 to 50 years by ensuring the completion of the Kashin-bila dam in Taraba State; the construction of a dam on River Benue and dykes across the country.

The President gave this assurance in Makurdi, the Benue State capital, when he visited the state to assess the damage caused by flood in parts of state and also to commiserate with the victims.

While lamenting the condition of the victims, the President also decried economic losses suffered by the victims, assuring that the Federal Government would do everything to mitigate the effect of the flood on their lives.

He noted that the Federal Government had already released N500 million to the state government stressing that this would be disbursed to the victims to assist them to pick up their lives again.

Jonathan also promised the release of funds to the Federal Ministry of Agriculture to purchase improved seedlings that would be distributed to farmers across the country, adding that money will also be given to the Ministry of Health to ensure control of water borne diseases like cholera and diarrhoea in parts of the country in the aftermath of the flooding.

He said: “Government is committed to turning your calamity into a blessing. Those of you who lost farmlands would be given high yielding seedlings to make you improve your farm produce. We will help you start new economic lives and pray that you do not suffer from such calamity again.”

He expressed appreciation to developmental partners, non-governmental organisations, faith-based organisations, security agencies and other well-meaning Nigerians for their support to the flood victims across the nation.

Flood affected five LGAs

Earlier in his speech, Governor Gabriel Suswam disclosed that flood affected five local governments of Makurdi, Guma, Gwer West, Logo and Agatu, noting that over 4,378 males, 6,378 female, 9,300 children, 348 infants, 341 pregnant women and eight physically challenged persons were displaced by the flood while 18 births had been recorded in the designated camps.

The governor who commended the President for the release of N500 million, assured that the money and several relief materials received from different organizsations and individuals would be applied strictly to displaced persons.

He expressed fears of imminent food crisis in the affected  states across the country and appealed to the Federal Government to intervene quickly to avert famine in the country.

Suswam urged the Federal Government to construct an 18 kilometre dam on River Benue and dykes across the Benue to check future flooding.
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FG loses N6.75bn oil revenue to flood daily


Nigeria is losing about $43million  or N6.75billion daily to production cut back on account of recent flooding that hit many parts of the country, particularly, the oil-rich Niger Delta.

Industry regulator, Department of Petroleum Resources, DPR, said, yesterday, that the country’s daily production fell by about 18 per cent from 2.6million barrels daily, bpd, to 2.1 million bpd, even as it plans to hold a new licencing round by the year end to boost production reserves.

Furthermore, Shell, Nigeria’s biggest producer, last week declared force majeure, a legal condition which frees it from contractual obligations on Bonny Light and Forcados exports.



Bonny Light and Forcados are two of the country’s most important oil grades, which accounted for 427,000 bpd or 20 per cent of the nation’s total exports of 2.048 million bpd in October.

The developments compound Nigeria’s revenue projections, and will impact negatively on the 2012 Budget, and will affect the execution of capital budget for the remaining part of the year, as the country depends on more than 90 per cent of oil proceeds for its survival.

Already, the National Assembly and the Presidency are at loggerheads over the poor budget implementation, and if the flooding continued, the controversial 2013 national budget will also be impacted.

DPR Director, Mr. Osten Olorunsola, addressing journalists on the state of the industry said: “Our production dropped f rom 2.6 million barrels per day to 2.1 million as at yesterday. But it is gradually coming back to 2.3 million bpd because the flood is gradually receding and the companies are coming back to put on wells as well as their facilities.”

Damage toll

Olorunsola said that the floods caused the shutdown of many of the fields, particularly those of the indigenous producers and some multinationals.

“Actually, some companies went out, companies like Sterling Energy and some little companies especially some marginal fields players. But even the big boys were seriously hit, as Total (French), was completely out in OML 58, which produces 90,000 bpd. Agip (Italy), was seriously hit at Obiafor, Obikro, Mbede, they were really down. Total shut down at a peak of about 500,000 barrels per day.”

The revelation contradicts earlier claims by the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, that the recent floods did not affect oil facilities, after visiting some of the flooded areas in the Niger Delta.

Licencing round

In another development, Alison-Madueke told a foreign news agency that the Federal government will hold its first oil exploration bidding round after five years by the end of this year, while licence renewal talks with Shell and Chevron over existing onshore fields are in their final stages.

In an interview, the minister said: “We expect within the next couple of months a marginal bid round will be announced. We hope a major bid round will follow before the end of the year.

“Shell and Chevron (onshore licence renewals) are in the final stages now, those will definitely be out before the end of the year,” she added.

Exxon Mobil signed 20-year oil licence renewals on Nigerian onshore assets producing around 550,000 bpd in February, but other oil majors are still negotiating terms with the government.

Some industry experts have questioned why licences are being renewed before the National Assembly has passed the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), which will adjust terms on these types of contracts.

“It would have become slightly cumbersome to keep waiting on the PIB before the renewals,” Mrs Alison-Madueke said in reply.

The National Assembly is currently debating the PIB, a wide-ranging law which has been delayed for more than five years on disputes between oil firms and different arms of government.

If it becomes law, the bill may end years of regulatory uncertainty that has blocked billions of dollars of investment.

Foreign oil majors, including Shell and Exxon, have said the tax terms in the current version of the PIB would make exploration deep offshore, which is the key to growing Nigeria’s oil and gas output and reserves, non-viable.

“I think it is very difficult in general if you have been receiving a certain level of profit over quite a long period of time, to adjust to a slightly lower level of profitability,” Mrs Alison-Madueke said of the oil majors’ complaints.

“We went over these terms several times, we kept ourselves competitive,” she added.

She said after the changes were made in the PIB, Nigeria’s “government take” on offshore projects would increase by 10 per cent to 73 per cent, lower than in rival producers Angola, Norway and Indonesia.

The PIB is meant to overhaul everything from fiscal terms to the state-owned Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation.

Oil, gas  production

DPR’s Olorunsola put Nigeria’s actual crude oil plus condensates production in quarter three at 2.5m, while reserves stood at 31.2 billion Barrels for oil, 5.02 billion barrels for condensate; 92.6 trillion cubic feet, TCF for Associated Gas, AG; and 90.150 TCF for Non-Associated, NAG.

He recalled that “a major enhancement to deepwater oil production was achieved when Total’s Usan FPSO, with capacity to process 180 million bpd was commissioned in April.”

However, he disclosed that associated gas flared average was 1.4 billion cubic feet per day, cf/d, approximately 18 per cent of total gas produced, even as the flare rate is  a reduction of about five percent of 2011 rate.

To enhance gas resources, he said the agency is “actively participating in the development and implementation of the Gas Network Code.”
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ALERT: 19 States, FCT, Under Fresh Flood Threat Says Federal Ministry Of Environment

The Federal Ministry of Environment on Saturday in Abuja announced a prediction of heavy rainfall which could cause flooding between now and Oct. 27 in 19 states and the FCT.Dr Morohunkeji Oyeleke, the ministry’s Deputy Director, Erosion, Flood and Coastal Zone Management, made the announcement in a statement.

The ministry identified the states as Kaduna, Kwara, Benue, Borno, Oyo, Niger, Cross River, Akwa Ibom, Taraba, Lagos, Osun, Bauchi, Sokoto, Plateau, Adamawa, Gombe, Imo, Ogun and Kebbi.

It also identified in specific terms some areas that could be affected as Sakaba in Kebbi, Sagamu in Ogun, Okigwe in Imo and Nafada in Gombe state.Other areas are Kari and Kirfi in Bauchi state, Makira in Sokoto state,Shelleng and Shendam in Plateau, and Mubi and Numan in Adamawa.

The ministry also listed Donga, Lau and Mutum-Biyu in Taraba, Etiosa, Lekki and Surulere in Lagos state and Igbo-Ora in Osun.It further listed Briyel in Bukuru and Otukpo in Benue, Calabar in Cross River and Eket, Etinan, Ikot-Nakada, Itu and Oron areas of Akwa Ibom.
The flood-prone areas included Abaji, Kwali, Bwari, Mabushi, Kukwaba, Guzape, Karu, Kuje, Kurudu and Lugbe in the FCT.

The ministry also said areas which could be affected by the downpour-induced flood included Apata, Bodija, Challenge, Eleyele, Moniya, Aiyete, Eruwa, Iseyin, Kisi and Ogbomoso in Oyo state.It also listed Bida, Katcha, Kontagora, Mashegu and Sarki Pawa, all in Niger, Birnin Gwari, Kaduna, Jemaa, Kachia in Kaduna state and Bode Saadu, Ilorin, Kosubosu and Lafiaji in Kwara.

The ministry appealed to the governments in the identified states to take all necessary precautionary measures to avoid any untold hardship.
It added that adherence to similar warnings in the past had saved many peoples’ lives and property.

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2-yr-old baby, 5 others missing as flood sacks 10 Delta communities

A two-year-old child, Oto Timbor, and five others were feared missing, yesterday, after flood submerged 10 communities, including Kalafiogbene, Elohim, Ebeberegbene, Ekogbene, Ekumugbene, Abadiama, Egrangbene communities in Bomadi and Burutu Local Government Areas of Delta State.
 
Others are Freeman Eregbene, 3years; Finidi Timibibo, 3 years; Egere John, 7years; Helen Musa, 8 years and Yopo Egberebo, 5 years.Vanguard learnt that the flood caught the people unawares and rendered thousands of persons homeless.

One of the victims, the General Overseer of Christ Divine and Gospel Mission, Rev. Dr. O.T. Timbor, was said to be sleeping in his house in the night when the flood swept in but managed to escape death.

A leader from one of the affected communities, Mallam Yusuf Eregbene, told Vanguard that over 50 fish ponds, churches, residential apartments and schools were submerged.

He said: “Earlier on Sunday, the ravaging flood took over the headquarters of Christ Divine and Gospel Mission in Elohim City Zion, displacing over 200 worshippers during their service.”

He added that all their belongings were swept away.His words: “We call on government to come to our aid to rescue the people, some of who are taking refuge on trees because if urgent steps are not taken, many will die.”
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Flood: 600,000 persons displaced in Kogi

 Over 600, 000 people were displaced by the flood disaster, which ravaged nine local government areas of the Kogi State. The state’s Commissioner for Information, Yabaji Bologi, who disclosed this to journalists yesterday in Lokoja, said according to the latest report released by the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) about 344 communities were completely submerged, while  property worth over N2 billion were destroyed. 

He said 50,493 internally displaced persons with no alternative accommodation arrangements are being housed in 87 camps spread across the affected local government areas.The commissioner said there has been no major out-break of epidemics, and that only eight lives were lost to the flood in the state.

The Commissioner for Environment, Abdulrahman Wuya, on his part, said that government has put machineries in motion to clean up all affected areas between now and December.
He said the cleanup is to guide against outbreak of epidemics, as according to him, the flood came with hazardous materials. He appealed to those affected by the flood not to move into their houses yet despite the fact that the water has started receding.

Meanwhile, Head of the Interim Management of Ajaokuta Local Government Area  of Kogi State, Aloysius Okino,  has said that four persons from the area are missing following the flood disaster. Okino, who disclosed this during a visit to the relief camp at Gadumo area of Ajaokuta Local Government, said all efforts to trace them either alive or dead have been fruitless.

He added that the missing persons are from Onakumi Island which was completely submerged by the flood. He said fishing which is the traditional trade of the people has been disrupted while rice farms and livestock worth billions of naira have been washed away.

According to him, the disaster also affected the education sector as six primary schools in the council have been shut down indefinitely.  He said three of the schools were shut down to accommodate about 7,000 displaced by the flood while the remaining three were closed down for the safety of pupils and staff.
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Flood sacks residents of five Bauchi councils


FARMLANDS, houses and other property have been destroyed and residents rendered homeless by flood in Misau, Giade, Shira, Kirfi and Jama’are local councils of Bauchi State.
Governor Isa Yuguda, who visited the areas worst hit by the flood yesterday, directed that the culverts on the Misau-Hardawa and Zadawa roads be rebuilt before they completely cut off the communities in the areas, thereby putting the people into more suffering in terms of making it difficult for relief materials to be distributed to the residents.
He assured that his administration would do everything humanly and administratively possible to ensure that the recent flood did not disrupt the living of the people affected.
Yuguda directed all the relevant agencies in the state to take urgent steps to repair all damaged roads, including the ones that belong to the Federal Government, in order not to cut off the flood-prone communities.
While going round the affected communities to see things for himself, the governor sympathised with all those who were negatively affected by the flood, assuring them that government will come to their aid immediately and consider the urgent need to resettle them.
At the Arobana Bridge on the Kari-Misau-Kano Federal Highway, Yuguda lamented that four years after his administration worked on the road to salvage it from total collapse, the concerned federal authorities have not refunded the expenses of the state government.
“However, that will not stop us from salvaging it this time again because of our people,” he said.
He directed the Ministry for Rural Development, in conjunction with other relevant agencies, to mobilise to the site and salvage the bridge, saying “this time around, serious technical work must be done in order to do a permanent work. We will not be spending on this same problem every season, hoping that the concerned federal agencies will come to our aid by ensuring that every kobo spent is refunded to enable us do more development jobs for our people.”
At the access road to the General Hospital in Shira, which was also washed away by the flood, Yuguda commended the Ministry of Special Duties for the steps so far taken to reclaim the road, hoping that the intervention will be a permanent solution to the problem.
He also directed that the erosion eating up Doguwa Town in Giade Local Council be checked immediately through re-channeling of the flow of water within the town.
Addressing some of the displayed persons, mostly Fulani herdsmen camped at the Adamami Primary School in Shira Council, the governor urged them to take it as an act of God, which cannot be stopped, considering that they had been living before the disaster.
He assured that until they go back to their various communities, the government would continue to cater for them at the camp.
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Flooding to occur in 16 states


The Federal Ministry of Environment has predicted a downpour in 16 states and the FCT that could cause flooding between now and April 20. Dr Morohunkeji Oyeleke, the Deputy Director, Erosion, Flood and Coastal Zone Management Department, disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Friday .
Oyeleke identified areas that could be affected to include Bonny in Rivers, Akure in Ondo, Jos and its environs in Plateau, Minna and Bida in Niger and Abuja and its environs in the FCT.
Other areas are Argungu and its environs in Kebbi, Biu in Borno, Gusau in Zamfara, Jebba and its environs in Niger, Yola in Adamawa and Jalingo and its environs in Taraba.
She also listed Abeokuta in Ogun, Ibadan and its environs as well as Ogbomoso in Oyo State, and Iseyin and Osogbo in Osun. The Deputy Director appealed to the governments of the respective states to take necessary precautionary measures to avoid loss of lives and property, noting that previous warnings had saved lives and property.
Oyeleke noted that Kwara had sent a report to the ministry indicating that the state government was able to prevent any havoc from a recent downpour due to dueduedue due precautionary measures put in place put in pla it had it had introduced.
According to her, the ministry has been receiving verbal reports from various state governments on how the forecast had helped to prevent loss of lives and property.
She further said that an alert had been sent to areas likely to experience windstorm during the rainy season and stressed that any change in the prediction would be announced as weather forecasting was based on probability.
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