This book critically examines the corporate environmental responsibility of major oil companies operating in Nigerias Niger Delta, focusing on oil spills and comparing regulatory frameworks in Nigeria, the US, the UK, and the EU. It provides a theoretical foundation for holding these companies to the same environmental standards in Nigeria as they adhere to in more advanced jurisdictions.
Analysing Shells oil spill environmental performance data, the book assesses how its operations in Nigeria compare with global performance figures. Additionally, it evaluates Nigerian environmental laws, highlighting deficiencies that may contribute to persistent oil pollution. Furthermore, it explores issues of regulatory capture, corporate environmental crime, and the transnational litigation of Nigerian oil spill cases in the US, the UK, and the EU. The Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021 is comprehensively assessed in the context of corporate environmental governance and oil pollution control.
To propose solutions, the book examines legal frameworks for strengthening corporate due diligence and accountability. It advocates for a robust legal regime to address the clean-up liability of pre-existing (stale) oil spills in the Niger Delta, drawing insights from UK/EU laws on contaminated land, the US Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA or Superfund), and UK laws on oil infrastructure decommissioning. Additionally, the book introduces a novel "failure to prevent" oil spill offence in Nigeria, an omission-based liability inspired by the UK Bribery Act 2010 and the UK Criminal Finances Act 2017.
This book will be of interest to researchers in the field of environmental law, pollution and land law.
This book critically examines the corporate environmental responsibility of major oil companies operating in Nigerias Niger Delta, focusing on oil spills and comparing regulatory frameworks in Nigeria, the US, the UK, and the EU. This book will be of interest to researchers in the field of environmental law, pollution and land law.
1. Introduction
2. Oil Spill Prevention, Sanctions, and Payment of Compensations
3. Analysis of Shells Oil Spill Environmental Performance Data
4. Managing Oil Spills in the Niger Delta: The Laws, Regulations, and
Challenges
5. Regulatory Capture, Revolving Doors, and the Multinational Oil Companies
in the Niger Delta
6. Litigating Nigerian Oil Spill Cases in the US, the UK, and the
Netherlands
7. Environmental Crime and Corporate Environmental Crime
8. Insights from Some Legal Frameworks for Strengthening Corporate Due
Diligence and Accountability
9. Environmental Review of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021 and
Suggestions for Improvement
10. Introducing a Failure to Prevent Oil Spill Offence in Nigeria
Millicent Nwabu Ele is a UK-based law lecturer and academic researcher focusing on corporate environmental responsibility, clean energy, and pollution control laws. She has a PhD in environmental and energy law from University of Aberdeen, Scotland, UK, and an LL.M from Columbia University School of Law, New York, USA. Before her law degree at University of Nigeria, Nsukka, she read Zoology/Botany/Education at University of Ibadan, Nigeria and taught biology and human physiology for many years. Millicent is well-published in law and has broad legal experience. She has been admitted to practice law in Nigeria and the State of New York, USA.