Oil company exploring in sensitive elephant habitat accused of ignoring community concerns (Namibia & Botswana)

S
stenews
Tue, May 11, 2021 6:09 PM

Oil company exploring in sensitive elephant habitat accused of ignoring
community concerns (Namibia & Botswana)
Jeffrey Barbee & Laurel Neme, National Geographic
May 11, 2021

See link
<https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/oil-company-reconafrica-accused-of-ignoring-communities-concerns?loggedin=true

for photo & map.

ReconAfrica, a Canadian company exploring for oil and gas in Namibia
upstream of a world-famous UNESCO World Heritage site that’s home to
elephants and other wildlife is disposing of wastewater without permits,
according to a government minister. The company is also ignoring local
concerns about the impact of exploration and drilling on water supplies,
homes, and animals, according to interviews and official comments submitted
by members of the public.

There was scant public awareness of ReconAfrica’s plans to search for oil
in this region of more than 200,000 people before National Geographic began
reporting last October on the risks drilling could pose to water and
wildlife.

The company’s 13,200 square-mile license area—about 70 percent of that in
Namibia and the rest in Botswana—encompasses part of the vital watershed of
the Okavango Delta.

One of the largest inland deltas in the world, this fragile,
7,000-square-mile desert wetland lies in northwestern Botswana about 160
miles southeast of ReconAfrica’s first test well. It attracts some 100,000
tourists to high-end lodges each year and holds such a spectacular
diversity of wildlife and plants that in 2014 UNESCO added it to its list
of World Heritage sites.

The delta is home to lions, giraffes, antelopes, wild dogs, martial eagles.
Botswana’s 130,000 endangered savanna elephants—Africa’s largest remaining
population—roam its lush islands, where they depend on the 2.5 trillion
gallons of water that flow in each year from the north and west.

ReconAfrica’s drilling areas also overlap with the continent’s largest
multicountry conservation park—the Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier
Conservation Area (KAZA), which includes land in Angola, Botswana, Namibia,
Zambia, and Zimbabwe—and six locally managed wildlife reserves in Namibia.

The threat from oil and gas drilling to one of the planet’s most diverse
ecosystems “boggles the mind,” Willem Odendaal told National Geographic
last year. Odendaal is the former land, environment, and development
project coordinator at Namibia’s Legal Assistance Centre, a public interest
law firm based in the capital, Windhoek.

The roads, pipelines, and construction that come with oil and gas
extraction could “negatively affect important animal habitat, migratory
pathways, and biodiversity,” according to the World Wildlife Fund.

And wringing oil from rocks deep underground requires massive quantities of
water, which is already scarce in the region. ReconAfrica’s license area
abuts the main river that feeds the Okavango Delta for some 170 miles. Few
other water sources are available for people and wildlife during the long
dry season in this parched land.

Drilling for the first test well began in January, and waste fluids are
being stored in what appears to be an unlined pond, where they could leach
into the ground and contaminate the water supply in this desert region,
National Geographic reported last month.

Calle Schlettwein, Namibia’s minister of agriculture, water, and land
reform, the agency responsible for water-related permits, told National
Geographic in a written statement that ReconAfrica does not yet have
permits approved to extract water to use in its drilling operations nor to
dispose of the waste water, suggesting that the company is operating in
breach of Namibian government regulations. In its 2019 environmental
assessment, ReconAfrica said it would have all permits in place before work
began.

Asked about wastewater disposal, water extraction, and the ministry’s
assertion that ReconAfrica has not yet secured the proper permits,
spokesman Chris Gilmour, of Beattie Communications, a U.K.-based public
relations firm hired by ReconAfrica, didn’t answer directly, but said in an
emailed statement that the company “has completed several required permits
for its ongoing work and will continue to complete all drilling-related and
other permit requirements.”

Beyond the dispute over permits and wastewater disposal, members of the
public—both in interviews and in statements submitted officially to company
representatives—say ReconAfrica has not taken seriously the requirement to
inform and consult the public about its plans.

That’s both legally mandated and critical to ensure the voices of the
people most likely to be affected by the project are heard, says Annette
Hübschle, a Namibian-raised environmental social scientist and senior
research fellow with the Global Risk Governance Programme at the University
of Cape Town in South Africa.

It allows “people to judge for themselves whether oil and gas development
is the kind of socio-economic development they are seeking for themselves
and their children,” she says.

As has happened in Nigeria’s Niger Delta, Ecuador, and elsewhere,
corporations often “fail dismally in apprising Indigenous peoples and local
communities about long-term impacts of resource extraction and the clean-up
once extraction processes have been completed.”

To guard against that, Namibian law requires companies to ensure that
members of the public are aware of the proposed project, fully understand
it, and have a chance to raise concerns.

This can be achieved by newspaper ads, notices on community bulletin
boards, and public meetings.

(ReconAfrica’s newspaper notices were published in English, the official
language, but most Namibians in rural communities affected by the project
don’t read or speak English.)

Numerous people and advocacy organizations have registered their concern
with ReconAfrica representatives that the process has fallen short.

For example, pandemic travel restrictions and health concerns prevented
some from attending public meetings, and at those meetings, the number of
attendees was capped, says an official comment from Natural Justice, a
human rights and environmental law nonprofit that supports Indigenous
African communities.

Namibia’s lack of broadband infrastructure, especially in the areas covered
by ReconAfrica’s exploration license, has also been a barrier to informing
Indigenous and rural communities and giving them an opportunity to give
feedback, others noted.

Meanwhile, at public meetings, including a contentious hearing in Windhoek,
company representatives sidestepped attendees’ questions. The company also
canceled other meetings in remote, rural communities without explanation.

Gilmour, ReconAfrica’s spokesman, did not respond to questions about the
public consultation process, notices, and meetings, but he said there have
been “detailed consultation[s] with local communities and other
stakeholders” and that ReconAfrica will “continue to keep an active and
collaborative relationship in place with all interested parties.”

Thumping the Ground

More recently, ReconAfrica has said it will begin seismic testing if it
gets approval—another way to help confirm oil and gas deposits. This
involves sending shock waves into the earth by thumping the ground with
mobile equipment the manufacturer describes as “better than dynamite.”

Some worry that the vibrations could damage their water wells and mud and
brick homes and say ReconAfrica isn’t taking their concerns seriously.

Before the company can begin a seismic survey, it needs to do an
environmental assessment that evaluates, among other things, any problems
the survey may cause. By law in Namibia, oil and gas projects must solicit
input from the public, and concerns raised must be addressed in the
assessment’s final report in order to get government approval. On March 26,
ReconAfrica released the thousand-plus-page draft of the assessment,
prepared by Namibian consultant Sindila Mwiya’s company, Risk-Based
Solutions.

Risk-Based Solutions also carried out a 2019 environmental assessment for
ReconAfrica’s test wells that was criticized as incomplete and lacking
scientific rigor by environmental experts who reviewed it for National
Geographic.

They lambasted it for—among other things—failing to include field
assessments of animals and plants to measure possible effects on wildlife,
local communities, archaeological sites, and water.

ReconAfrica invited comment on the project during a public review period
from January 7 through February 12, and a number of public meetings were
held during that time.

Namibian journalist John Grobler said a meeting scheduled in Mbambi on
January 23 never took place.

The next day when he was traveling to a scheduled meeting in Ncamakora
constituency, a ReconAfrica representative told him it had been canceled.

But according to the draft assessment for the seismic survey, the Ncamakora
meeting was held the day before at Mbambi, where, Grobler says, about a
hundred people were waiting for the opportunity to raise their concerns
directly with ReconAfrica.

The company is either “confused, poorly organized, or being intentionally
misguiding,” Grobler says.

ReconAfrica spokeswoman Claire Preece and Gilmour did not answer National
Geographic’s questions about public meetings.

Max Muyemburuko, chairman of the Muduva Nyangana community-based wildlife
conservancy, which lies within ReconAfrica’s exploration area, says the
hearing he attended on January 22 in Rundu was so filled with jargon that
“no one on the ground can understand the technical terms that Recon is
using. We just come from the meeting with no information at all. It is very
upsetting.”

Muyemburuko calls the two-hour-long meeting “not a proper consultation,” a
concern echoed by many in comments submitted to Risk-Based Solutions. There
were only 15 minutes left at the end for questions, “but…they ignored the
community’s questions, and they rushed it.”

Later that day, Muyemburuko sent Mwiya, the company’s consultant, an email
listing concerns about the seismic testing that he hadn’t been able to ask
at the meeting.

Muyemburuko cited concerns about potential damage to homes, “many made from
mud or light brick and concrete,” close to the roads to be used for the
seismic survey. More than a hundred are along the survey lines, satellite
imagery on Google Earth shows.

Mwiya’s emailed response was dismissive.

“You are just trying to seek some limelight out of nothing and out of a
project that you absolutely do not understand at all,” Mwiya wrote.

“It is really sad to see this so low level of ignorant environmental
advocacy that you are displaying.” Mwiya went on: “Stupidity and nonsense
of the highest level. . .what is wrong with you?”

“At first I was angry,” Muyemburuko says of Mwiya’s response. “But later I
see that it gave [me] motivation to fight for the people on the ground in
the Okavango.”

Muyemburuko says he’s worried that the region around his home will end up
resembling Nigeria’s highly polluted Niger Delta, where oil drilling caused
an environmental and social catastrophe, and resulted in the execution of
Ken Saro-Wiwa and other Nigerian activists who opposed a Shell Oil project
in the 1990s.

Muyemburuko says that people warned him about wading into the controversy,
and he told National Geographic that he’s afraid. “My life is in danger,”
he believes.

A Contentious Consultation

At the heated public meeting on February 2 in Windhoek, Mwiya and Preece
sidestepped attendees’ questions.

Asked about potential damage to homes and water wells from seismic thumper
trucks, for example, Preece said the trucks are “not something that stays
there,” but didn’t address the question asked.

Preece and Mwiya emphasized that the project is a step-by-step process and
that concerns will be addressed as it progresses. Petroleum production is
“far, far away,” Mwiya said. Trying to calm an audience that was growing
increasingly frustrated, he said, “We don’t even know that the [oil and
gas] basin exists.”

That comment contradicts the company’s own statements and investor
presentations. ReconAfrica has described its license area in Namibia and
Botswana to investors as “one of the largest onshore undeveloped
hydrocarbon basins in the world.”

Ina-Maria Shikongo, Namibian coordinator of Fridays for Future, a global
climate youth movement inspired by the Swedish activist Greta Thunberg,
said the officials’ obfuscation at the meeting and in emails was insulting.

At one point during the meeting, she declared, “We were bullied by Dr.
Sindila [Mwiya].” (In comments submitted to Risk-Based Solutions, others
also noted similar experiences with Mwiya.)

Mwiya did not respond to National Geographic’s questions about the
consultative process or accusations of bias and bullying.

It’s “very sad to see that people like you. . .who have zero experience or
training in oil and gas exploration now want to be overnight experts,” he
wrote to wildlife conservancy director Muyemburuko. “The application [for
seismic testing] is indeed going ahead.”

Now that the comment period is closed, Namibia’s environmental
commissioner, Timoteus Mufeti, will review the assessment and decide
whether to grant ReconAfrica a permit for its planned seismic survey.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/oil-company-reconafrica-accused-of-ignoring-communities-concerns?loggedin=true

Oil company exploring in sensitive elephant habitat accused of ignoring community concerns (Namibia & Botswana) Jeffrey Barbee & Laurel Neme, National Geographic May 11, 2021 See link <https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/oil-company-reconafrica-accused-of-ignoring-communities-concerns?loggedin=true > for photo & map. ReconAfrica, a Canadian company exploring for oil and gas in Namibia upstream of a world-famous UNESCO World Heritage site that’s home to elephants and other wildlife is disposing of wastewater without permits, according to a government minister. The company is also ignoring local concerns about the impact of exploration and drilling on water supplies, homes, and animals, according to interviews and official comments submitted by members of the public. There was scant public awareness of ReconAfrica’s plans to search for oil in this region of more than 200,000 people before National Geographic began reporting last October on the risks drilling could pose to water and wildlife. The company’s 13,200 square-mile license area—about 70 percent of that in Namibia and the rest in Botswana—encompasses part of the vital watershed of the Okavango Delta. One of the largest inland deltas in the world, this fragile, 7,000-square-mile desert wetland lies in northwestern Botswana about 160 miles southeast of ReconAfrica’s first test well. It attracts some 100,000 tourists to high-end lodges each year and holds such a spectacular diversity of wildlife and plants that in 2014 UNESCO added it to its list of World Heritage sites. The delta is home to lions, giraffes, antelopes, wild dogs, martial eagles. Botswana’s 130,000 endangered savanna elephants—Africa’s largest remaining population—roam its lush islands, where they depend on the 2.5 trillion gallons of water that flow in each year from the north and west. ReconAfrica’s drilling areas also overlap with the continent’s largest multicountry conservation park—the Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA), which includes land in Angola, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia, and Zimbabwe—and six locally managed wildlife reserves in Namibia. The threat from oil and gas drilling to one of the planet’s most diverse ecosystems “boggles the mind,” Willem Odendaal told National Geographic last year. Odendaal is the former land, environment, and development project coordinator at Namibia’s Legal Assistance Centre, a public interest law firm based in the capital, Windhoek. The roads, pipelines, and construction that come with oil and gas extraction could “negatively affect important animal habitat, migratory pathways, and biodiversity,” according to the World Wildlife Fund. And wringing oil from rocks deep underground requires massive quantities of water, which is already scarce in the region. ReconAfrica’s license area abuts the main river that feeds the Okavango Delta for some 170 miles. Few other water sources are available for people and wildlife during the long dry season in this parched land. Drilling for the first test well began in January, and waste fluids are being stored in what appears to be an unlined pond, where they could leach into the ground and contaminate the water supply in this desert region, National Geographic reported last month. Calle Schlettwein, Namibia’s minister of agriculture, water, and land reform, the agency responsible for water-related permits, told National Geographic in a written statement that ReconAfrica does not yet have permits approved to extract water to use in its drilling operations nor to dispose of the waste water, suggesting that the company is operating in breach of Namibian government regulations. In its 2019 environmental assessment, ReconAfrica said it would have all permits in place before work began. Asked about wastewater disposal, water extraction, and the ministry’s assertion that ReconAfrica has not yet secured the proper permits, spokesman Chris Gilmour, of Beattie Communications, a U.K.-based public relations firm hired by ReconAfrica, didn’t answer directly, but said in an emailed statement that the company “has completed several required permits for its ongoing work and will continue to complete all drilling-related and other permit requirements.” Beyond the dispute over permits and wastewater disposal, members of the public—both in interviews and in statements submitted officially to company representatives—say ReconAfrica has not taken seriously the requirement to inform and consult the public about its plans. That’s both legally mandated and critical to ensure the voices of the people most likely to be affected by the project are heard, says Annette Hübschle, a Namibian-raised environmental social scientist and senior research fellow with the Global Risk Governance Programme at the University of Cape Town in South Africa. It allows “people to judge for themselves whether oil and gas development is the kind of socio-economic development they are seeking for themselves and their children,” she says. As has happened in Nigeria’s Niger Delta, Ecuador, and elsewhere, corporations often “fail dismally in apprising Indigenous peoples and local communities about long-term impacts of resource extraction and the clean-up once extraction processes have been completed.” To guard against that, Namibian law requires companies to ensure that members of the public are aware of the proposed project, fully understand it, and have a chance to raise concerns. This can be achieved by newspaper ads, notices on community bulletin boards, and public meetings. (ReconAfrica’s newspaper notices were published in English, the official language, but most Namibians in rural communities affected by the project don’t read or speak English.) Numerous people and advocacy organizations have registered their concern with ReconAfrica representatives that the process has fallen short. For example, pandemic travel restrictions and health concerns prevented some from attending public meetings, and at those meetings, the number of attendees was capped, says an official comment from Natural Justice, a human rights and environmental law nonprofit that supports Indigenous African communities. Namibia’s lack of broadband infrastructure, especially in the areas covered by ReconAfrica’s exploration license, has also been a barrier to informing Indigenous and rural communities and giving them an opportunity to give feedback, others noted. Meanwhile, at public meetings, including a contentious hearing in Windhoek, company representatives sidestepped attendees’ questions. The company also canceled other meetings in remote, rural communities without explanation. Gilmour, ReconAfrica’s spokesman, did not respond to questions about the public consultation process, notices, and meetings, but he said there have been “detailed consultation[s] with local communities and other stakeholders” and that ReconAfrica will “continue to keep an active and collaborative relationship in place with all interested parties.” Thumping the Ground More recently, ReconAfrica has said it will begin seismic testing if it gets approval—another way to help confirm oil and gas deposits. This involves sending shock waves into the earth by thumping the ground with mobile equipment the manufacturer describes as “better than dynamite.” Some worry that the vibrations could damage their water wells and mud and brick homes and say ReconAfrica isn’t taking their concerns seriously. Before the company can begin a seismic survey, it needs to do an environmental assessment that evaluates, among other things, any problems the survey may cause. By law in Namibia, oil and gas projects must solicit input from the public, and concerns raised must be addressed in the assessment’s final report in order to get government approval. On March 26, ReconAfrica released the thousand-plus-page draft of the assessment, prepared by Namibian consultant Sindila Mwiya’s company, Risk-Based Solutions. Risk-Based Solutions also carried out a 2019 environmental assessment for ReconAfrica’s test wells that was criticized as incomplete and lacking scientific rigor by environmental experts who reviewed it for National Geographic. They lambasted it for—among other things—failing to include field assessments of animals and plants to measure possible effects on wildlife, local communities, archaeological sites, and water. ReconAfrica invited comment on the project during a public review period from January 7 through February 12, and a number of public meetings were held during that time. Namibian journalist John Grobler said a meeting scheduled in Mbambi on January 23 never took place. The next day when he was traveling to a scheduled meeting in Ncamakora constituency, a ReconAfrica representative told him it had been canceled. But according to the draft assessment for the seismic survey, the Ncamakora meeting was held the day before at Mbambi, where, Grobler says, about a hundred people were waiting for the opportunity to raise their concerns directly with ReconAfrica. The company is either “confused, poorly organized, or being intentionally misguiding,” Grobler says. ReconAfrica spokeswoman Claire Preece and Gilmour did not answer National Geographic’s questions about public meetings. Max Muyemburuko, chairman of the Muduva Nyangana community-based wildlife conservancy, which lies within ReconAfrica’s exploration area, says the hearing he attended on January 22 in Rundu was so filled with jargon that “no one on the ground can understand the technical terms that Recon is using. We just come from the meeting with no information at all. It is very upsetting.” Muyemburuko calls the two-hour-long meeting “not a proper consultation,” a concern echoed by many in comments submitted to Risk-Based Solutions. There were only 15 minutes left at the end for questions, “but…they ignored the community’s questions, and they rushed it.” Later that day, Muyemburuko sent Mwiya, the company’s consultant, an email listing concerns about the seismic testing that he hadn’t been able to ask at the meeting. Muyemburuko cited concerns about potential damage to homes, “many made from mud or light brick and concrete,” close to the roads to be used for the seismic survey. More than a hundred are along the survey lines, satellite imagery on Google Earth shows. Mwiya’s emailed response was dismissive. “You are just trying to seek some limelight out of nothing and out of a project that you absolutely do not understand at all,” Mwiya wrote. “It is really sad to see this so low level of ignorant environmental advocacy that you are displaying.” Mwiya went on: “Stupidity and nonsense of the highest level. . .what is wrong with you?” “At first I was angry,” Muyemburuko says of Mwiya’s response. “But later I see that it gave [me] motivation to fight for the people on the ground in the Okavango.” Muyemburuko says he’s worried that the region around his home will end up resembling Nigeria’s highly polluted Niger Delta, where oil drilling caused an environmental and social catastrophe, and resulted in the execution of Ken Saro-Wiwa and other Nigerian activists who opposed a Shell Oil project in the 1990s. Muyemburuko says that people warned him about wading into the controversy, and he told National Geographic that he’s afraid. “My life is in danger,” he believes. A Contentious Consultation At the heated public meeting on February 2 in Windhoek, Mwiya and Preece sidestepped attendees’ questions. Asked about potential damage to homes and water wells from seismic thumper trucks, for example, Preece said the trucks are “not something that stays there,” but didn’t address the question asked. Preece and Mwiya emphasized that the project is a step-by-step process and that concerns will be addressed as it progresses. Petroleum production is “far, far away,” Mwiya said. Trying to calm an audience that was growing increasingly frustrated, he said, “We don’t even know that the [oil and gas] basin exists.” That comment contradicts the company’s own statements and investor presentations. ReconAfrica has described its license area in Namibia and Botswana to investors as “one of the largest onshore undeveloped hydrocarbon basins in the world.” Ina-Maria Shikongo, Namibian coordinator of Fridays for Future, a global climate youth movement inspired by the Swedish activist Greta Thunberg, said the officials’ obfuscation at the meeting and in emails was insulting. At one point during the meeting, she declared, “We were bullied by Dr. Sindila [Mwiya].” (In comments submitted to Risk-Based Solutions, others also noted similar experiences with Mwiya.) Mwiya did not respond to National Geographic’s questions about the consultative process or accusations of bias and bullying. It’s “very sad to see that people like you. . .who have zero experience or training in oil and gas exploration now want to be overnight experts,” he wrote to wildlife conservancy director Muyemburuko. “The application [for seismic testing] is indeed going ahead.” Now that the comment period is closed, Namibia’s environmental commissioner, Timoteus Mufeti, will review the assessment and decide whether to grant ReconAfrica a permit for its planned seismic survey. https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/oil-company-reconafrica-accused-of-ignoring-communities-concerns?loggedin=true