Sustainable Development - Authoritative and Leading Edge Content for Environmental Management 2012
DOI: 10.5772/47730
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Oil Exploration and Climate Change: A Case Study of Heat Radiation from Gas Flaring in the Niger Delta Area of Nigeria

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Cited by 7 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Despite its importance, the region is virtually unprotected and as a result has been the focus of increasing research activity in recent years, particularly on the impacts of oil exploitation on the environmental (Bayode et al, 2011;Nwaogu and Onyeze, 2010;Eregha and Irugh, 2009), socio-cultural and economic characteristics of the region (Aghalino and Odeh, 2010;Ajiboye et al, 2009). Among the many activities associated with the oil industry that directly affect the environment, such as oil spillage and fires, deforestation, dredging and associated waste, gas flaring is a prominent agent of pollution in the region (Abdulkareem, Afolabi, Abdulfatai, Uthman, & Odigure, 2012;Dung, Bombom, & Agusomu, 2008;Ovri & Iroh, 2013;Ovuakporaye, Aloamaka, Ojieh, Ejebe, & Mordi, 2012). However, efforts to empirically assess the environmental impacts of flaring in the Niger Delta have been hampered by limited access to official information on flare locations and volumes and difficulties in undertaking field investigations due to security issues.…”
Section: Study Areamentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…Despite its importance, the region is virtually unprotected and as a result has been the focus of increasing research activity in recent years, particularly on the impacts of oil exploitation on the environmental (Bayode et al, 2011;Nwaogu and Onyeze, 2010;Eregha and Irugh, 2009), socio-cultural and economic characteristics of the region (Aghalino and Odeh, 2010;Ajiboye et al, 2009). Among the many activities associated with the oil industry that directly affect the environment, such as oil spillage and fires, deforestation, dredging and associated waste, gas flaring is a prominent agent of pollution in the region (Abdulkareem, Afolabi, Abdulfatai, Uthman, & Odigure, 2012;Dung, Bombom, & Agusomu, 2008;Ovri & Iroh, 2013;Ovuakporaye, Aloamaka, Ojieh, Ejebe, & Mordi, 2012). However, efforts to empirically assess the environmental impacts of flaring in the Niger Delta have been hampered by limited access to official information on flare locations and volumes and difficulties in undertaking field investigations due to security issues.…”
Section: Study Areamentioning
confidence: 96%
“…However, efforts to empirically assess the environmental impacts of flaring in the Niger Delta have been hampered by limited access to official information on flare locations and volumes and difficulties in undertaking field investigations due to security issues. Thus, previous research has mostly been speculative or restricted to small areas surrounding individual flares (Abdulkareem et al, 2012;Anomohanran, 2012;Dung et al, 2008;Obia, Okon, Ekum, Eyo-Ita, & Ekpeni, 2011;Odjugo & Osemwenkhae, 2009;Oseji, 2011). Hence, there is an important need to develop a comprehensive understanding of flaring activity and its impacts in the Niger Delta, particularly given that Nigeria ranks second among gas flaring countries globally ).…”
Section: Study Areamentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The atmosphere naturally conducts self-purification periodically by rinsing off excessive pollutant loads with suspended liquid scrubbers. With water vapour and fog as the primary scrubbing or precipitation media, the atmosphere enriched with oxides of Carbon, Sulphur and Nitrogen from anthropogenic emissions are hydrolyzed according to the following stoichiometric relations (Abdulkareem, et al, 2012):…”
Section: Inventory Of Flared Gas Emissions and Theirmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The amount of gas flared per day is about 56,633m 3 [26], while the quantity of gas used by Nigerian generation companies in 2015 was 12,510,500,300m 3 [19].…”
Section: Electricity Generation and Transmissionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consumers do not have options. This suggests that DISCOs do not have to be competitive and innovative to make profits, considering the practice of estimated billings and non-deployment of pre-paid meters [26]. Therefore, the paper advocate review and amendment, through effective legislation of the current status of the DISCOs, as informed by the Electric Power Sector Reform Act of 2005.…”
Section: Policy Innovationmentioning
confidence: 99%