Kwaghe International Journal of Arts, Humanities and Religious Studies
Vol 2 No 2 (2025): Kwaghe International Journal of Arts, Humanities and Religious Studies

From Perception to Effect of Oil Spillage Among Fishermen in the Niger Delta Region of Bayelsa State, Nigeria

Tensaba Andes Akafa (Unknown)
Solomon Ossom Asare (Unknown)
Adobeni Emmanuel Dennis (Unknown)
Daniel Konka (Unknown)
Smile Kobina Ametsi (Unknown)
Issifu Tahidu (Unknown)
Gloria Omonefe Oladele (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
01 Jun 2025

Abstract

Oil spillage continues to pose a significant environmental threat in Nigeria’s Niger Delta, leading to ecological degradation, disruption of livelihoods, and socio-political instability. This study investigates the perceptions and impacts of oil spillage among fishermen in the Biseni community of Bayelsa State. Utilizing a descriptive cross-sectional design, data were collected from 358 respondents selected through systematic random sampling. A semi-structured, interviewer-administered questionnaire was employed, and responses were analyzed using SPSS version 16. The results show that 94.4% of respondents identified pipeline corrosion from soil-related factors as a major cause of oil spillage. Other commonly perceived causes included sabotage by surveillance contractors (86.3%), pipeline vandalism (85.2%), and unemployment (84.1%). Water pollution was identified by 98.0% of respondents as the most severe environmental consequence, particularly affecting aquatic life. Health impacts were also substantial, with 96.9% reporting adverse effects, skin rashes being the most frequently cited (32.0%). Economically, 95.5% of respondents reported reduced income due to declining fish yields. Broader socio-economic impacts included perceived links to unemployment (91.9%), increased kidnapping (79.6%), lack of compensation (80.4%), displacement (35.8%), and the need to purchase drinking water (70.4%). The study concludes that repeated oil spillage and unregulated exploitation have caused significant environmental and socio-economic harm in the Biseni community. The lack of effective compensation mechanisms intensifies local grievances and underscores the urgent need for sustainable environmental governance and enhanced corporate accountability in oil-producing areas.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

KIJAHRS

Publisher

Subject

Religion Arts Humanities Biochemistry, Genetics & Molecular Biology Social Sciences

Description

Kwaghe International Journal of Arts, Humanities and Religious Studies aims to publish high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship that advances knowledge in the arts, humanities, and religious studies. The journal encourages critical, historical, textual, philosophical, and interpretive work that ...