Shell knew. For years. Leaked internal documents, seen by this bureau, paint a damning picture of systematic pollution in the Niger Delta. The oil giant was aware of the environmental devastation caused by its operations as early as the 1970s. It did nothing. Worse, it actively covered up evidence.
The documents, part of a trove obtained by lawyers representing Nigerian communities, include internal memos and technical reports. They detail how Shell’s own surveys showed massive oil spills contaminating drinking water, destroying farmland, and poisoning the air. The information was buried. Local officials were kept in the dark.
One memo from 1975 states plainly: “Oil escapes are inevitable. The effect on the creeks will be severe.” Another report from the 1990s warns of “irreversible damage” but recommends no public disclosure. Instead, Shell spent decades challenging court cases, disputing spill volumes, and blaming sabotage.
The timing is brutal for Shell. It comes just as the company tries to rebrand itself as a green energy leader. This leak threatens to unravel that narrative. The documents suggest a pattern, not an accident. A calculated decision to put profit before people.
Westminster sources are watching closely. The Foreign Office has been briefed. MPs on the International Development Committee are already calling for an inquiry. Labour’s shadow environment secretary said it was a “national scandal”. Human rights groups are demanding Shell executives face prosecution.
Shell’s response has been muted. A spokesperson said the company operates to “the highest standards” and disputes the claim it covered up evidence. But the paper trail is hard to ignore. These are not anonymous allegations. They are signed, stamped, and dated.
The Nigerian government, long accused of complicity, has remained silent. But the political calculus is shifting. With elections next year, no politician wants to be seen as defending Shell. The pressure will mount.
For now, the real story is in the documents. They show a company that knew the cost of its operations and chose to hide it. In the Delta, communities are still drinking poisoned water. Shell’s share price has barely budged. But the leak marks a turning point. The game has changed.











