Shell, the British oil giant, has been caught in a scandal of staggering proportions. It emerges that the company knowingly pumped oil through a corroded pipeline in Nigeria's Niger Delta, despite clear evidence that it was leaking and causing widespread environmental devastation. This is not a story of an unfortunate accident. This is a story of calculated neglect, where corporate greed outweighed basic environmental responsibility. The polluted pipelines in Ogoniland are a testament to decades of damage, but this new revelation suggests the problem is systemic and ongoing.
Documents obtained by investigative journalists show that Shell's own surveys flagged the pipeline as high risk, with multiple leaks reported. Yet, the company continued operations, prioritising output over safety. The result? Thousands of barrels of crude spilling into farmlands, rivers, and mangroves, destroying livelihoods and contaminating drinking water. The people of the Niger Delta have long borne the cost of oil extraction, but this time the evidence points to deliberate malfeasance.
For Shell, the calculus is clear: the fines and clean-up costs are a fraction of the profits extracted. Even when the company is forced to pay compensation, it drags its feet through legal labyrinths. Meanwhile, the Nigerian government, complicit in its own way, has failed to enforce regulations. The country's oil regulator is underfunded and, some say, captured by the industry it is meant to oversee.
This scandal has implications beyond Nigeria. Shell is a British company, listed in London, and the Financial Conduct Authority must ask whether its disclosures to shareholders adequately reflect the legal and reputational risks. The company's share price may wobble, but the real cost is borne by the environment and the local population. Investors who claim to care about ESG should be watching closely.
The question now is whether this will be the scandal that forces change. Past leaks and spills have been met with promises of improvement, yet the pattern persists. Shell's public relations machine will spin this as an isolated incident, but the documents suggest otherwise. If the company is willing to risk environmental catastrophe for marginal oil flows, what else is it hiding?
In the City, we talk about 'externalities' as if they are minor abstractions. But here, the externality is a poisoned river and a destroyed community. The market has failed to price in these costs, and until regulators or courts step in, Shell will continue to pump and pollute. For the people of the Niger Delta, the scandal is not new. It has just become visible to the rest of us.








