Assessing The Socioeconomic Impacts of A Mystery Oil Spill on Coastal Communities in Eastern Obolo, Nigeria
  • Author(s): Meshach Ojile; George, Victor Tupere
  • Paper ID: 1716465
  • Page: 1478-1489
  • Published Date: 16-04-2026
  • Published In: Iconic Research And Engineering Journals
  • Publisher: IRE Journals
  • e-ISSN: 2456-8880
  • Volume/Issue: Volume 9 Issue 10 April-2026
Abstract

Oil spill incidents along the Niger Delta coastline persistently challenge environmental governance, yet the social dimensions of such events remain insufficiently documented, especially when responsibility for the spill cannot be unambiguously assigned. This paper presents a post-impact socioeconomic assessment of a so-called “mystery spill” detected on 2 October 2016 along approximately 22 km of the Eastern Obolo coastline in Akwa Ibom State, Nigeria, where neither spiller, volume, nor precise origin had been formally established almost a year after the incident. Drawing on participatory rural appraisal techniques, focus group discussions, key informant interviews, semi-structured interviews, transect walks, and triangulated secondary data, the study covered nine fishing communities and settlements located both within and immediately outside the alleged impact boundary. Findings indicate that artisanal fisheries, the dominant livelihood of the resident population, were perceived to be substantially disrupted, with reported declines in catch per effort, longer fishing trips, soiled gear, and a deterioration in already-fragile water and sanitation conditions. The absence of a pre-spill baseline, the contested attribution of the spill, and the inability to disentangle spill-related effects from broader macroeconomic decline and chronic infrastructural deprivation introduce considerable interpretive uncertainty. The study argues that the very ambiguity of “mystery” spills exposes structural weaknesses in Nigeria’s oil spill compensation regime, which privileges admissible commercial claims over the broader social losses experienced by affected populations. Defensible socioeconomic compensation in such contexts requires anticipatory baseline studies, indicator frameworks tailored to small-scale fisheries, and institutional reforms that decouple impact recognition from definitive proof of liability.

Keywords

Mystery Oil Spill; Socioeconomic Impact Assessment; Artisanal Fisheries; Niger Delta; Eastern Obolo; Compensation; Participatory Rural Appraisal

Citations

IRE Journals:
Meshach Ojile, George, Victor Tupere "Assessing The Socioeconomic Impacts of A Mystery Oil Spill on Coastal Communities in Eastern Obolo, Nigeria" Iconic Research And Engineering Journals Volume 9 Issue 10 2026 Page 1478-1489 https://doi.org/10.64388/IREV9I10-1716465

IEEE:
Meshach Ojile, George, Victor Tupere "Assessing The Socioeconomic Impacts of A Mystery Oil Spill on Coastal Communities in Eastern Obolo, Nigeria" Iconic Research And Engineering Journals, 9(10) https://doi.org/10.64388/IREV9I10-1716465