Phasing-Out Gas Flaring In Nigeria: A Critical Assessment of the Regulatory Regime

The rapid development of the global oil and gas industry has led to an increase in atmospheric emissions which is detrimental to the wider atmosphere. The flaring of gas during oil exploration and production (E & P) activities alarmingly contributes to the emission of green-house gases which con...

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Main Author: Okukpon, Irekpitan
Other Authors: Glazewski, Jan
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/7402
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-74022020-10-06T05:11:32Z Phasing-Out Gas Flaring In Nigeria: A Critical Assessment of the Regulatory Regime Okukpon, Irekpitan Glazewski, Jan The rapid development of the global oil and gas industry has led to an increase in atmospheric emissions which is detrimental to the wider atmosphere. The flaring of gas during oil exploration and production (E & P) activities alarmingly contributes to the emission of green-house gases which contribute to climate change. The enactment of legislation with adequate provisions for the reduction and elimination of gas flaring from oil and gas activities is very important. Very few countries in the world (e.g. Canada) have been able to successfully eliminate the problem of gas flaring through conservation and the enactment of adequate legislation with stringent sanctions for defaulters who continue flaring. Nigeria is an example of a country with inadequate gas flaring laws. This thesis examines the effectiveness of regulatory regimes on gas flaring in Nigeria with a view to determining if the phase-out of the problem can be achieved. It stipulates that the provisions of the Associated Gas RE-Injection Act (AGRA) 1979 and its Regulations of 1984 are inadequate for the regulation and or elimination of gas flaring. It also advocates for the amendment of AGRA, the development of more effective laws on gas flaring and methods by which the gas being flared can be conserved in order to ensure a clean and healthy environment in Nigeria (particularly the Niger-Delta), free from gas flares. 2014-09-10T12:28:31Z 2014-09-10T12:28:31Z 2010 Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/7402 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Law School for Legal Practice
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language English
format Dissertation
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description The rapid development of the global oil and gas industry has led to an increase in atmospheric emissions which is detrimental to the wider atmosphere. The flaring of gas during oil exploration and production (E & P) activities alarmingly contributes to the emission of green-house gases which contribute to climate change. The enactment of legislation with adequate provisions for the reduction and elimination of gas flaring from oil and gas activities is very important. Very few countries in the world (e.g. Canada) have been able to successfully eliminate the problem of gas flaring through conservation and the enactment of adequate legislation with stringent sanctions for defaulters who continue flaring. Nigeria is an example of a country with inadequate gas flaring laws. This thesis examines the effectiveness of regulatory regimes on gas flaring in Nigeria with a view to determining if the phase-out of the problem can be achieved. It stipulates that the provisions of the Associated Gas RE-Injection Act (AGRA) 1979 and its Regulations of 1984 are inadequate for the regulation and or elimination of gas flaring. It also advocates for the amendment of AGRA, the development of more effective laws on gas flaring and methods by which the gas being flared can be conserved in order to ensure a clean and healthy environment in Nigeria (particularly the Niger-Delta), free from gas flares.
author2 Glazewski, Jan
author_facet Glazewski, Jan
Okukpon, Irekpitan
author Okukpon, Irekpitan
spellingShingle Okukpon, Irekpitan
Phasing-Out Gas Flaring In Nigeria: A Critical Assessment of the Regulatory Regime
author_sort Okukpon, Irekpitan
title Phasing-Out Gas Flaring In Nigeria: A Critical Assessment of the Regulatory Regime
title_short Phasing-Out Gas Flaring In Nigeria: A Critical Assessment of the Regulatory Regime
title_full Phasing-Out Gas Flaring In Nigeria: A Critical Assessment of the Regulatory Regime
title_fullStr Phasing-Out Gas Flaring In Nigeria: A Critical Assessment of the Regulatory Regime
title_full_unstemmed Phasing-Out Gas Flaring In Nigeria: A Critical Assessment of the Regulatory Regime
title_sort phasing-out gas flaring in nigeria: a critical assessment of the regulatory regime
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/7402
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