Oil and gas host communities in Rivers State have received training on accessing the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) for development of their areas.
The training was part of a two-day sensitisation programme held on Monday and Tuesday, in Port Harcourt, by Center for Advanced Law Research of the Rivers State University and F1 Team Associates.
Highlighting the essence of the program, Jude Ndubuisi, a legal practitioner, public and oil and gas expert, said the target was to educate host communities on the relevant provisions of the PIA and how they can access them to protect their rights and promote their cause for sustainable development and harmonious co-existence between them and settlors.
Ndubuisi, explained that: âThe whole idea is to explain to the people at the local government council level the provisions of the Petroleum Industry Act which actually is a revolutionary legislation that has brought a lot of changes in the oil and gas eco-system.
Rivers State is a major producer of oil and gas in the Nigerian Federation, so itâs important that our people at the local level understand the provisions of the act.â
Speaking on host communitiesâ rights, another expert, Prof Samuel Chika Dike, a professor of energy and comparative environmental aw, faulted grey areas of the PIA that seeks to sideline host communities and which he said some oil companies operating in their areas capitalise on to infringe on the peopleâs rights.
Dike noted the need for political will to accelerate effective implementation of host community development provisions of the Act and the host community regulations to achieve development.
He called for amendment of PIA host community provisions âto allow for increased host security involvement in HCDT establishment and implementationâ, adding that âSettlors should not be the one to choose members of the HCDT boards.â
Also speaking Prof. Kato Kingston, a professor of energy and natural resources law at the faculty of law, Rivers State University, said host communities had a right to seek for redress through the channels specified in the PIA when they feel their rights had been violated by the oil companies operating in their domains.
Speaking on the topic, âHost Communities Dispute Resolutionâ, Prof. Kingston noted that Chapter 3 of the PIA addressed matters relating to the host communities.
Blessing Ibunge