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Babatunde, B.B.; Sikoki, F.D.; Avwiri, G.O.; Chad-Umoreh, Y.E., E-mail: bolaji.babatunde@uniport.edu.ng2019
AbstractAbstract
[en] Highlights: • Oil and Gas activities utilise and discharge waste into the environment containing radionuclides. • Drilling and production activities are capable of bring NORM to the surface and injecting same into food chain. • The Niger Delta is the oil and gas hub of Nigeria with reported ecologic devastation since oil discovery. • Many authors have reported radioactivity in several media in the Niger Delta to be higher than stipulated limits. • Environmental radioactivity is a recent science in Nigeria. Scientists should make efforts to provide data for policymakers to enforce regulations on discharges from oil and gas activities. • More research needs to be supported for continuous monitoring of the occurrence of radionuclides in the region under review. - Abstract: There is widespread degradation of the environment of the Niger Delta region of Nigeria such that the United Nations Environment Program described it as an ecological wasteland. The contamination is due mainly to unregulated oil and gas production activities leading to oil spills and illegal disposal of contaminated materials, indiscriminate industrial and domestic discharges into water bodies. This widespread contamination includes naturally occurring radioactive materials (NORM) and technologically enhanced radioactive materials (TENORM). NORMs are naturally associated with every mineral in the earth crust, thus the exploitation of such minerals may transport NORM to the surface as TENORM. If uncontrolled by operators and unregulated by government agencies, NORM can find its way into surface and ground water, seafood and even crops consumed by humans. The Niger Delta region is the hub of oil and gas activities providing huge employment and socioeconomic benefits to its indigenes and accounting for more than 90% of foreign exchange earnings for the country. However, uncontrolled spills and discharges from these activities have left the land desolate, degrading most of its aquifers and surface waters, leaving the indigenes with a Hobson choice, eating and drinking contaminated substances everyday of their lives. It is expedient that attention be drawn to this area as radionuclides such as Po-210, Pb-210 and Ra-226 have been confirmed as radiotoxic and may be responsible for several new cases of health challenges reported in the study area over the years.
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Source
S0265931X1830804X; Available from http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvrad.2019.01.015; © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
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Journal Article
Journal
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ACCIDENTS, AFRICA, ALKALINE EARTH ISOTOPES, ALPHA DECAY RADIOISOTOPES, BETA DECAY RADIOISOTOPES, BETA-MINUS DECAY RADIOISOTOPES, CARBON 14 DECAY RADIOISOTOPES, DAYS LIVING RADIOISOTOPES, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DOCUMENT TYPES, ENERGY SOURCES, EVEN-EVEN NUCLEI, FOSSIL FUELS, FUELS, HAZARDS, HEALTH HAZARDS, HEAVY ION DECAY RADIOISOTOPES, HEAVY NUCLEI, HYDROGEN COMPOUNDS, INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS, ISOMERIC TRANSITION ISOTOPES, ISOTOPES, LEAD ISOTOPES, MATERIALS, NANOSECONDS LIVING RADIOISOTOPES, NUCLEI, OXYGEN COMPOUNDS, POLONIUM ISOTOPES, RADIOACTIVE MATERIALS, RADIOISOTOPES, RADIUM ISOTOPES, WATER, YEARS LIVING RADIOISOTOPES
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