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  • Hold Shell to account for its human rights abuses in Nigeria

    Hold Shell to account for its human rights abuses in Nigeria

    Dear friends, Over the past 48 hours, Shell’s active role in human rights abuses in Nigeria has been exposed in a new Platform briefing: Dirty Work: Shell’s Security Spending in Nigeria. The briefing analyses financial data from Shell’s security department, leaked to Platform by a concerned ex-Shell manager. The leaked data covers three bloody years of…

    22 Aug 2012 admin
  • Shell Security Spending Data Mapped on Guardian Data Blog

    Shell Security Spending Data Mapped on Guardian Data Blog

    Platform and the Guardian Data Blog have mapped Shell’s global security spending for 2008. The graphic is based on leaked internal financial data. You can find Platform’s full briefing on this issue here.  

    22 Aug 2012 admin
  • An “unusual travel book” along a pipeline

    An “unusual travel book” along a pipeline

    A Guest Blog by John de Falbe of Sandoe’s Books. I just received an early copy of “The Oil Road: A Journey from the Caspian Sea to the City of London” by Platform’s James Marriott and Mika Minio-Paluello, published by Verso, due out in mid-September. I read it in manuscript: it’s a brilliant analysis of…

    21 Aug 2012 admin
  • Exclusive interviews with Al-Jazeera on Shell’s security spending in Nigeria

    Exclusive interviews with Al-Jazeera on Shell’s security spending in Nigeria

    On 20 August, Al-Jazeera interviewed Platform researcher Ben Amunwa about the leaked data that revealed Shell’s deep financial links to human rights abusers in Nigeria. Unfortunately a technical hitch cut the first interview short. However, it’s worth watching, if only for the ‘shifty eyes’ at the end of the video as the line cuts out…

    21 Aug 2012 admin
  • Data leak reveals Shell’s deep financial links to human rights abusers in Nigeria

    Data leak reveals Shell’s deep financial links to human rights abusers in Nigeria

    Shell spent at least $383 million on security in Nigeria between 2007 and 2009, according to company data leaked to oil watchdog Platform.[1] Shell’s leaked data is analysed in a new Platform briefing, Dirty Work: Shell’s security spending in Nigeria and beyond, which shows that a substantial amount of Shell’s security spending went into the…

    19 Aug 2012 admin
  • Unpicking Nigeria’s new draft oil law

    Unpicking Nigeria’s new draft oil law

    This guest blog was written by Jeremy Weate. He runs Naijablog and is on twitter. Over the past few years, Nigeria’s Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) has acquired a mythic, if not theological framing. It’s as if the document, once gazetted, will provide a final judgement on the direction of reform of the sector. No matter the…

    25 Jul 2012 admin
  • Tangled up in US cables: an intern’s view

    Tangled up in US cables: an intern’s view

      This post was written by Platform intern, Pip Brown. Back in October 2011, I gladly accepted the task of working together with Platform researchers and sifting through the US Embassy cables to find information on oil and conflict in the Niger Delta. How many could there be? I typed the words “Shell” and “Nigeria”…

    5 Jul 2012 admin
  • EU announces Arctic policy, but what does it mean?

    EU announces Arctic policy, but what does it mean?

    Yesterday (3rd July) the European Commission published a document outlining its policy position on the Arctic region. Alarmingly, one of the action priorities listed in the press release is "Promotion and development of environmentally friendly technologies that could be used by extractive industries in the Arctic". In the Communication full text (p9) they add: In…

    4 Jul 2012 anna

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