Impact of Oil Extraction Industries on Local Communities and Environment in Hadhramawt Governorate, Yemen (2022-2023)

The interaction of climate change and environmental stress that is caused by oil extraction and its effect on public health will be tackled by working with communities and stakeholders in Yemen.

About the project

Over the past years, the oil extraction industry and climatic disasters obviously played an important role in environmental degradation and socio-political instability in Yemen. Based on these problems, the Yemeni organization Ettifaq and its partners CARPO and MMF explore the impact of oil extraction in the governorate of Hadhramawt. Livelihoods and the health of local communities are at the focus of the project, as well as the way environmental pressure exacerbates tension and hinders coexistence.
Through understanding the impact of the oil industry’s high pollution on the one hand and using this gained knowledge for a range of social interactions on the other hand, the complex topic is approached. Resolving and targeting environmental stress, also within the local communities, constitutes a key prerequisite for a longstanding and sustainable peace process.
Why are we running this project?

Over the last years, Yemen’s largest governorate Hadhramawt has experienced increasing numbers of cyclones and changing rainfall periods due to climate change. The erratic rainfall is mixed with dumped waste and byproducts from oil extraction. With the water, those pollutants are transported over long distances and risk the widespread contamination of water resources, soil and vegetation. In many cases, residents consume the contaminated water and cultivate on polluted soil due to general unawareness, a lack of data regarding the pollution and out of necessity due to dwindling access to natural resources in an ongoing state of war. At the same time, air pollution through unfiltered gas flaring is also prevalent around productive oil fields.
Despite complaints from local communities, efforts to mitigate the threats have been absent so far. Overall, the effects on public health and the government’s inaction put a significant strain on Yemen’s government and could impair peaceful state-society relations long after the war has ended.

What are our goals?

 

Yemen suffers from complex and multidimensional environmental stress. Thus, the first goal of the project is to present a new dataset regarding the impact of the oil industry’s high pollution on the population and their livelihoods. Clear recommendations to local and national policy makers help to develop new strategies to prevent and/or mitigate future incidences of oil pollution and enable policy makers to design adequate adaptation measures.
In the Hadhramawt governorate increased tension between society, the oil industry and governmental institutions as well as NGOs rise, due to the deterioration in health and the damage of agricultural land and water resources. Thus, the second goal of the project is to bring together relevant stakeholders to join forces and to search for a common ground for environmental policy solution and community cohesiveness.

How does the project work?

 

The project tackles several dimensions: One issue is to examine the quality of water and soil and its level of contaminants’ concentration. On this basis, suitable interventions are deduced, such as awareness campaigns, briefing workshop, or trainings. Thereby, vulnerable sections of society will gain special attention. Staff working in national and local environmental institutions receive an on-the-job training program, based on a prioritization of the most pressing environmental threats in the targeted areas. Lastly, briefing workshops among oil industry, environmental government institutions, local communities, and civil society actors are planned. Those can create a communication channel among various stakeholders to lower the potential for conflict.

Who organizes and supports the project?

Ettifaq Center for Environmental and Agricultural Consultations was established in 2020, based on the urgent need to preserve the Yemeni environment and to develop agricultural production to bridge the food gap in Yemen. The center seeks to contribute to finding scientific solutions and providing consultations, studies and experiences in the field of environment and agriculture to various government agencies and local and international organizations.
The Medical Mercy Foundation (MMF) was founded in Sana'a, Yemen in 2004. It is a national non-governmental association and medical humanitarian organization that provides emergency aid to vulnerable people affected by conflict, epidemics, natural disasters and those without access to healthcare.
The Center for Applied Research in Partnership with the Orient (CARPO) was founded in 2014 by Germany-based academics trained in the fields of Near and Middle Eastern Studies, Political Science and Social Anthropology. CARPO will provide guidance on developing a joint policy brief with Ettifaq on environmental sustainability in the study sites.

Your contacts

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Dr. Eidah Ali Assa'dy

Medical Mercy Foundation

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Ali Al-Amudi

Medical Mercy Foundation