The burning of Associated Gas produced
alongside crude oil by the 29 gas flaring sites in Delta
state constantly hurts nature’s domain and constitutes a
waste of assets which could be utilized to end the
persistent energy failure faced by the power sector in
Nigeria. The proclamation of Gas flaring as one of the
major sources of anthropogenic CO2 has become a
disturbing issue for both scholars and host
communities, hence, regarded as a catalyst to
temperature change in the study area. It is against this
background that this study carried out “an assessment
of gas flaring as a major contributor to temperature
change in Delta State”. The study examined the pattern
of total gas flared in the Niger Delta region and its
impact on temperature variability in Delta State using
satellite climate data and gas flaring data over the
region. The Time Series Analysis was used to investigate
the trends, variations and seasonality of total gas flared
and temperature for six decades in R software. The
standard deviation and coefficient of variation showed
annual variability in temperature with respect to the
mean with a downward trend of gas flaring within the
period of review. Although there was positive
relationship between temperature and gas flaring, other
factors could have contributed to temperature
variability in the region. The statistical indications were
not enough to conclude that there is climate change in
the study area, but one can conclude that there are
slight indications of climate change in the study area.
Thus, it is recommended that more synoptic weather
stations be sited in all the oil producing communities in
Delta State and Niger Delta region as a whole in order
to have adequate up-to-date data of climate and
weather pointers obtainable and accessible to scholars.
Keywords : Associated Gas, Gas Flaring, Temperature, Climate Change.