Google – AFP, 10 April 2013
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An activist
dressed as a polar bear prepares to climb onto the drilling rig
West Hercules,
in a photo by Greenpeace (Greenpeace/AFP, Nick Cobbing)
|
OSLO — Two
Greenpeace activists dressed as polar bears boarded an oil platform in Norway
on Wednesday to protest against Norwegian oil and gas group Statoil's planned
drilling in the Arctic.
"No
oil company in the world is prepared for Arctic conditions," said the head
of Greenpeace Norway, Truls Gulowsen, one of the two activists who boarded the
West Hercules platform currently stationed in Oelen in southwestern Norway.
"It is
unacceptable that Statoil wants to gamble with safety and the environment in
the vulnerable Arctic regions," he added in a statement.
Greenpeace
sent two "polar bears" to "inspect" the platform and to
raise public awareness about the dangers of oil activities in the Arctic, a
region with extreme climate conditions and located far from mainland
infrastructures.
The West
Hercules is scheduled to be sent this month to the Norwegian waters of the
Barents Sea, which is normally ice free, to conduct a prospecting campaign that
is expected to last into 2014.
The
campaign, which calls for up to nine drilling operations including some in
zones very far north, is already several months behind schedule.
"Preparing
the platform took longer than expected," Statoil spokesman Ola Anders Skauby
said.
After
changes to the West Hercules' route, ope3 rations in the northernmost zones
have been postponed but are still planned.
"We
are always evaluating the pace of our drilling in light of our resources and
our priorities and there is nothing dramatic" about the changes, Skauby
said.
After Shell
and Statoil both postponed their respective drilling campaigns in Alaska,
Greenpeace said it believes the major oil companies are realising how difficult
it is to operate in the Arctic.
"The
oil industry is beginning to understand that drilling in the Arctic is much
more difficult than it had us believe," Gulowsen told AFP.
According
to a 2008 study by the US Geological Survey, the Arctic could hold up to 22
percent of the world's undiscovered oil and gas reserves, resources which have
become more accessible in recent years as the Arctic ice melts.
Norway's
oil production has been in steady decline for more than a decade. But the
country recently raised its estimates for its oil and gas reserves, due to the
Barents Sea reserves.
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