Posted - January 6, 2013 - rt.com
Greenland has decided to open up one of the most fragile Arctic
environments to oil drilling, brushing aside environmental concerns. BP,
the company responsible for the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, has won
permission to drill in eastern Greenland.
The Anglo-American energy giant, held responsible for turning the
Gulf of Mexico into an ecological catastrophe in 2010, has been
given exploration rights in eastern Greenland – an area of 2,630
square kilometers and the world’s biggest island.
http://img.rt.com/files/news/21/be/f0/00/1204010_greenland0800_480p.mp4?event=download
"Northeast Greenland is a long-term play, and we expect
several years of careful planning before exploring this
challenging and interesting region,” BP said in a statement.
“We look forward to working with the BMP [Greenland's Bureau
of Mines and Petroleum] and partners to develop a 2D seismic work
programme."
The Greenland government's decision is a complete U-turn from
what it said only nine months ago, when a moratorium on any
further drilling was imposed due to environmental concerns.
"The latest move is understood to be tightly connected to
Greenland's striving for independence from Denmark," RT's
Aleksey Yaroshevsky said.
Although Greenland is still a part of the Kingdom of Denmark, it
has enjoyed autonomy since 1979; in 1985 the island became the
only territory to leave the EU. Gaining full independence has
long been a challenge for the 57,000 people of Greenland, who
mostly rely on fishing and tourism to make a living. Oil is seen
by many as a long-awaited chance to become richer and more
independent. Along with the US’s Alaska, Russia, Canada and
Norway, Greenland has promising Arctic reserves, with an
estimated 25 percent of the world's remaining oil and gas
reserves lying under and around the Arctic Ocean.
Reuters / Bob Strong
"We claim our right to economic development,"
Greenland's Prime Minister Kuupik Kleist told the Independent in
2011. "And we claim our right to be independent from former
colonial powers."
Meanwhile, in a bid to raise public awareness about the dangers
of drilling, Greenpeace has repeatedly said that the people in
Greenland have been kept in the dark about the enormous risks
taken by the politicians and companies in the quest for Arctic
oil.
Under pressure from environmentalists, the new government in
Greenland put a moratorium in March on the granting of fresh
offshore oil and gas drilling licenses in the country's Arctic
waters, amid growing fears that unique icy waters around
Greenland could be irreparably damaged by oil spills.
"It's very important that the Greenland government and
population are aware that the risks they are taking would not
only have environmental consequences, but if it still happens
will have massive consequences," Greenpeace Nordic Arctic
campaigner Jon Burgwald told RT.
While almost all of west Greenland is already open for oil
drilling, "the threat of a catastrophic oil spill in areas
like Baffin Bay remains," Greenpeace warned.
Although environmental experts are at a loss how BP, a firm with
such a checkered history, has been allowed to work in such a
fragile region, the country's Minister for Industry and Mineral
Resources has been pleased that the government managed "to
attract the largest oil companies in the world [BP and Shell] to
explore for oil and gas in our area."
"It increases our belief that they are able to find oil and
gas in commercial quantities," Jens-Erik Kirkegaard said,
pledging that safety would be not be ignored.
"All exploration for oil and gas is conducted by following
the highest achievable standards when it comes to protecting the
marine environment and living resources in the sea," he
stated.
The 2010 explosion of the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig and
rupture of BP's Macondo oil well killed 11 people and triggered
the largest US offshore oil spill. Since the end of 2012, BP has
not been awarded any new licenses by the US government, but has
won stakes in drilling rights in the Barents Sea off Norway.
In September one of BP's main competitors, the French company
Total, warned against the dangers of drilling in the Arctic.
"Oil on Greenland would be a disaster," Total CEO
Christophe de Margerie told the FT. "A leak would do too much
damage to the image of the company."
Post to be found at:
http://rt.com/news/greenland-oil-drilling-arctic-223/
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment