Arctic Greenpeace Activists Board Drilling Platform

August 27, 2012

Photo credit Greenpeace
Photo credit Greenpeace

Greenpeace personnel board Russia's Gazprom Prirazlomnaya platform in the Pechora Sea.

The activists aim at disrupting the platform’s operation and bring focus on climate change in the Arctic.

The activists set off in three inflatable speedboats from the Greenpeace ship "Arctic Sunrise" and scaled the platform via mooring lines. Six climbers have taken up positions on the structure and claim to have interrupted the platform's operations. Greenpeace say their people are out of reach and have enough supplies to last them for several days.

Russian energy giant Gazprom intends to begin full commercial drilling operations by early next year, becoming the first ever company to start commercial oil production in the offshore Arctic.

Executive Director of Greenpeace International, Kumi Naidoo said: “We climbed Gazprom's rusting oil platform backed by over a million people who have joined a new movement to protect the Arctic. We are here on their behalf.

Earlier Greenpeace discovered that the Gazprom platform is operating without an official oil spill response plan. Gazprom’s response plan was approved in July 2007 for a period of exactly five years. The Russian Ministry of Emergency admitted to Greenpeace in a letter that a new spill plan has been neither submitted nor approved.


 

Logistics News

Teamwork Required to Thwart Illegal Wildlife Trade

Teamwork Required to Thwart Illegal Wildlife Trade

Longer Sailing Distances Boost Bulker Demand

Longer Sailing Distances Boost Bulker Demand

Laura DiBella Designated as Chairman of FMC

Laura DiBella Designated as Chairman of FMC

Port of Los Angeles Appoints Christopher Chase as Director of Cargo Marketing

Port of Los Angeles Appoints Christopher Chase as Director of Cargo Marketing

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Airbus to start larger A220 jet sales drive, sources say
Trump says US decertifying Bombardier Global Express until Canada certifies Gulfstream
Honeywell's revenue and profit increase as demand for aerospace aftermarket products remains strong