Saturday 25 February 2012

Greenpeace occupies Arctic-based vessel

Save the Arctic

Greenpeace
The pristine and beautiful Arctic: Shell wants to exploit it for oil. We want it protected.

As a Shell oil drillship was preparing to leave Port Taranaki to sail for the Arctic to begin drilling for oil off the coast of Alaska - Greenpeace activists along with Lucy Lawless took action to block the departure of the ship. Take action alongside our activists now. Demand Shell stop its plans to put the fragile Arctic and its biodiversity at risk.

UPDATE:After 25,000 emails sent to the CEO of Shell, Peter Voser your emails started bouncing so we to switched to Marvin Odum, another Shell director but that started bouncing at about 80,000 so we have now switched to Pete Slaiby - vice president of Shell Alaska.

Like the deep sea oil drilling we face in NZ , Arctic drilling is extremely risky. The fact that it's being considered at all shows just how desperate the industry is to reach the last drops of oil - no matter what the cost.

We're on the cusp of an Arctic oil rush, the stakes are high and our chance to  stop it is now.

This is a defining moment and we can choose a new path where a clean energy future replaces the climate change, resource wars and environmental devastation that are the consequences of the world's oil addiction.

Help stop Arctic destruction now by sending an email to Shell demanding it scraps plans for Arctic oil drilling


You can send an email by going HERE


Lucy Lawless protests with Greenpeace




A man has been arrested after seven Greenpeace protesters, including Hollywood star Lucy Lawless, clambered onto an Arctic-bound oil drilling vessel and scaled its 53-metre tower at Port Taranaki this morning.

The group managed to evade the port's tight security and, about 7am, board the Liberian-flagged Noble Discoverer, which was to depart on an 11,000km journey to drill three exploratory oil wells in the Chukchi Sea off the coast of Alaska.

They climbed to a platform atop its 53-metre drilling derrick and unravelled banners saying "Stop Shell'' and "Save The Arctic''.

A police spokesman confirmed a man who was associated with the protest but not on the boat was arrested at the port gate this morning.

Five officers were on board and had made face-to-face contact with the protesters, he said.

"We're trying to establish what their intentions are.''

Greenpeace spokesman Steve Abel said police were trying to climb the derrick to get to the protesters.

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"We'd be pretty concerned about that because it requires specialist knowledge and capabilities to climb so you wouldn't want your everyday police officer having to do that without proper equipment. It's industrial climbing.''

The protest has captured international media attention with organisations including MSNBC, The Nation and the Associated Press trying to get interviews with Lawless, whose television series Spartacus is currently airing in the United States.

"Her involvement is very significant. There are very few people with her amount of profile and number of fans who have taken this level of non-violent direct action so, yeah, it's a pretty exceptional, historical event,'' Mr Abel said.

Police area commander for New Plymouth Inspector Blair Telford said their role in these situations was to ensure any protest was lawful and owners and crew of the ship were allowed to go about their lawful business.

"The protesters are clearly breaking the law by trespassing on the ship and we are currently liaising with the Port of Taranaki and the Harbour Master to decide the most appropriate course of action. Public safety is paramount.''

Lawless, the star of Xena: Warrior Princess, is a long-time Greenpeace supporter.

"I'm here today acting on behalf of the planet and my children,'' she was quoted as saying in a Greenpeace statement.

"Deep sea oil drilling is bad enough, but venturing into the Arctic, one of the most magical places on the planet, is going too far.''

Mr Abel said Lawless had decided to take part in today's activity of her own volition.

"She really was very keen to partake in a non-violent protest activity such as this one.''

She had considered that the police could be involved and people could be arrested, he said.

"She's got a strong passion for ensuring the Arctic does not become the latest frontier for the oil industry.''

She has taken to Twitter from the platform.

"All safe up here but a squall coming in. Good spirits,'' she tweeted.

"Today I'm taking direct action with GreenpeaceNZ in peaceful protest against Shell's Arctic oil drilling.

"I'm on one of the oldest drill rigs on the planet and it's heading to the Arctic. Tell Shell to stop.''

The ship was built in 1966.

Shell said in a statement it was "disappointed'' that Greenpeace had chosen this method of protest.

"While we respect the right of individuals to express their point of view the priority should be the safety of Noble Discoverer's personnel and that of the protesters.

"Shell has undertaken unprecedented steps to pursue safe, environmentally responsible exploration in shallow water off the coast of Alaska. We recognise the industry licence to operate offshore is predicated on being able to operate in a safe, environmentally responsible manner.''

Shell's Alaska exploration plans were guided by extensive Arctic expertise and world-class capabilities, it said.

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