Total
against Arctic drilling on ecology issues
French
oil major Total has become the first oil company to warn against
offshore oil exploration in the Arctic due to environmental concerns.
RT,
27
September, 2012
Christophe
de Margerie, CEO of Total told the Financial Times that the risk of
an oil spill in the Arctic is too high to justify drilling. “Oil on
Greenland would be a disaster. A leak would do too much damage to the
image of the company,” he said.
Earlier
this year ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell, ENI of Italy and Norway’s
Statoil signed deals with Russian oil major Rosneft to drill for oil
in Russia’s Arctic. Other companies have secured agreements to
explore reserves off Greenland.
But
last week, Shell had to postpone an attempt to drill the first well
off the Alaskan coast after an important piece of safety equipment
failed. The company has spent $4.5 billion and seven years preparing
to drill.
Total’s
comments were welcomed by environment activists who oppose drilling
in the Arctic.
Although
Total warns against oil drilling, it doesn’t plan to give up Arctic
exploration. The company will continue to explore the area’s gas
reserves as gas leaks were easier to deal with than oil spills, Total
CEO explained. The French oil major has several natural gas ventures
in the region, including a stake in the vast Shtokman field in
Russia’s Barents Sea.
Earlier
this month, Russian gas major Gazprom postponed the start of oil
production at its Prirazlomnoye field, the first in the Russian
Arctic, due to safety concerns. An oil rig in the field was attacked
by Greenpeace activists protesting the drilling.
The
Russian Arctic shelf is believed to hold about 100 billion tonnes of
natural resources including 13 billion tones of oil, accounting for
over a fifth of global reserves. Though there are 257 oil wells in
the region, the majority of them aren’t exploited. The development
of the Arctic might cost up to $400 billion says Igor Sechin,
President of Rosneft.
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