Oil
Companies Set to Be Handed Drilling Permits
Friday,
17 May 2013, 2:56 pm
Press
Release: Greenpeace New Zealand
Oil
Companies Lacking ‘Expertise’ and ‘Financial Ability’ Set to
Be Handed Drilling Permits
17
May, 2013
PM
‘Misled’ New Zealand, say Greenpeace
Prime
Minister John Key has misled the nation about oil industry safety
standards, Greenpeace said today, as an amendment to the
controversial Crown Minerals Bill is set to allow companies with no
previous experience of drilling to get the relevant permits.
Just
last month, during a speech covering offshore oil drilling standards,
Key claimed, in front of an audience of oil executives and
journalists that “This government is very clear; we won’t let
cowboys operate here in New Zealand.”
But
today Key’s government has tabled an amendment to the Crown
Minerals Bill which will allow companies with no previous experience
of drilling or ‘financial ability’ to get the relevant offshore
oil permits.
The
government explanation to the amendment, which is heard in Parliament
this afternoon, says: ‘An applicant for a Tier 1 permit for
exploration who does not have the expertise or financial ability to
undertake exploration drilling activities will be able to be granted
a permit on a conditional basis.’ Once the company has carried out
initial survey work it can, according to the amendment, ‘build its
own capability to do the contingent work so that it can commit to do
that further work itself’.
A
Tier 1 permit relates to petroleum, minerals, underground and
offshore activities.
Nathan
Argent, Greenpeace’s chief policy advisor, said:
“John
Key has misled New Zealand. He said his government is not going to
let cowboys operate here. But this government amendment is designed
to encourage and then unleash a posse of cowboys.
“And,
shockingly, this amendment makes it clear that these cowboy chancers
won’t even have to have expertise or money, before they’re let
lose to drill in our precious seas.”
Last
month, an earlier amendment to the same Bill, designed to criminalise
aspects of peaceful protests at sea, was slammed by a range of
well-known New Zealand groups and individuals.
In
a joint statement, Greenpeace, Rt Hon Geoffrey Palmer QC, Peter
Williams QC, WWF, Forest and Bird, Dame Anne Salmond, Rikirangi Gage
of Te Whānau-ā-Apanui, Sir Ngatata Love, the New Zealand Council of
Trade Unions, George Armstrong (founder of the Peace Squadron),
Amnesty International NZ, Lucy Lawless and many others, said that
energy minister Simon Bridges’ “new law is a sledgehammer
designed to attack peaceful protest” and is “being bundled
through Parliament without proper scrutiny despite its significant
constitutional, democratic and human rights implications.”
Over
40,000 people have now added their name to the statement and, in a
Horizon Research poll carried out last month, 79 per cent of those
asked said that the earlier amendment should be withdrawn completely
or sent back to a select committee of politicians for more scrutiny
and more chance for the public to have a say.
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