Key’s drilling plan “in freefall” as NZ’s biggest offshore oil prospector bails
August
30, 2016 at 13:25 - In the wake of last week’s reports that oil
giant Shell is having a firesale of its New Zealand assets,
prospecting company ION Geophysical has also now relinquished its oil
surveying permits, which covered almost half of New Zealand’s
waters.
30
August, 2016
ION’s
bid, lodged last September, was the largest application ever to be
made for prospecting in New Zealand’s EEZ. It involved surveying
1.6 million square kilometres of ocean.
To
add to the mass pull-out, another Houston based company, TGS, also
yesterday withdrew its application for its major offshore prospecting
permit off the West Coast of the North Island.
Greenpeace
New Zealand’s senior campaign advisor, Steve Abel, said the growing
list of oil companies bailing are a solid indication that the
Government’s oil programme is dying a death.
“Prospecting
is the essential first step of offshore drilling. These companies
gain data that is on-sold to the oil companies, but if there is poor
indication of possible oil or there aren’t buyers for the data then
the prospectors aren’t going to waste their time and money on
surveying,” he said.
“The
ION and TGS departures are another critical blow to John Key’s
offshore oil prospects. I think it’s safe to say the New Zealand’s
offshore oil industry is in freefall. International petroleum players
are dropping like flies.
“It’s
high time for Key to give up on this waste of taxpayers money and
make good on the promises he made at the Paris climate conference by
quitting support for oil drilling and properly backing the clean
innovative sectors that should be powering and providing jobs and
income for New Zealanders.”
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