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OIL AND GAS
Greenpeace activist hurt in clash over Canaries oil exploration
by Staff Writers
Madrid (AFP) Nov 15, 2014


Protests to greet oil-exploring boat off Canary Islands
Tenerife, Spain (AFP) Nov 14, 2014 - Environmental activists rallied Friday in anger at the arrival of a boat due to start prospecting for oil in the waters off Spain's Canary Islands, a major tourist destination.

Greenpeace said activists on its Arctic Sunrise protest boat sailed to the zone where they expected Spanish oil group Repsol to launch its explorations this weekend, vowing to block the prospecting vessel.

Local groups meanwhile called rallies on Friday right across the Atlantic archipelago, whose beaches are a popular draw for foreign tourists from Britain, France and elsewhere.

Locals and authorities in the Canaries oppose Repsol's government-backed plan to spend three years probing for oil and gas under the sea bed 50 kilometres (30 miles) from the islands of Lanzarote and Fuerteventura.

Residents fear Repsol's explorations will harm local flora and fauna such as dolphins and disrupt the tourism industry on which their economy relies.

They have tried in vain to stop the prospections going ahead.

"It seems that Repsol and the Spanish government still intend to begin the prospection," said Fran Castro, a local spokesman for Ecologists in Action, demonstrating near the port on the island of Tenerife.

"We are going to try and keep up the popular opposition to it until the last moment. We consider this project a catastrophe for the future of the Canaries," he told AFP.

Environmental groups and local councils have complained to EU authorities over Repsol's plan.

The Canary Islands regional government also opposes the plan and has called a referendum to allow residents to vote on it, but the national government has blocked that in the courts.

Repsol has promised to take steps to protect the environment and says the project will create jobs in the islands, where the unemployment rate is over 30 percent.

A Greenpeace activist was hurt Saturday in a confrontation with the Spanish navy that intervened during fresh protests against a controversial oil exploration project in waters off the Canary Islands.

The propellor of a Greenpeace boat cut and broke a 23-year-old Italian woman's leg after she fell overboard during the dawn clash, according to Spanish authorities and the environmental group.

The Spanish defence ministry said the navy believed the activists were trying to board oil exploration vessel Rowan Renaissance, and had moved in to halt three Greenpeace boats. However, the activists say they intended to carry out a "peaceful protest."

"In the events that followed an activist from the ecologist organisation fell in the water and was seriously wounded when she hit a propeller of one of Greenpeace's boats," the defence ministry said.

A video clip of the confrontation released by Greenpeace showed a Spanish navy boat hitting one of the activists' boats, which were very close to the Rowan Renaissance.

Locals and authorities in the Canaries oppose Spanish oil group Repsol's government-backed plan to spend three years probing for oil and gas under the sea bed 50 kilometres (30 miles) from the islands of Lanzarote and Fuerteventura, off the west coast of Africa.

Residents fear Repsol's explorations will harm local flora and fauna such as dolphins and disrupt the tourism industry that is vital to the area's economy. They have tried to stop the prospections going ahead.

The clash with the Spanish navy vesssls on Saturday, came just one day after rallies against the oil exploration were held across the Atlantic archipelago, whose beaches are a popular draw for foreign tourists from Britain, France and elsewhere.

The Canary Islands regional government has called a referendum to allow residents to vote on it, but the national government in Madrid has blocked that in the courts.

Repsol has promised to take steps to protect the environment and says the project will create jobs in the islands, where the unemployment rate is over 30 percent.


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