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OIL AND GAS
Shell takes legal action over Greenpeace protest on rig
by Staff Writers
Los Angeles (AFP) April 8, 2015


Greenpeace activists scale drilling rig
Anchorage, Alaska (UPI) Apr 7, 2015 - Greenpeace said six of its activists have scaled a drilling rig in the Pacific Ocean to protest Shell's plans to explore for oil off the coast of Alaska.

U.S. activist Aliyah Field said Tuesday she was positioned about 130 feet above the surface of the ocean on the Polar Pioneer rig bound for the Port of Seattle. Shell is using the port as a base of operations for plans this year to explore the arctic waters off the coast of Alaska.

"Shell is determined to drill in the arctic, even with the knowledge that it is a critical battleground for the preservation of life on the planet," she said.

The Department of Interior last week affirmed a 2008 lease sale for exploration in the Chukchi Sea off the coast of Alaska.

Shell said the decision cleared the way for a review of its plans for offshore Alaska. The company devoted about $5 billion and more than eight years of work for its arctic oil exploration off Alaska's coast in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas.

In 2012, seven Greenpeace activists, including actress Lucy Lawless, were removed from the Noble Discoverer drill ship and arrested by New Zealand authorities. The rig was to leave for the Chukchi Sea off the Alaskan coast to drill exploratory oil wells for Shell.

Polar Pioneer and Noble Discover are both headed again to offshore Alaska. Shell acknowledged last month there were "technical, fiscal, regulatory, political" and other issues that may interfere with frontier development in the arctic.

Oil giant Shell filed a legal complaint Tuesday against Greenpeace protestors who have boarded an Arctic-bound oil rig in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, a spokeswoman said.

The six activists are camping out on the 38,000-tonne Polar Pioneer platform, which they boarded 750 miles northwest of Hawaii using inflatable boats from the Greenpeace vessel "Esperanza."

"These acts are far from peaceful demonstrations," said a Shell statement a day after confirming the Greenpeace action Monday.

"Boarding a moving vessel on the high seas is extremely dangerous and jeopardizes the safety of all concerned, including both the people working aboard and the protestors themselves," it added.

The Anglo-Dutch group said it had filed a complaint in federal court in Alaska, seeking an injunction "to end the illegal boarding currently taking place in the Pacific Ocean and to prevent such actions in the future."

The injunction "would apply while the all of the vessels associated with our Alaska exploration program are in transit to the US, while in port, and while transiting to our leases." The rig is on its way to the Arctic via Seattle, Washington.

"The injunction, if granted, would also apply to the aviation assets related to the program," it added.

The six activists -- from the United States, Germany, New Zealand, Australia, Sweden and Austria -- have supplies for several days and can communicate with the outside world, Greenpeace said.

Johno Smith, one of the protestors from New Zealand, said: "We're here to highlight that in less than 100 days Shell is going to the Arctic to drill for oil.

"This pristine environment needs protecting for future generations and all life that will call it home.

"But instead Shell's actions are exploiting the melting ice to increase a man-made disaster."


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