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- From: Greenpeace via Jym Dyer <jym@mica.berkeley.edu>
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive,alt.activism,talk.environment
- Subject: NEWS: Long Term Effects of Spanish Oil Spill Denounced
- Followup-To: talk.environment
- Date: 14 Dec 1992 23:15:00 GMT
- Organization: The Naughty Peahen Party Line
- Lines: 58
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Message-ID: <Greenpeace.14Dec1992.1514@naughty-peahen>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: remarque.berkeley.edu
-
- [Greenpeace Press Release from Environet -- Redistribute Freely]
-
- GREENPEACE DENOUNCES THE LONG TERM EFFECTS OF SPANISH OIL SPILL
-
- LA CORUNA, SPAIN -- A research team from the international
- environmental group Greenpeace released preliminary results of
- its inspection of damage caused by the massive oil spill in La
- Coruna. Representatives from Greenpeace said that the efforts
- to contain the spread of the spill have been totally inefficient
- and nothing has been done to remove what fuel may still be
- aboard the Greek tanker "Agean Sea."
-
- The international team includes Jeremy Leggett, a (U.K) Phd
- in geology and expert on oil issues; Albert Kuiken, the Dutch
- captain of the Greenpeace ship "Solo"; John Bennett, (Canada)
- international coordinator of the oil campaign; and Juan Lopez
- de Uralde, coordinator of Greenpeace Spain's toxics campaign.
- Also present were Raul Garcia and Guillermo Fernandez Obanza
- from the local environmental group BIOTOPO, which is working
- in cooperation with Greenpeace to recover birds affected by
- the oil. According to BIOTOPO, thousands of oiled marine birds,
- including endangered species like the razorbill and the common
- guillemot, are washing up along the coast. Many face certain
- death.
-
- Dr. Leggett said the effects of the spill will be felt long
- after the slick disappears. As has been seen in other spills
- of this magnitude, toxics compounds such as polycyclic aromatic
- hydrocarbons will remain in the water and continue to harm the
- marine environment after the oil dissipates.
-
- The captain of the "Solo", Albert Kuiken, criticized the Spanish
- authorities for not taking the initial steps necessary to remove
- whatever oil may remain in the ship. For this type of operation
- to have any chance of success work must begin immediately
- weather permitting.
-
- In addition, according to Greenpeace, the booms and skimmers
- being used to protect the area`s rich tributaries are too small
- and inefficient to prove effective. In a spill of this size
- damage to the marine ecosystem is unavoidable, but all possible
- measures should be applied in order to remove as much oil from
- the water as possible and to try to protect sensitive areas.
-
- But Greenpeace also warned that dispersants, detergents or any
- other chemical compounds should not be used to fight the spill,
- because these measures only add new pollutants to the sea.
- John Bennett warned that these catastrophes will continue unless
- our society ends its addiction oil. Alternatives do exist, and
- we must forge a responsible energy policy based on Energy
- Conservation and Efficiency (which would allow us to reduce
- energy consumption), and renewable, clean sources of energy.
-
- "We are so addicted to oil and accepting of the consequences
- that we simply ask when and where the next oil spill will take
- place. It is necessary to develop alternatives that will permit
- us to stop the spills and leave the oil in the soil forever,"
- Bennet said.
-