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- From: Greenpeace via Jym Dyer <jym@mica.berkeley.edu>
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive,alt.activism,talk.environment
- Subject: NEWS: Greenpeace Ship Arrives at Shetland Islands Oil Spill
- Followup-To: talk.environment
- Date: 8 Jan 1993 00:29:43 GMT
- Organization: The Naughty Peahen Party Line
- Lines: 58
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Message-ID: <Greenpeace.7Jan1993.1629@naughty-peahen>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: remarque.berkeley.edu
- Keywords: environment press
-
- [Greenpeace Press Release from Environet -- Redistribute Freely]
-
- GREENPEACE SHIP TO ARRIVE AT SHETLAND ISLANDS OIL SPILL TONIGHT
-
- LONDON -- 5 January, 1993 -- The Greenpeace ship, SOLO -- a
- former ocean-going salvage tug -- is on its way to the Shetland
- Islands and has offered to assist with efforts to limit the
- damage from today's oil spill.
-
- Just after 06:00 GMT today, the Liberian-registered tanker
- "Braer" -- on its way from Norway to Canada -- lost engine
- power off the southern coast of the Shetland Islands. It
- began spilling its estimated 85,000 tonnes of Norwegian light
- crude oil when it ran aground at approximately 11.10. The
- weather was described as "extreme" when the oil spill started.
-
- The tanker was chartered by the UK oil company Ultramar PLC.
-
- The SOLO's captain, Dave Enever from the UK, contacted
- the Shetland Islands coastguard earlier today to announce
- Greenpeace's imminent arrival and to offer the SOLO's
- assistance.
-
- The SOLO, which is equipped with a helicopter pad, had been
- documenting fisheries in the North Sea when the news of the
- spill came through.
-
- Greenpeace spokesman Paul Horsman said the Shetland Islands
- were a famous habitat for seabirds, otters, grey seals, and
- numerous fish species.
-
- "Even with the strictest guidelines, this sort of accident
- continues to happen," said Paul Horsman. "Only four weeks
- since the 'Aegean Sea' spilled most of its contents off the
- Spanish coast wreaking havoc on the environment, we are faced
- with a potentially worse disaster."
-
- Horsman said given the extreme weather conditions, it was
- unlikely that even 10 per cent of the spilled oil could be
- recovered.
-
- The Shetlands are home to colonies of puffins, razorbills,
- guillemots, kitewakes, cormorants, manx shearwaters, storm
- petrels among other bird species.
-
- The depleted sandeel fishery in the Shetland coastal waters had
- just begun to recover when the oil spill hit. Sandeels are the
- main foodstock of local bird species.
-
- "These catastrophes will continue to happen as long as the oil
- companies are allowed to use the seas as their personal oil
- highways," Horsman said. "At any one time, there are around 500
- million barrels of oil being transported on the world's oceans."
- The "Braer", a single-hulled tanker, is carrying twice as much
- oil as the Exxon Valdez was carrying before its infamous spill
- in Alaska in 1989. The recent spill at La Coruna in Spain
- resulted in more than 50,000 tonnes of oil entering the
- environment.
-