Tag Archives: Shell

Activists Use Tripod To Block Shell’s Seattle Operations

courtesy RisingTideNA (Twitter)

courtesy RisingTideNA (Twitter)

from Rising Tide North America / Earth First! 

Days after the Foss Maritime announced that they intended to defy Seattle Mayor Ed Murray, and illegally host Shell’s Arctic drilling fleet, Seattle activists have blockaded Shell’s Seattle fuel transfer station by erecting a tripod.

Seattle resident Annie Lukins, who is suspended from the top of the tripod, says she made the decision to block the facility because like everyone who lives near the shore, she has a stake in stopping Shell.  “Shell already knows the impacts of drilling in the arctic.

They are placing themselves in defiance of climate science, in defiance of the treaty subsistence rights of the Inupiat, and in defiance of our elected official here in Seattle. I’m here because I’m not the only young person who wants to raise her children near the shore. Whether they are my kids or the kids of the Inupiat people of the arctic, I want the next generation to be able to to eat fish from the ocean whose flesh doesn’t carry the killing toxins of crude oil. Shell has already proven they cannot safely operate in the arctic, and the niger delta has shown us that they don’t clean up after themselves. We need to ban arctic drilling now.”

“By coming to seattle in defiance of the mayor’s announcement, Shell is proving again what we already know.” Said Marianna Coles Curtis, who helped support the protest “They are getting away with illegally docking their drilling fleet here by paying $500 a day.

It’s like a parking ticket.  This is a company that made nearly $15 billion in profits last year, so $500 a day isn’t anything to them. It just shows how companies like Shell, BP, and Exxon can trample all over a community, and then get away with a small fine that hardly takes a chip out of their profit.”

Shell’s criminal activities are worldwide.  The oil giant has come under public scrutiny for numerous environmental and human rights violations. Shell is responsible for the spilling of 1.5 million tons of oil in the Niger Delta over the last 50 years. According to human rights watch groups, Shell has made inadequate efforts to remediate impacts, and the oil has led to massive fish kills which have devastated the local fishing economy.

Shell’s Arctic drilling mission has also sparked controversy. In 2012, Shell ran one of their Arctic rigs aground, violated permits regulating air pollution, and failed to certify crucial safety equipment. These violations have prompted Inupiat leaders to come forward in opposition to Shell’s Arctic drilling project, saying that it poses too great a danger to the tribe’s treaty subsistence rights.

Next week, thousands of protestors from Seattle and beyond plan to converge at terminal 5 and Harbor Island to non-violently resist the progress of Shell’s Arctic drilling rigs and support vessels.  On May 16 a family-friendly Paddle in Seattle will rally people on water and land to protest their presence.  Then  May 18,  activists plan direct action on land. Read more about “Festival of Resistance” at Shellno.org.

“We are going to stand up.” Lukins said. “Until Barak Obama has to make a choice – arrest an entire movement for standing in defense of our own environment and in defense of the treaty rights of indigenous people, or end arctic drilling!”

DIRECTIONS: The Tripod is on 16th Ave Southwest on Harbor Island, just north of the corner of 16th Ave SW and Lander St. Turn north onto 16th Ave SW off of Spokane St and drive north until lander street, the protest will be on your right.

Posted by Earth First!, Tuesday, May 12th, 2015

http://earthfirstjournal.org/newswire/2015/05/12/activists-use-tripod-to-block-shells-seattle-operations/

Following New Rules, Groups Say Only ‘Safe’ Arctic Drilling Is ‘No Drilling’

Greenpeace protests Shell's drilling in the Arctic. (Photo: Greenpeace Switzerland/cc/flickr)

Greenpeace protests Shell’s drilling in the Arctic. (Photo: Greenpeace Switzerland/cc/flickr)

by Lauren McCauley

‘There is no such thing as safe or responsible offshore drilling in the Arctic, and the federal government knows it,’ campaigners warn

Environmentalists are sounding the alarm after the Obama administration unveiled the first-ever guidelines for drilling in the Arctic.

Released by the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE) and the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) on Friday, the proposed guidelines are being touted as a protective measure to “ensure that future exploratory drilling activities on the U.S. Arctic Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) are done safely and responsibly, subject to strong and proven operational standards.”

However, as green groups were quick to note, the best way to prevent a catastrophic oil spill from threatening the dangerous and pristine waters of the Arctic is to issue an outright drilling ban in that region.

“There is no such thing as safe or responsible offshore drilling in the Arctic, and the federal government knows it,” said Friends of the Earth climate campaigner Marissa Knodel. According to the government’s own environmental analysis, one lease sale in the Chukchi sea poses a 75 percent chance of a large oil spill, with no effective method for cleaning up or containing it.

“Even with new standards the chances of an oil spill are high, as is the threat to our climate if we fail to heed scientists’ warnings to keep these dirty fuels in the ground,” Dan Ritzman, Alaska Program Director for Sierra Club’s Our Wild America campaign, said in a statementfollowing the announcement.

The proposed guidelines focus solely on offshore exploration drilling operations within the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas. They seek to codify specific requirements through all phases of the process, including mobilization, drilling, maritime transport and emergency response.

The Arctic-specific guidelines were issued in direct response to the grounding of Royal Dutch Shell’s Alaskan Arctic drilling rig, the Kulluk, in January 2013.

Despite having been forced to cancel its Arctic drilling operations the past two years because of related safety violations, Shell is planning to return to the Arctic this summer with plans to dig a series of exploratory wells and to deploy two rigs in the Chuckchi sea, the Guardian reports.

In an official statement announcing the proposed rules, BSEE and BOEM note that drilling in the Alaska OCS is an “integral part of the Nation’s ‘all-of-the-above’ domestic energy strategy.” And Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell commended the guidelines, saying: “The Arctic has substantial oil and gas potential, and the U.S. has a longstanding interest in the orderly development of these resources.”

Despite these assurances, environmental groups warn that such regulations only further entrench U.S. dependence on fossil fuels.

“This government sanction of ‘safe’ drilling will harm future generations by unleashing more of the dirty fossil fuels that are already warming Alaska twice as quickly as the rest of the nation,” FOE’s Knodel added.

Earlier this month, Greenpeace launched an online campaign calling on supporters to share their “worst joke” in a bid to show Shell that “Arctic drilling is no joke.”