Oil Free Seas Flotilla Occupying Anadarko Oil Drill Site
Oil Free Seas Flotilla Occupying Anadarko Oil Drill
Site
Six boats are currently occupying the
sea above the site where oil giant Anadarko intends to start
drilling in the coming days.
The drill site is over
100 nautical miles off the west coast of New Zealand, and in
waters around a kilometer and a half deep.
The six
boats are part of the Oil Free Seas Flotilla which was
cheered off by hundreds of New Zealanders from various ports
earlier this week.
They are now waiting for the
Noble Bob Douglas drilling ship, which has not yet been
tested to drill at these depths.
Bunny McDiarmid,
the executive director of Greenpeace, is onboard one of the
boats. She said:
“We’re here to protect our
seas, our beaches and our future prosperity. And we’re
doing that by sitting right here, on the very spot that
Anadarko want to drill for oil using their untested drilling
ship.
“An oil spill would devastate our beaches
and our waters. But this government’s obsession with
polluting, outdated forms of energy will drill through our
cutting edge, clean technologies, that will power not just
our homes and our cars, but our economy
too.
“The National government may have given up
on our kiwi know-how and innovation, but we have not.
That’s why we’re here, right now, at this crucial moment
for New Zealand. To protect our seas, our beaches, and also
our economy, and our children’s
prosperity.”
Also onboard is Jeanette Fitzsimons,
who said:
"I am doing this on behalf of my
grandchildren and everyone's grandchildren. They have a
right to a decent world with clean seas and a stable
climate. Anadarko is threatening that right. We know there
are clean energy alternatives that can replace fossil fuels.
It's time we invested in those."
The Oil Free Seas
Flotilla is a loose association of individuals and boat
owners who oppose deep-sea drilling and the new legislation
that takes away New Zealander’s long-standing right to
peacefully protest at sea. One of the boats taking part, the
Vega, also sailed against French nuclear tests in the
Pacific.
Earlier this year, the Government
announced a controversial new law to ban aspects of
protesting at sea, known as the ‘Anadarko
Amendment’.
ENDS