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Shell, govt spin machine keeps lid on worst UK oil spill for decade

The worst spill in British waters and began last Wednesday! Royal Dutch Shell says there are now only two barrels of oil a day leaking from one of its North Sea rigs. But with an estimated two hundred tons having leaked into the water over 6 days, environmentalists say the clean-up could take some time. It's said to be the worst spill in British waters in more than a decade, and began last Wednesday. But it was only acknowledged by Shell two days later. Adam Ramsay from the UK-based People and Planet student organisation, thinks Shell and the government have been complicit in oil industry cover-ups for ages.

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Shell receives approval to start removing oil and gas from pipeline leaking in North Sea

A subsea leak had spilled about 1,500 barrels of oil Shell received approval to start removing residual oil and gas from a pipeline that leaked from the Gannet platform in the North Sea, London announced.Shell said last week that divers had stopped flow of oil from its Gannet platform in the North Sea. A subsea leak had spilled about 1,500 barrels of oil when it was first reported Aug. 10 but the escaping amount had slowed to less than one barrel per day.Hugh Shaw, the British secretary of state's representative for maritime salvage and intervention, said Shell was planning to secure the subsea pipeline to the ocean floor to protect it from the threat of storm of tidal damage."Planning is now under way for the safe and timely removal of the gas and oil remaining in the damaged pipeline," he said in a statement.None of the oil from the Gannet platform had reached shore. Most of the initial sheen was dispersed naturally.Shell was criticized for taking two days before issuing public statements about the spill. Shaw said he didn't know about the spill until Aug. 12.Source: UPI

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Oil spill probe launched as Shell plugs North Sea leak

According to Shell yhe oil sheen on the surface has finally disappeared The oil sheen on the surface of the North Sea that followed the UK's worst oil spill for a decade has finally disappeared, according to Shell, after the company managed to plug its leaking pipeline on Friday.Government officials are now launching an investigation into the leak as part of an effort to discover how the spill came about and how to prevent such damage recurring.However, the successful plugging of both the primary and secondary leaks at the Gannet Alpha platform, 180km east of Aberdeen, came as a Scottish newspaper revealed Shell's poor safety record in the region.An investigation by the Sunday Herald found that Shell had been officially censured 25 times in the past six years for breaking safety rules, giving it one of the worst safety records of any major oil company in the UK.Infringements by Shell include repeatedly failing to maintain pipelines - similar to the one that gave rise to the Gannet leak - as well as for failing to report a dangerous incident, and failing to protect workers from hazardous chemicals.The revelations cited come from records held by the government's health and safety executive ...

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North Sea Oil Spill: Shell says it has closed leaking valve

Being the worst North Sea oil spill in more than a decade Royal Dutch Shell PLC said Friday it has closed a valve from which oil was spilling into the North Sea.The company said this was a "key step" in stopping the leak at its Gannet Alpha platform, the worst North Sea oil spill in more than a decade.Shell said it will now monitor the flowline to make sure the valve remains sealed.Glen Cayley, technical director of Shell's exploration and production activities in Europe, said divers sealed off the valve in a "careful and complex operation.""But we will be watching the line closely over the next 24 hours and beyond," he said."Our next task is to remove the residual oil from inside the depressurized flowline, and that will take time."About 1,300 barrels of oil has spewed into the sea since a pipeline was found to be leaking Aug. 12, the company said, although it claimed that after is shut the well, only one barrel a day had been leaking from the installation to control the build-up of pressure in the pipeline.The Maritime and Coastguard Agency said the spill, 110 miles (180 kilometers) east of Aberdeen, Scotland, has caused a sheen ...

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Shell trying to stop oil spill leak in North Sea

An operation is under way to stop the leak Royal Dutch Shell PLC said Thursday an operation is under way to stop the leak at its Gannet Alpha platform following the worst North Sea oil spill in more than a decade.About 1,300 barrels of oil has spewed into the sea since a pipeline at Shell's Gannet Alpha platform was found to be leaking Aug. 12, the company said, though it claims that after shutting the well, only one barrel a day is leaking from the installation to control the build up of pressure in the pipeline.The pipeline at the Gannet Alpha platform, around 110 miles (180 kilometers) east of Aberdeen, Scotland, still contains up to 660 tons, or 4,620 barrels, of crude oil and needs to be stabilized before it can be shut down.In the first phase of the operation to shut down the leak, engineers have lowered five giant concrete "blankets" on to a stretch of pipeline to place it back on the seabed after it lifted 4 feet (1.2 meters) off the sea floor.Work is ongoing to lay concrete blankets to secure the pipeline, Shell spokesman Steve Harris said."First, we have to make a risk assessment ... to ...

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North Sea oil spill: polluters should pay but can we make them?

Shell's oil spill in the North Sea this week is the worst in a decade Shell's oil spill in the North Sea this week is the worst in a decade, but compensation for any environmental damage could be in short supply says Susie Wilks from ClientEarth.What is the difference between a sea bird dying because its feathers are coated in crude oil, and a sea bird starving to death because its food source has been destroyed by chemical dispersants used to break up an oil slick? To the bird, not a lot. To a conservation organisation or local authority trying to recover the costs of restoring ecosystems and animal populations, the difference could be everything.In September last year, the Ecologist published an article on the toxic effects of dispersants used to tackle the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. The article recounted the chain of events which led to the decimation of bird populations after the Exxon Valdez spill of 1989 when dispersants killed native coastal vegetation. This was replaced by invasive plant species that couldn't withstand the tough Alaskan weather conditions and died, leaving sea birds to starve. It is a tragic example of what lawyers call 'indirect loss'.Liability for ...

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BPing the Arctic again — Fast-Tracking Shell’s Dangerous Drilling

Shell Oil's conditional permit to drill exploratory wells off Alaska should not have been granted One of the riskiest and most destructive extreme energy oil exploration projects on the planet is moving toward implementation without scientific understanding or technical preparedness -- Shell's oil drilling in the Arctic Ocean of Alaska.On August 4, the US Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement (BOEMRE) conditionally approved Shell's plan to drill up to four exploratory wells in the Beaufort Sea of Arctic Alaska starting July 2012. A Los Angeles Times editorial correctly opined, "Shell Oil's conditional permit to drill exploratory wells off Alaska should not have been granted. The hazards of drilling in such waters are in some ways worse than operating thousands of feet underwater. ... It's too early for any approval, conditional or otherwise." Shell still needs several more permits including an air quality permit from the Environmental Protection Agency before they can do any drilling in the Arctic seabed. We must stop it.Soon I'll tell you how BOEMRE is ignoring science to fast-track Shell's dangerous drilling plan, but first here is a brief history of how we got here.During the Bush administration Shell bought leases in both the Beaufort ...

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Shell locates secondary oil leak beneath an offshore platform in the North Sea

216 tonnes of oil are estimated to have spilled fromthe platform Shell said on Tuesday it is working to stop a secondary flow of oil spilling into the North Sea from beneath an offshore platform.An initial leak was brought "under control" last week but work is continuing on a smaller leak from the same source in an area surrounded by marine growth.About 216 tonnes of oil, equal to 1,300 barrels, were estimated to have spilled from the Gannet Alpha platform, 112 miles east of Aberdeen, by Monday.The amount is far greater than the annual totals for the North Sea over the past decade, according to figures from the Department of Energy and Climate Change.The total amount of oil discharged into the North Sea in 2009 was 50.93 tonnes.Environmental groups have heavily criticised the operator for the way it has handled the leak, which was first detected on Wednesday. Shell said the current rate of leakage is less than five barrels a day.A Shell spokeswoman said: "The leak source remains the same. The initial release path was stopped on Thursday, however the oil found a second pathway to the sea."Since then we have been working to find the source of the ...

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Shell receives approval to drill at Gulf of Mexico Europa field

The permit will allow Shell to return all of its five contracted drilling rigs to work Royal Dutch Shell (RDSA) said Thursday it has received approval from federal regulators to drill a new well at its Gulf of Mexico Europa field.The permit will allow Shell, one of the largest producers in the Gulf, to return all of its five contracted drilling rigs to work, a company spokeswoman wrote in an email.Shell and other companies slowed the pace of drilling in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico after the federal government imposed a nine-month drilling moratorium in the area following last year's BP PLC's (BP) Deepwater Horizonoil spill. The government resumed issuing permits in late February.The approval Shell received Thursday came from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement for a new well at Europa, a subsea field in nearly 4,000 feet of water. Production from Europa is tied to Shell's Mars tension-leg platform.The bureau oversees oil and gas drilling in federal waters.Source: Dow Jones Newswires

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Don’t Allow Shell Oil to Destroy America’s Arctic

An open letter to Michael Bromwich - Director of BOEMRE An Open Letter to Michael Bromwich, Director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and EnforcementRe: Shell's push to drill in the ArcticDear Director Bromwich:You recently said that you were studying how to treat " operators who may have behaved badly in the past and whether they should be allowed to continue operating in the future." I'm writing to tell you about one company that has not only been "behaving badly" in the past but plans to continue doing so into the future. Shell Oil is pushing to drill in America's Arctic Ocean - an area pristine and untouched, home to some of our nation's most beloved species of wildlife and relied upon for thousands of years by local indigenous peoples -with no effective way to clean up an oil spill in the Arctic's ice-covered, remote and extreme conditions.In the wake of the largest environmental disaster in our nation's history - one year later, 491 miles of Gulf coastline remain contaminated by oil - Shell should not be allowed to destroy America's one and only Arctic.Shell is pushing an aggressive plan to drill 10 wells in the Arctic's Chukchi ...

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