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THE PITS
Greenpeace activists board coal ship off Australia reef
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) April 24, 2013


Greenpeace makes appeal to Arctic oil whistleblowers
London (AFP) April 24, 2013 - Environmental group Greenpeace launched a website on Wednesday to attract whistleblowers from the oil industry to reveal risks with drilling for oil and gas in the Arctic.

The site, www.arctictruth.org, is part of the group's bid to persuade governments to ban oil and gas exploration in the Arctic because of its fragile environment.

Greenpeace is urging oil company employees and subcontractors to provide information through the site if they believe it exposes safety risks that could be in the public interest.

"The public needs to know about the incredible risks these companies are taking each and every day in the fragile Arctic," said Greenpeace spokesman Ben Ayliffe.

Greenpeace said posters advertising the site would appear in the streets near the London offices of Anglo-Dutch oil giant Shell.

In February, Shell put its controversial drilling plans for the Alaskan Arctic on hold for the rest of 2013 after a series of problems with two drilling rigs.

Six activists from conservation group Greenpeace boarded a coal carrier on the edge of the Great Barrier Reef Wednesday, calling for an end to exports of the fuel.

The group, from five major coal exporting and consuming nations in Asia-Pacific that are being targeted by Greenpeace, sailed out to the MV Meister to stage a protest on the bow urging an end to the "Age of Coal".

"Australia's coal exports are the nation's greatest contribution to climate change and plans are under way to roughly double the volume of coal we export," Greenpeace said in a statement.

"Yet every tonne of coal that is exported will return to us as climate change: bushfires, heatwaves and drought."

Australia is among the world's worst per capita polluters due to its reliance on coal-fired power stations and its exports of the fuel to Asia.

The Greenpeace members, who hail from Australia, India, the United States, China and New Zealand, took a boat to the coal freighter from the Rainbow Warrior and climbed aboard with a ladder to unfurl a banner.

After boarding the Panama-flagged MV Meister -- which was loaded with coal in Queensland and is bound for South Korea -- just outside the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area, they vowed not to budge.

"We have no idea how it's going to play out at this stage," said protester Emma Giles from on board the Panama-flagged ship.

"Either the coastguard will come and get us, or we end up in Korea."

Australia's border police said they were alerted to the incident by maritime safety officials and had deployed a surveillance aircraft to investigate.

"Rescue Coordination Centre Australia received a call from the master of MV Meister who reported 21 crew on board and that all persons are safe and no acts of violence have occurred," a Customs spokeswoman told AFP.

"The master, however, expressed security concerns for his vessel and has contacted his company," she added.

"The six persons are currently still on board the MV Meister."

The reef's heritage status has come under scrutiny, with UNESCO last year warning it could be declared at risk if action was not taken to protect it from a gas and mining boom and increasing coastal development in the region.

Ports on the Barrier Reef coast currently export 156 million tonnes of coal per annum (mtpa) and there are plans to expand that to 953 mtpa within the next decade. By 2020 an estimated 7,000 ships will traverse the reef every year, up from 5,000 in 2010.

"In the clear absence of political leadership to address this problem, Greenpeace is stepping in to take immediate and peaceful action," the group said.

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Lincoln, Calif. (UPI) Apr 4, 2013
The governors of Oregon and Washington have asked for unprecedented "life-cycle impact" analysis of five planned export terminals and the cargo being transported through them before the Army Corps of Engineers issue permits. In particular, the governors have asked that the emissions effects of burning coal outside the United States be evaluated for global climate change impacts. The exp ... read more


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