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New EU deep-water oil rules advance
by Staff Writers
Strasbourg, France (UPI) Sep 21, 2012

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

A key European Parliament committee has approved new rules for deep-water oil drilling that tighten environmental liability requirements on energy companies.

Energy firms wanting to drill in deep waters within the European Union's economic zone would have to show they are financially able to cover 100 percent of the environmental cleanup costs of a major oil spill under a measure approved Wednesday in Strasbourg, France.

The European Parliament environment committee voted 55-10 to accept the measure, which is backed by EU Energy Commissioner Guenther Oettinger but opposed by energy companies and some member nations as a costly new burden.

The bill goes on to the energy committee where it is set for a vote next month.

Among its many other provisions cracking down on drilling in the wake of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, the legislation demands energy firms have "adequate financial security" enabling them to pay for "full cleanup or compensation" for any environmental damage from oil spills.

The costs of the Deepwater Horizon disaster have been estimated at $38 billion. Rig owner BP said in July it had set aside an additional $875 million to help pay for the accident.

"We urgently need a strong regulation to secure safety and environmental standards across all EU waters -- from the North Sea to the Mediterranean -- to avoid disasters such as the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and more recently the gas leak from the Elgin oil and gas platform in the North Sea," Lithuanian Member of European Parliament Justas Vincas Paleckis said.

Paleckis, a Socialists and Democrats Party MEP, said the European Union must spell out the financial responsibility of energy companies to pay for the damages caused by spills in deep-water areas.

"There must be a clear obligation for operators to put in place the financial guarantees necessary to cover the costs of cleaning up and compensation in the event of a major accident," he said. "Let's remember the key principle of EU environmental legislation: The polluter should pay."

Among its elements, the law would extend the purview of the European Union's mandate to more than 200 miles from the coast, supplanting current piecemeal regulations that cover wells only as far out as the continental shelf where member states have jurisdiction.

In a bid to regulate the newer phenomenon of deepwater oil rigs, the regulation would cover all EU marine waters, including its exclusive economic zone, which stretches up to about 230 miles from the coast.

In addition to financial liability, the measure would set minimum European standards for offshore oil and gas safety and would regulate licensing, emergency plans and decommissioning of platforms.

Another tightening would come in the area of company "transparency" in their drilling activities. The legislation mandates that before an EU member nation can issue a license, it must probe companies' prior involvement in incidents worldwide and effectiveness of their responses.

Before the measures become law, however, they must be approved by Council of Europe, where they face opposition from member countries, including Britain, The Guardian reported.

"We know that the commission is considering proposals which might result in a greater regulatory burden on the U.K. industry," the Department of Energy and Climate Change said in a statement last year.

"We will continue to work with the commission toward a pragmatic approach which does not reduce the standards of the very robust regulatory system which we already have here."

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Shell wants Greenpeace protest ban or hefty fine
The Hague (AFP) Sept 21, 2012 - Royal Dutch Shell counter-attacked against Greenpeace on Friday, asking a judge to ban the group protesting near any of its property, with a million-euro fine as the cost of flouting the ruling.

The oil multinational wants an order to ban "any Greenpeace protests in the Netherlands within 500 metres (yards) of its operations, including petrol stations or offices, or face a one million euro fine," the environmental lobby group said.

Greenpeace said the suit targeted its global campaign against drilling for oil in the Arctic and that Shell wanted a fine of an additional "100,000 euros for every day or part of a day that a violation of such order lasts."

It was unclear however whether the injunction sought by Shell related to Greenpeace's protests in the Netherlands alone or would extend to its actions worldwide.

"They are seeking to stop the global Greenpeace campaign against Arctic exploration," Greenpeace lawyer Jasper Teulings told AFP.

But Shell spokesman Wim van de Wiel declined to confirm this, saying "we have to wait until October 5" when the judge will hand down a finding.

Greenpeace has organised several protests against Shell's exploratory drilling in the Arctic, including last week using bicycle locks to shut down pumps at more than 60 filling stations in the Netherlands.

Shell said on Monday that it was delaying until next year exploratory drilling for oil in offshore Alaska after suffering damage to a dome used to contain any potential spills.

Shell's search for oil in the region is facing deep opposition from environmentalists, who worry that an oil spill could have devastating effects on the pristine Arctic environment.

"We have launched an urgent application in the Amsterdam District Court against Greenpeace to stop them from holding any protest actions at Shell's assets including filling stations, refineries and our head office in The Hague," Shell spokesman Van de Wiel earlier told AFP.

"We believe the protest action damaged small business owners and people who have really nothing to do with Shell's drilling operations in the Arctic."

Last week's protest shut down Shell pumps but not service station shops, according to Greenpeace. The protests led to 18 arrests and ended after firefighters cut through the bicycle locks.

The environmental group said that other companies' petrol stations were available near all the Shell stations affected by the protests.

"Greenpeace's freedom of expression is important, but we believe their actions are damaging people who have nothing to do with our operations," Van de Wiel said.

Greenpeace said that Shell was pursuing three suits against Greenpeace USA and 13 other environmental and Indigenous organisations in Alaska to try to stop future legal challenges against Shell's Arctic operating licences.

"All this is a thinly-veiled attempt to prevent public scrutiny of the true cost of its drilling campaign and its ability to deal with a disastrous oil spill," said Greenpeace lawyer Teulings.



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Tokyo (UPI) Sep 21, 2012
Canada is touting its potential to be a major supplier of liquefied natural gas to Asia. Five LNG projects to be developed on Canada's west coast could go online from 2014-19, Canadian Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver said in a speech this week at a LNG conference in Tokyo, Platts news service reports. Canadian LNG tankers could reach the Pacific Basin market in as few as 11 ... read more


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