Greenpeace occupies vessel in call for Shell to stop drilling

AFP
01 Feb 2023 04:07pm
Activists from environmental group Greenpeace project a slideshow on the Berlaymont building, to urge EU leaders to adopt a strong Global Ocean Treaty, during a protest action at the European Commission headquarters in Brussels on Jan 23. Greenpeace activists yesterday boarded a vessel contracted to Shell as it sailed in the Atlantic Ocean, demanding that the Anglo-Dutch oil giant "stop drilling and start paying". Four Greenpeace International activists from Argentina, Turkey, the UK and the US boarded the White Marlin vessel just north of the Canary Islands, the group said in a statement. - AFP
Activists from environmental group Greenpeace project a slideshow on the Berlaymont building, to urge EU leaders to adopt a strong Global Ocean Treaty, during a protest action at the European Commission headquarters in Brussels on Jan 23. Greenpeace activists yesterday boarded a vessel contracted to Shell as it sailed in the Atlantic Ocean, demanding that the Anglo-Dutch oil giant "stop drilling and start paying". Four Greenpeace International activists from Argentina, Turkey, the UK and the US boarded the White Marlin vessel just north of the Canary Islands, the group said in a statement. - AFP
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LONDON - Activists from environmental group Greenpeace on Tuesday boarded a vessel contracted to Shell as it sailed in the Atlantic Ocean, demanding that the Anglo-Dutch oil giant "stop drilling and start paying".

Four Greenpeace International activists from Argentina, Turkey, the UK and the US boarded the White Marlin vessel just north of the Canary Islands, said the group.

The vessel is taking an oil and gas platform to the Penguins field, close to the Scottish Shetland Islands in the North Sea.

"The peaceful protest aims to highlight the worldwide climate devastation caused by Shell and the wider fossil fuel industry, who haven't paid a penny towards the loss and damage they've caused," said the group.

The activists boarded the vessel by rope at 0800 GMT on Tuesday, having approached it in three boats launched from Greenpeace's Arctic Sunrise ship.

They remain on board and "are now occupying the ship's cargo, a Shell oil and gas platform" with enough supplies to last days, said Greenpeace.

Yeb Sano, executive director of Greenpeace Southeast Asia, said: "Shell must stop drilling and start paying.

"We're taking action today because when Shell extracts fossil fuels it causes a ripple of death, destruction and displacement around the world, having the worst impact on people who are least to blame for the climate crisis.

"We won't stop until we get climate justice. We will make polluters pay," he added. - AFP
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