Extinction Rebellion Ōtautahi Boards OMV Rig In Cook Strait
Tuesday, March 3: At 10.30am today
Extinction Rebellion Ōtautahi intercepted OMV’s oil rig
at sea as it travelled past the Marlborough
Sounds.
Siana Fitzjohn and Nick Hanafin
boarded the 100 metre high rig and are now secured to the
side of the rig.
The OMV rig is in transit
from the Great South Basin, where it was doing exploratory
drilling for deep sea oil. It’s due to arrive in Taranaki
late this evening.
From on board the rig, the COSL
Prospector, Fitzjohn says the pair want to expose OMV’s
climate destroying operations in New
Zealand.
“We’ve shown that a bunch of
ordinary Kiwis can stand up to one of the biggest oil
companies in the world. I feel really proud of all of us for
exposing OMV’s climate destroying agenda and showing them
that we’ll be confronting them every step of the way,”
she says.
A team from Extinction Rebellion
(XR) Ōtautahi, XR Ōtepoti, XR Nelson, Oil Free Otago, and
School Strike for Climate were on a yacht sailing alongside
the oil rig to protest and expose OMV’s offshore
operations. The group insists that there can be no more
drilling for fossil fuels in a climate emergency. School
students, Molly Smeele (SS4C) and James Dufty (SS4C and XR)
joined the voyage to call for climate justice and show the
world what OMV are doing. They both recently appealed to the
public for boats to protest oil at sea.
“Without
opposition, companies like OMV will keep driving the earth
towards mass extinction. They’re literally gambling
everyone and everything we love.” Says Smeele, 15, from
Christchurch Girls’ High school.
“It’s our
first at-sea climate protest, so it’s kind of a big
adventure. I’m sure a few classes were missed during the
anti-nuclear movement so we hope our schools will understand
how important this is.”
The oil rig is due
to continue drilling for new gas reserves off the coast of
Taranaki. The group anticipate that the rig will maintain
its course with the climbers on board. However it is
unlikely that OMV will commence commercial drilling until
the pair are removed.
“People are losing their
homes and loved ones in the climate crisis. If OMV wants to
knowingly disrupt the Earth’s climate with oil and gas
drilling, then getting on their rig to disrupt them is
necessary, ” says Nick Hanafin, the other climber on board
OMV’s oil rig.
“We’re not sure how long
we’ll be here for, but we plan to continue for as long as
possible.”