Greenpeace welcomes Goff’s long-awaited insight on deep sea oil
Auckland, 12 October 2011 - Greenpeace today welcomed Labour leader Phil Goff’s acknowledgement that there is a direct
link between the Rena oil spill, and plans to open New Zealand up to deep sea oil exploration.
Speaking on TV3’s Firstline programme this morning, Mr Goff said that: “I think the opposition [to deep sea oil
drilling] will grow if we can’t cope with one ship that grounds offshore only a matter of kilometres from a major port,
and it takes us so long to respond to that, what chance would we have of a failed oil well, that was pouring, you know,
hundreds of thousands of tonnes of oil into the sea?”.
Greenpeace NZ Climate Campaigner Steve Abel says in response: “Labour is recognising the obvious - that the national
mood is swinging against deep sea oil drilling."
He continues: “The Rena disaster is unfolding as a terrible reminder of the devastating impact that oil spills can have
on our wildlife, coastlines and livelihoods.
“People are now looking at the Government’s proposals for deep sea oil drilling with fresh eyes. They can see the
obvious – that if we can’t deal with a leak of thousands of litres in 100 metres of water just offshore how could we
possibly hope to deal with a leak of millions of litres at depths of thousands of metres.”
“The cost to our economy and livelihoods could amount to billions if a major oil spill struck our precious coastal
waters and it’s simply not worth the risk," Abel adds.
In 2010, BP’s Deepwater Horizon deep sea oil well disgorged 780 million litres of oil into the Gulf of Mexico over a
period of three months, devastating both wildlife and local fishing and tourism. A major reason it took so long to stop
the leak was the extreme depths the oil companies were drilling in.
The New Zealand Government has already issued permits for exploratory drilling on the East Coast of both the North and
South Islands, at depths even greater than the Deepwater Horizon, and is planning to further auction off the rights to
drill for deep sea oil off more of the country’s spectacular coastlines.
Deep sea drilling risks any part of our country with a Bay of Plenty type disaster but on a much greater scale.*
Abel concludes: “Two years ago we saw New Zealanders stand up to see off plans to open our best conservation land for
mining and now, once again we need to stand up and stop deep sea oil exploration because our oceans and our coastlines
are too valuable to gamble for oil."
Greenpeace has been dealing with a surge of public interest following the Rena spill. Thousands of New Zealanders signed
onto Greenpeace’s ‘No New Oil’ petition over the last week, with the total number of signatories now standing at almost
90,000.
When it hit the reef near Tauranga the Rena was carrying two million litres of heavy fuel oil. This infographic shows
how much that is in comparison to what is carried by an oil tanker or what would be leaked in a Deepwater Horizon type
spill.
ENDS