Today we confront Cairn in court

Posted by nick_gp - 6 June 2011 at 1:08pm - Comments
Our activists arrested after boarding Cairn's arctic rig
All rights reserved. Credit: © Steve Morgan / Greenpeace
Our activists arrested after boarding Cairn's arctic rig

Today our mission to protect the Arctic moves from the frozen seas of Greenland into the courts of Amsterdam and Greenland.

After our first occupation of its oil rig at the beginning of last week Cairn filed for an injunction with the courts in Amsterdam. The injunction is aimed at preventing us taking any further action to stop drilling in the Arctic. It would mean we’d be fined two million euros for every day any future protest stops drilling on the company’s Arctic oil rigs.

We responded first with another occupation of the rig in which a delegation of 18 activists boarded the Leiv Eiriksson demanding to see Cairn’s elusive oil spill response plan. Drilling was stopped again for another ten hours but the plan was kept hidden.

Today we stepped up the campaign by lodging an official complaint with the Greenlandic parliament, calling for the release of the oil spill response plan.

Our lawyers have submitted an official complaint to the ombudsman of the Greenland parliament. The complaint details how Cairn has denied public access to a series of crucial documents – including Cairn’s oil spill response plan; papers detailing how Cairn will pay for a clean up operation if a spill occurs; and a series of technical reports that would shed light on the risky nature of Arctic oil drilling.

This level of secrecy is not normal and can mean only one thing – they have something to hide.

Cairn’s lawyers are threatening us with millions of euros in fines, which shows just how desperate they are to keep the oil spill response plan secret. But, Cairn can hire all the expensive lawyers they like: we won’t stop demanding what the public has a right to see. And along with Greenpeace, almost 45,000 people have sent emails to Cairn asking to see the response plan.

It should not be kept hidden any longer and when it is finally published we’ll see in black and white what the experts have been saying for months, that Cairn wouldn’t be able to clean up an Arctic oil spill. That should worry Cairn’s investors as much as it does those of us who want to see this beautiful fragile environment protected.

Find out more about Greenpeace's mission to protect the Arctic:

Google translate will translate all these documents

Environmental Impact Assessment:
http://dk.nanoq.gl/Emner/Landsstyre/Departementer/Råstofdirektoratet/Høringer/ ~ / media/C8B9D2140EC840F981C996B557DA5FA7.ashx

Drilling License:
http://dk.nanoq.gl/Emner/Landsstyre/Departementer/R%C3%A5stofdirektorate...
(See Page 55 for Oil Spill response - the plan that is not meant to exist).

Press Release: Greenland will benefit economically by 300Bn:
http://dk.nanoq.gl/Emner/Landsstyre/Departementer/R%C3%A5stofdirektorate...

Greenpeace's lies about the Redlist chemicals:
http://dk.nanoq.gl/Emner/Landsstyre/Departementer/R%C3%A5stofdirektorate...

Greenpeace's lies about no consultation:
http://dk.nanoq.gl/Emner/Landsstyre/Departementer/R%C3%A5stofdirektorate...

"There has been extensive consultation prior to consideration of drilling applications in Greenland Government. All key stakeholders in the Greenlandic society has been invited to participate in the process. Moreover, the material has been through a public hearing at Self Government consultation portal. Further, held a large number of stakeholder meetings and public meetings along the coast on the plans by oil exploration wells in offshore western Greenland in 2011. "

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