Also by ben

Why Shell’s spill response plan is a dog's breakfast

Posted by ben - 21 February 2012 at 6:53pm - Comments

While we’re Tweeting from the rooftop at London's National Gallery (the banner is now down and Paula Bear is having a wander), we thought you might like to find out a bit more about Shell’s spill response plan – the document which apparently explains what the company will do to block a ruptured well and save this unique Arctic region from catastrophe. 

Arctic sea ice decline breaking records over 1,000 years old

Posted by ben - 25 November 2011 at 7:00am - Comments
Da Vinci's Vitruvian Man Recreated on Arctic Sea Ice
All rights reserved. Credit: Greenpeace / Nick Cobbing
Da Vinci's Vitruvian Man Recreated on Arctic Sea Ice

According to a new paper in Nature, sea ice in the Arctic is now declining at a pace and scale not seen for over a thousand years. It estimates that after decades of decline, the amount of ice locked away in the High North is now 2 million km2 smaller than it was at the end of the 20th Century and that ice-free summers at the Pole are likely sooner rather than later.

The Arctic 20 on trial

Posted by ben - 16 September 2011 at 9:01am - Comments
The 18 activists in jail for boarding Cairn's rig to demand the spill response p
All rights reserved. Credit: Greenpeace
18 of the 20 activists facing trial

Early one June morning this year, along with 19 fellow activists I jumped off a Greenpeace inflatable and climbed up the vertical wall of the leg of a giant oil rig, the Leiv Eiriksson, which was drilling 
nearly 200km off the coast of Greenland in the freezing waters of the 
Davis Strait.

Cairn fails to find Arctic oil, again

Posted by ben - 13 September 2011 at 11:48am - Comments
Melting summer sea ice in the Arctic
All rights reserved. Credit: Greenpeace / Nick Cobbing
Melting summer sea ice in the Arctic

This month sees the Arctic sea ice minimum, a litmus test for the health of the global climate, with indications suggesting the extent in 2011 could be the lowest level ever.

Questions to ask about Shell's Arctic oil drilling plans

Posted by ben - 16 August 2011 at 2:42pm - Comments
North Sea drilling platform Neddrill 7, co-chartered by Shell and Esso (1991)
All rights reserved. Credit: Greenpeace / Klaus Radetzki
Shell is planning to drill for oil in the Arctic but does it have all the answers?

What does the ongoing North Sea oil spill say about Shell's plans to open up the Arctic, where an accident would be all but impossible to clean up? Especially now the existence of a suspected second leak at its Gannett Alpha platform has been revealed?

Risky business in the far north

Posted by ben - 3 August 2011 at 4:01pm - Comments
Melting icebergs in the path of rigs in the Arctic, the latest oil frontier
All rights reserved. Credit: Will Rose / Greenpeace
Melting icebergs in the path of rigs in the Arctic, the latest oil frontier

Today Cairn Energy published the latest operational update for its risky oil drilling off Greenland and the news, at least for the wildcat oil company, was far from good.

For the second year in succession Cairn, has announced it has found no oil in the Arctic.

Cairn wields a legal hammer to stop us protecting the Arctic

Posted by ben - 2 June 2011 at 6:25pm - Comments
The navy seized the pod and our brave activists. Now Cairn is wielding a legal h
All rights reserved. Credit: Steve Morgan / Greenpeace
The navy seized the pod and our brave activists. Now Cairn is wielding a legal hammer.

Last night, Hannah and Luke, our two brave climbers, were removed from the Arctic survival pod that had been suspended from the underside of the 53,000 tonne Leiv Eiriksson oil rig, here off the coast of Greenland, for the last 100-odd hours. By hanging near the "moon pool" where the rig's drill-bit would normally be sunk, they stopped it drilling for over four days.

Arctic: our modern-day Thule needs protecting

Posted by ben - 25 May 2011 at 1:22pm - Comments
The Arctic is under threat from oil drillers
All rights reserved. Credit: Will Rose / Greenpeace
The Arctic is under threat from oil drillers

Medieval geographers referred to very distant places as Ultima Thule, beyond the "borders of the known world", but even before that, as far back the classical period, authors like Strabo and Pliny talked of a mysterious, semi-legendary place, found at the end of the world, called Thule.

The drills are heading into the Arctic ice

Posted by ben - 11 May 2011 at 4:01pm - Comments
Cairn's tugs drag icebergs out the way of its Arctic oil drilling rig
All rights reserved. Credit: Will Rose / Greenpeace
Cairn's tugs drag icebergs out the way of its Arctic oil drilling rig

Yesterday, the UK’s wildest wildcat oil company, Cairn Energy, received the news it has been waiting for: it got permission from the Greenland authorities to start its 2011 Arctic drilling programme.

BP's 'sadly naive' attitude

Posted by ben - 2 February 2011 at 11:22am - Comments
BP has learned little from its experience in the Gulf of Mexico
All rights reserved. Credit: Laurent Hunziker / Greenpeace
BP has learned little from its experience in the Gulf of Mexico

BP’s results for the last quarter of 2010 were published yesterday, with the firm admitting that the total cost of the Deepwater Horizon spill will be about £26bn. This off the back of making a total loss of £3.1bn for last year, despite final quarter profits of £2.9bn (made mainly because of the high oil price).

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