From activists in the Kimberly of Northwest Australia
FIRST ATTEMPT TO PLUG OIL LEAK FAILS - ABC News
"The company responsible for an oil leak off the north-west coast of
Australia says the first attempt to plug the leak with mud and stop the flow of
oil has been unsuccessful.
It has been more than six weeks since oil
first started leaking from the West Atlas oil rig.
Operator PTTEP
Australasia has been trying to stop the leak by drilling a relief well for the
past three weeks."
For more see
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/10/06/2706299.htm?site=local PRESS RELEASE
OIL SPILL "LIKE A SCENE FROM A DISASTER MOVIE" -
Press Release
"Environs Kimberley Director Martin Pritchard flew over
the West Atlas oil spill over the weekend. The flight from Broome headed to the
oil spill before heading off 30km due east and turning around to refuel at
Truscott.
“Seeing it first hand was a real shock, it was like something
from a disaster movie. The rig was billowing smoke and there was a sheen of oil
from horizon to horizon. We followed the oil for 30km due east and all you
could see from the cockpit was oil covering the sea, when we turned around the
slick was heading in an easterly and northerly direction towards Indonesia”
Mr Pritchard said.
“What we realized when we got to the rig was that the
slick appeared to be heading in a southerly direction which is a change to the
north-easterly direction of the last three weeks.
This is a real worry
if it’s now heading for the Kimberley coast” said Mr Pritchard.
“We’re
very concerned that the Federal government is scaling back its efforts
particularly if the oil slick is now heading towards the Kimberley.
“We
are particularly concerned because from what we saw there is still a massive
amount of oil coming from the well and we are not at all confident in the
Federal Minister for Resources Martin Ferguson’s assessment that less oil is
coming out. The government have admitted they don’t know what the flow rate
is so how can they know less oil is coming out? The photos we have show a huge
slick coming from the well” said Mr Pritchard.
The Kimberley coast is
one of the world’s most intact large tropical marine ecosystems with a coral
reef province of global significance. The seas in the area are known as a
‘marine superhighway’ because of the amount of dolphins, whales, turtles,
seabirds and fish found there.
Environs Kimberley is calling for marine
sanctuaries to protect Kimberley marine areas from threats posed by the oil and
gas industry."
http://www.environskimberley.org.au/press/09_sep14_MR_Oil_spill_scene_from_disaster_movie.pdf
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