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- From: Greenpeace via Jym Dyer <jym@mica.berkeley.edu>
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive,alt.activism,talk.environment
- Subject: NEWS: Sumatran Supertanker Collision Was "Inevitable"
- Followup-To: talk.environment
- Date: 25 Jan 1993 01:47:00 GMT
- Organization: The Naughty Peahen Party Line
- Lines: 54
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Message-ID: <Greenpeace.24Jan1993.1746@naughty-peahen>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: remarque.berkeley.edu
- Keywords: environment press
-
- [Greenpeace Press Release from Environet -- Redistribute Freely]
-
- SUMATRA SUPERTANKER COLLISION INEVITABLE - GREENPEACE
-
- London -- 21 January 1993 (GP) -- The latest in the recent
- series of oil tanker disasters -- a collision between two
- supertankers in the Malacca Strait off Sumatra -- is an
- inevitable result of the world's reliance on oil, Greenpeace
- said today.
-
- The Maersk Navigator collided early today with the Sanko Honor
- in one of the world's busiest shipping lanes. The Maersk
- Navigator's 78 million gallons of oil had the potential to be
- the biggest tanker spill in history, said Dr Jeremy Leggett of
- Greenpeace International.
-
- The past two months have seen at least three oil spills -- in
- Spain (Aegean Sea: 18 million gallons), the UK (Braer: 26
- million gallons) and another last week in the Gulf of Finland.
- Today's disaster is the second in four months in the Malacca
- Strait. Dr Leggett said the only way of avoiding disasters such
- as these was to move away from a reliance on oil altogether, he
- said.
-
- "This is possible. A report commissioned by Greenpeace,
- released this week, shows that the world can do without oil,
- that the technical options are already available, and that such
- a transition would not bankrupt economies (1)," he said.
-
- The tanker, still on fire, is reportedly drifting towards the
- Great Nicobar Island, 50 nautical miles off the Aceh Province in
- Northern Sumatra. Its owners, Danish company A P Moller, report
- that oil is now spilling into the sea.
-
- The area is home to mangrove forests, huge breeding grounds for
- fisheries and shrimp.
-
- Dr Leggett noted that the tanker may be still at sea, but that
- oil could travel a great distance.
-
- The world's biggest oil disaster, a blowout at the Ixtoc I Well
- in the Gulf of Mexico in 1979, spilled 140 million gallons.
- Three million gallons from that spill reached the coast of
- Texas, 1000 kms away.
-
- "The oil industry says it is ready for spills, for such
- disasters. But every time one happens, they are not ready. Oil
- spills will always happen - with 500 million barrels (21 billion
- gallons) being transported around our seas at any one time. We
- need to stop this at its source," he said.
-
- Notes:
-
- (1) "Energy Without Oil", Greenpeace International, January 1993
-