Greenpeace Activists Removed from Rig

June 14, 2019

Two Greenpeace activists who were occupying an oil rig have been removed from the structure and arrested.

Officers boarded the Transocean rig in the Cromarty Firth, which was contracted by BP for drilling operations in the UK North Sea, at around 2pm on Thursday and arrested two environmental campaigner men, aged 40 and 50, ending a five-day protest.

The action is part of the group’s efforts to stop BP’s drilling plans offshore Scotland. The rig had been due to leave from near Invergordon, heading for the Vorlich oil field east of Aberdeen. Police said nine people in total had been arrested in connection with the demonstration.

On the 5th day of the standoff between Greenpeace and BP, rig workers have informed the activist that the rig will be lowered 20 metres into the sea to allow the police access by boat. One Greenpeace activist is now in a portaledge attached to the anchor chain in an attempt to thwart the removal efforts.

The move comes following an injunction issued to Greenpeace in response to the occupation. The oil rig was due to head to Vorlich field on Sunday where BP hopes to access 30 million barrels of oil.

Greenpeace is demanding that BP immediately end drilling new wells and switch to only investing in renewable energy. If BP does not do that, Greenpeace say, it should wind down its operations, return cash to investors and go out of business.

Rosie Rogers, Senior Climate Campaigner at Greenpeace UK, said: “We are determined to resist removal as long as BP remains determined to drill for oil. BP’s plans are completely and unacceptably at odds with the climate emergency we are facing. If they put half as much effort into investing in renewables as they appear to be putting into removing us from their rig, the world would be looking like a much better place right now.”

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