Shell capital city operations shut down over Arctic drilling

Last edited 16 July 2012 at 1:55pm

Greenpeace to broadcast live direct action against oil giant in 12 hour TV special

16 July, 2012

Greenpeace campaigners are today attempting to shut down every Shell petrol station in the capital cities of London and Edinburgh just as the oil company is about to drill in the Arctic for the very first time. 

The environmental group, who recently launched a star-studded campaign to save the Arctic, intend to close over 100 stations in London, and over a dozen in Edinburgh, by using the emergency shut-off switch, which stops petrol going to the pumps, and removing the fuse so it can’t immediately be turned back on again. 

The first stations in the two capitals have already been shut, and the campaigners have said that they will spend the rest of the day, until this evening, touring the two cities using a combination of low-emission cars, bikes and public transport and shutting off the petrol supply to the pumps. 

Greenpeace are televising today’s activities in a 12 hour live online television special, starting at 8am. The show will be anchored from purpose-built studios in Greenpeace’s London base, and will be going live throughout the day to campaigners as they shut down Shell’s capital city operations. To see the show, go to www.greenpeace.org.uk

Shell is due to begin drilling at two offshore sites in the Alaskan Arctic in the coming weeks, amid fears that an Arctic oil rush will be sparked and the push to carve up the region will accelerate. Russian oil giant Gazprom is also venturing into the Arctic this year. 

Just yesterday, it was revealed that one of Shell’s two drilling ships ran aground in an Alaskan harbour as the fleet was making final preparations to drill for oil in the Arctic. 

At the Shell garage on Queenstown Road, next to London’s Battersea Park, volunteers have scaled the roof and are operating a life-sized super-realistic polar bear puppet. On Dalry Road in Edinburgh, campaigners have also scaled the garage roof. 

***Greenpeace campaigners are available for interview at the above two Shell petrol stations***** 

Greenpeace campaigner Sara Ayech, who is at the Shell petrol station in Battersea, said: 

“The oil giant Shell is preparing, for the first time, to unleash a drilling fleet of huge vessels upon the fragile and beautiful Arctic, home of the polar bears. 

“It’s time to draw a line in the ice and tell Shell to stop. That’s why today we’re going to shut down all of Shell’s petrol stations in the capital cities of London and Edinburgh. We’ve got dozens of people who will hit over 100 Shell garages throughout the day and we’ll be televising it live on a special dedicated online TV channel. 

“An oil spill in the Arctic would be catastrophic for wildlife such as walruses and whales, and Shell knows full well that it would be impossible to clean up after such devastation. The Arctic must be saved, and made a global sanctuary where oil drilling is banned.” 

Last month, stars from the worlds of music, film, TV and business launched a campaign to save the Arctic. 

Sir Paul McCartney, Penelope Cruz, Robert Redford, One Direction, Alexandra Burke, Jarvis Cocker and Sir Richard Branson are among dozens of famous names who joined forces with Greenpeace to demand that oil drilling and unsustainable fishing are banned in Arctic waters. 

They were among the first one hundred names to be written on an Arctic Scroll, which has now been signed by over 850,000 people. Anybody in the world can add their name to the Arctic Scroll by visiting www.SaveTheArctic.org

ENDS 

Contacts: 

In London: Graham Thompson on 07551 302818

In Edinburgh: Richard George on 07551 303821

Greenpeace UK press office: 020 7865 8255

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