Big Oil Don't Surf: Paddle Out Protest Against Oil Drilling in Great Australian Bight

in #steempress5 years ago (edited)
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Damien Cole giving the finger to oil drilling company Equinor.

There is a humming on the water, a low buzz that sounds like bees. The thumping of boards begins to sound out like a drum across the ocean, and tens of hands begin to splash, picking it up in handfuls and throwing salty water skyward. It feels like a storm, or falling rain. I'm grinning.

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The collection of boards on the beach are fabulous enough in themselves - it's like a history lesson of surfing on this coast, with everything from locally shaped 1970's single fins to more modern boards, to beaten old things spray painted with political protest. It's special. It's bigger than us, but at the same time it IS us - we are a hive, working together to protect earth honey.

This is what people can do when we care enough.


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Last Sunday I joined a few hundred people on the Torquay foreshore for a paddle out to protest against oil drilling in the Great Australian Bight by Norwegian company Equinor. The chanting of 'No Way Equinor' filled the ocean - there were little kids and dogs on the front of mals and paddleboards, old men and young woman, friends and families. I saw people I grew up with on this coast I hadn't seen in years. The whole thing was run by Damien Cole, son of local shaper and surf legend Maurice Cole, the local independent candidate. You can see part of his plea here - everyone was in admiration of his passion and spirit on the day.

On Tuesday, Equinor released it's draft environment plan for an exploration off the South Australian coast. Whilst the company claims it can be done safely, the real cost could be catastrophic. If there is an oil spill - and remember it only takes one - all of southern Australia's coast, from Western Australia, through SA and Victoria, Bass Strait and north to NSW - could be affected, as the below image shows.

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The 'oil spills are incredibly rare' argument sits very uncomfortably with me. Nuclear disasters are rare too, but look what happened at Chernobyl and Fukishima. The risk is far too risky to contemplate. I don't think the benefits outweigh the risks, particularly in an age where we should be focussing on renewable resources such as solar and wind, rather than relying on old technologies.

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At the moment there are no heavy industries along that coast. The waters are currently pristine, rare for the Earth at all. Marine conservation biologist Rick Steiner writes:

A worst-case oil spill in the Bight would cause extensive lethal and sublethal impacts to hundreds of marine species, dozens of marine reserves, and many coastal wetlands. Such a spill could result in the mortality of hundreds of thousands of birds; thousands of marine mammals, potentially including endangered southern right whales, blue whales, killer whales, dolphins, endemic Australian sea lions, New Zealand fur seals; and hundreds of sea turtles. Pelagic eggs and larvae of valuable fish populations, such as sardine and anchovy, could be severely impacted. Hundreds of kilometres of shoreline could be oiled, causing extensive harm to intertidal and subtidal communities, including the productive nearshore kelp ecosystems of the Great Southern Reef. Ecological injury could persist for decades (as from the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska).
Even reading about it makes me feel quite ill. We know how industry can misrepresent itself for the sake of money, and we know how devastating an oil spill can be.

That's why we gathered on the beach at Torquay. This coast just means to much to us, and our children, to the whales, the dolphins, the orcas, and all the sea life that calls this place home. Including me.


Read more about it here - ethical company Patagonia is leading the way. And this video from Greenpeace sums it up here. You can donate to the Great Australian Bight Alliance here and most importantly, please, PLEASE PLEASE, add YOUR voice HERE.



Posted from my blog with SteemPress : http://www.riverflowings.com/?p=266


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Good job! Get those money grabbing polluters away from your lovely shores! Wrecking their own coast is bad enough, but going elsewhere to do the same is another level of low. Of course, the corporation doesn't care where it originally came from, and would just as readily pollute their fjords as your reefs. It's us people everywhere who have to stand up to these fake entities! Very well done.

Thanks. We are trying so hard! Of course, while there is still demand for oil, such as plastics (@mountainjewel!) they'll keep trying. So it's up to us to curb our use of oil as much as we can and support alternatives.

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How wonderful to have so many show up in protest!
It makes me feel sick too, to just think of the devastation one oil spill could have and how some company could be willing to risk so much, all for the sake of money and profits!
I added my statement to the Nopsema public consultation file.
Thanks for bringing this to our attention to help save this pristine marine wildernesses from such devastation.

Thank you so much for adding your statement. It makes writing the article worthwhile. One more statement can make a difference. Friend and I were saying that it would have been easy to stay home and do our own thing but then what if everyone did that question mark so everybody on the beach that day made a decision to stand United. Such a buzz and made me proud to be a human being.

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Isn't it wonderful when people stand up toether for causes they believe in - it does make you proud!

That we're still fighting against Big Oil when we have so much alternate energy saddens me. Lovely to see old Torquay again.... 💙 lovely memories of many dawn swims there back in the day. Let's keep not only protesting Big Oil, but actively engaging in, promoting & choosing cleaner energy.

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And how many protester's arrived in liquid fuel powered vehicles while they protest big oil? All the while contributing to oil companies needs to extract more oil. I do find it hypocritical when people do this they don't want these oil companies drilling and potentially making a mess of the environment yet most don't have electric vehicles charging via renewable power. I think we need to start protesting by changing our own habit's first and be the change we want to see. Buy electric vehicles and install solar to charge them etc. That's the only way to reduce oil companies drilling. This is how I see it anyway.

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I totally think you're right. However what the fuck are we meant to drive when electric cars are so expensive and no one is doing anything to bring the price down because our government is still a believer in coal and oil?

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Well Hyundai have just released there Ioniq electric car from $49.253 and just about to release there Kona electric suv. You can also get older vehicles converted to electric drive and people have been doing this for over ten years in Australia. You can also get second hand Japanese import electric car's and van's some from around $20.000. So there are more options available almost every month now and price's are coming down. Things are improving quickly in this area now :) I converted an old push bike to electric assist about 12 years ago and it still works and charges off my solar setup. We have a bloke in Burnie Tasmania that converted his old VW Beetle to electric and charges it on his solar setup. I love seeing it getting around very quite and fast:)

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For sure. But who can afford 50 grand for a car? It's not affordable for most people. But I agree - we're looking at buying an old Landie to convert to electric, or even convert the one we have. It's a debate about keep it original and placate the river counters or build a car that is environmentally sound and still has the grunt of a Landie. Which they do - have you seen what electric landies can do? So cool.

I have to say @j85063, (and I'd love to know your real name, btw, or should I just say J) - this is the most I've seen you write on Steemit! Love it. We must pop in whilst we are in Tassie.

Yes I know not many can afford that price hence the second hand Japanese vehicles could be a great option. Best thing is electric cars are getting better and cheaper all the time. I think you should do what every you want with the landy so what if some others don't like it being converted to electric if you do that. Plus I think more and more classics will get converted and a lot already are. You could set a new trend. Just call me j if you like. For sure would be great to meat you both as long as I am about when you are here :)

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Ha now I'm thinking... Jim? Jordan? John?

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No more clues :)

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I'm definitely hoping our next car will be electric. And yes, Jamie's definitely looking at a Landie conversion.

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I have been thinking and wanting an electric car for years. Hopefully someday soon. The closest I have got is the Toyota Prius I bought in 2017.

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Thanks, dear @travelfeed! There were quite a few international travellers paddling out with us too!

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Cool! Glad you all are buzzing in protest! Those things are almost guaranteed to spill and leak! Just ask the gulf communities of America! reminds me of allllll the pipeline efforts “that don’t leak either” and then the billion dollar efforts that they then require to clean up. Way to go you guys- I hope you win and push these nasty people far away.. all the way back to Norway!

Exactly - we KNOW about those oil spills and the ABSOLUTE horror of it! Fingers crossed - if you can/have time do click on the link and write for us xx

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