Current:Home > Contact-usGreenpeace urges Greece to scrap offshore gas drilling project because of impact on whales, dolphins-InfoLens
Greenpeace urges Greece to scrap offshore gas drilling project because of impact on whales, dolphins
View Date:2025-01-09 07:52:41
ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greenpeace on Thursday urged Greece to abandon a deep-sea gas exploration project in the Mediterranean, citing newly published research to argue that its impact on endangered whales and dolphins would be greater than previously believed.
The environmental group said a survey last year in waters off southwestern Greece and Crete that are earmarked for exploratory drilling found sea mammals were present there in the winter, as well as the summer, as had been already established.
The area being explored for gas largely overlaps the Hellenic Trench, which includes the Mediterranean’s deepest waters, at 5,267 meters (17,300 feet). It is a vital habitat for the sea’s few hundred sperm whales, and for other marine mammals already threatened by fishing, collisions with ships and plastic pollution.
Current environmental safeguards in place for the project limit prospection to the winter, to less impact whale and dolphin, or cetacean, breeding periods.
But the survey published Thursday in the Endangered Species Research journal found that at least four species of cetaceans — including sperm whales and Cuvier’s beaked whales — were present in the area all year round.
Kostis Grimanis from Greenpeace Greece said that part of the Mediterranean is of “huge” ecological importance.
“And yet, the government and oil companies are obsessively pursuing hydrocarbon exploration in these waters,” he said. “This is an absurd crime against nature. It will not only be detrimental to these iconic marine fauna species, but to our fight against the climate crisis,” by seeking to exploit undersea fossil fuels.
Greenpeace called on the government to cancel all offshore drilling permits.
In 2019, Greece granted exploration rights for two blocks of seabed south and southwest of the island of Crete to an international energy consortium, and smaller projects are under way farther north. This year, ExxonMobil and Greece’s Helleniq Energy completed a three-month seismic survey of the seabed in the two big blocks, and the Greek government says initial exploratory drilling could start there in 2025.
Officials say the strictest environmental standards are being followed.
The seismic survey bounces sonic blasts off the seabed to identify potential gas deposits, a process that would be deafening to sound-sensitive cetaceans. Sonar used by warships has been shown to have deadly effects on whales, and experts say seismic surveys can do the same. Drilling and extracting gas would also cause significant undersea noise, according to environmentalists.
The new report, by Greenpeace Greece, the University of Exeter and the Athens-based Pelagos Cetacean Research Institute, detected at least five species of cetaceans in 166 encounters — including 14 sperm whales — in winter 2022. It followed similar research during summer months.
___
Follow AP’s climate and environment coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/climate-and-environment
veryGood! (1)
Related
- The Daily Money: All about 'Doge.'
- As 2024 Paris Olympics near, familiar controversies linger
- Shakira's Face Doesn't Lie When a Rat Photobombs Her Music Video Shoot
- In Florida's local malaria outbreak, forgotten bite led to surprise hospitalization
- World leaders aim to shape Earth's future at COP29 climate change summit
- Buffalo Bills S Damar Hamlin a 'full-go' as team opens training camp
- Whistleblower tells Congress the US is concealing ‘multi-decade’ program that captures UFOs
- Mississippi candidates gives stump speeches amid sawdust and sweat at the Neshoba County Fair
- Statue of the late US Rep. John Lewis, a civil rights icon, is unveiled in his native Alabama
- Q&A: John Wilson exploits what other filmmakers try to hide in final season of ‘How To’
Ranking
- NASCAR Cup Series Championship race 2024: Start time, TV, live stream, odds, lineup
- Mega Millions jackpot soars to over $1 billion after no winner declared in draw
- Patients sue Vanderbilt after transgender health records turned over in insurance probe
- Prosecutors oppose a defense request to exhume the body of the Pittsburgh synagogue shooter’s father
- Elon Musk responds after Chloe Fineman alleges he made her 'burst into tears' on 'SNL'
- Father arrested after being found in car with 2 children suffering from heat: Police
- Mother punched in face while she held her baby sues Los Angeles sheriff’s department
- Salmonella outbreak linked to ground beef hospitalizes 6 people across 4 states
Recommendation
-
Kendall Jenner Is Back to Being a Brunette After Ditching Blonde Hair
-
Q&A: John Wilson exploits what other filmmakers try to hide in final season of ‘How To’
-
Man fatally shot by western Indiana police officers after standoff identified by coroner
-
Germantown, Tennessee, water restrictions drag on as supply contamination continues
-
Love Is Blind’s Chelsea Blackwell Reacts to Megan Fox’s Baby News
-
Why Matt Damon Joked Kissing Costar Scarlett Johansson Was Hell
-
Family of Black mom fatally shot by neighbor asks DOJ to consider hate crime charges
-
DNA test helps identify body of Korean War soldier from Georgia