The Manila Times

High-stakes oil and gas vote has Italy in a tizz

- AFP PHOTO

Italy’s ENI Gas plant is seen in Marina di Ravenna on April 6. An offshore platform a stone’s throw from Dante’s beach on Italy’s Adriatic coast has become the focus of a politicall­y charged national referendum on the country’s oil and gas drilling concession­s. a constituti­onal reforms referendum in October.

The 41-year-old has bet his political career on the reforms and many see this vote as a pretext to attack his leadership.

Nine regions asked for and are affected by the referendum, from Basilicata, to Calabria, Sardinia and the Veneto. Most observers say the result will have little effect on the government’s coffers either way: concession­s within the 12-mile band brought in a relatively modest 38 million euros ($43 million) in royalties in 2015,

At the heart of the drama lies Ravenna, once the capital city of the Western Roman Empire, and now the hub for oil and gas across the country’s center and north. Some 47 of the 92 platforms in question lie here in the Emilia-Romagna region and the local economy is inextricab­ly tied to the sector’s fate.

According to the Filctem Cgil union, closing rigs when the concession­s expire would put at least 2,500 jobs on platforms and in services at risk. A report this year by the Nomisma research foundation found there were some 140,000 people in the region whose jobs depend on oil and gas.

Gianluigi Bambini, who runs a maritime transport company, said business had already been hit by stagnating output.

“We had 264 employees 18 months ago, now we have 180, most of those let go are young,” he said as one of his crew boats pulled up next to an Eni rig, shrouded in mist, with hundreds of gleaming mussels clinging to its red tubular legs.

Rising seas

Plucked from the platform by divers and steamed in vats with tomatoes, onions and parsley, freshly gathered molluscs are served up by supporters of the “No” camp in the port area of Marina di Ravenna to raise support. Giovanni Fucci, president of local mussels farming asso- a sector’s name after a Greenpeace report last month asserted molluscs from Eni platforms contained traces of heavy metals and hydrocarbo­ns.

“Every 15 days health inspectors come out to sea and take samples, they analyze them and rule them fit for human consumptio­n. These mussels are sought by the best Italian chefs for their taste and quality,” he said, adding that the market is worth 126 million euros a year in Emilia-Romagna alone.

Back on Dante beach, local campaigner­s rejoice that the referendum is drawing attention to coastal erosion they claim is caused by nearby rigs, the closest of which lies just 1.5 kilometers offshore.

Pine trees in a national nature reserve set back from the beach are dying, according to 74-year old Pasquale Minichini, because “rising sea water is killing them at the roots” -- aggravatin­g a phenomenon caused by global warming.

He cites research that says Ravenna could return to its Roman-era state -- small islands in a lagoon, like Venice -- by 2100.

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