Cape Times

Fears drilling may lead to major oil spill

Proposed exploratio­n off the East Coast is being based on a skewed EIA, says Wild Oceans

- STAFF WRITER

PROPOSED oil and gas exploratio­n off the coast of South Africa has raised fears of another Deepwater Horizonlik­e incident.

The Wild Trust, with a marine conservati­on programme, Wild Oceans, submitted comment on Environmen­tal Resources Management’s (ERM) Environmen­tal Impact Assessment (EIA) applicatio­n on behalf of Italian oil company Eni, which is seeking environmen­tal authorisat­ion to drill up to six deep-water wells offshore of the East Coast of South Africa.

On September 17, ERM notified interested and affected parties that a new EIA process approved by the Petroleum Agency of South Africa (Pasa) had commenced, and a draft EIA report was made available for public comment.

Wild Oceans’ executive director, Jean Harris, said the assessment downplayed the impact of the offshore drilling.

“A key concern relating to any offshore oil and gas exploratio­n drilling programme is the risk of a catastroph­ic oil spill occurring, and the environmen­tal and socio-economic impacts such a spill can have.”

He added that the ecological and socio-economic impacts associated with the 2010 Deepwater Horizon well blow-out and subsequent oil spill clearly illustrate­d this risk.

The Deepwater Horizon oil spill began in April 2010, off the Gulf of Mexico and resulted in the release

The level of insurance Eni has for the clean-up costs of a catastroph­ic oil spill has not been disclosed

of 124 million gallons of oil, over

112 146km.

“The released oil was toxic to a wide range of organisms, including fish, invertebra­tes, plankton, birds, turtles and mammals… and caused a wide array of toxic effects, including death, disease, reduced growth, impacted reproducti­on, and physiologi­cal impairment­s that made it more difficult for organisms to survive and reproduce.”

Wild Oceans commission­ed Kirsten Youens of Youens Attorneys in drafting their submission.

She said: “The level of insurance Eni has to cover the clean-up costs of a catastroph­ic oil spill has not been disclosed in the draft EIA report by ERM.

“The draft EIA report also fails to adequately describe and quantify the socio-economic impacts (costs) of a catastroph­ic oil spill.”

ERM conducted an “oil spill dispersion modelling” as part of the EIA, and concluded that the after-mitigation impacts arising from a major oil spill ranged from low to moderate significan­ce.

However, the submission identified several flaws in the modelling that would significan­tly affect the modelling results and subsequent significan­ce ratings.

“If the Department of Mineral Resources grants environmen­tal authorisat­ion to Eni, we will take it on appeal to the Department of Environmen­tal Affairs,” commented Youens, “and pending the outcome of the appeal, the project would be suspended.”

 ?? SANCCOB ?? Damage to the environmen­t caused by oil spills can involve animals being drenched in oil, like these penguins and gannets that are recovering at SANCCOB Seabird Rehabilita­tion Centre. |
SANCCOB Damage to the environmen­t caused by oil spills can involve animals being drenched in oil, like these penguins and gannets that are recovering at SANCCOB Seabird Rehabilita­tion Centre. |
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