Big Oil still refusing to act to save some of world’s rarest whales17/06/2009 16:03:16
Scientists find whales more endangered in Exxon, BP and Rosneft oil areas June 2009. Oil and gas exploration by energy giants Exxon, BP and Rosneft is seriously threatening one of the world's most critically endangered whales, according to a panel of top scientists in a new report. The Western Gray Whale Advisory Panel (WGWAP), composed of 11 scientists and representatives from Shell and Sakahlin Energy, met in April to discuss how oil and gas development affect the whales' main annual feeding area off the northeastern coast of Sakhalin Island, Russia. Whales scared away by seismic activity "Western gray whale cows with their calves feed near the shore, but the industrial noise resulting from oil and gas development activities is pushing them out of the area," Doug Norlen from Pacific Environment. "Any disturbance of these critically endangered whales' behavior is particularly concerning as there are only 130 of them left." Exxon, BP and Rosneft refuse to act "The new information presented at this meeting has heightened rather than diminished the Panel's concern that whale distribution and behaviour may have been seriously affected by industrial activities - on land and offshore - in 2008," according to the panel's report. The panel reiterated it call for a moratorium on all development activities in the area this summer. Because of those concerns, Sakhalin Energy - a partnership between Shell, Gasprom and other sharholders - agreed in April to cancel their proposed 2009 seismic activities in the whales' feeding area. The Western Gray Whale is one of the world's most endangered whales, with only 25-30 breeding females remaining.
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