This is the news story that was quoted in Mermaids: The New Evidence
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/mar/27/greenland-halts-oil-drilling-licences
Terry Macalister
The Guardian
Wednesday 27 March 2013 22.47 GMT
The new government in Greenland has slapped a moratorium on the granting of fresh offshore oil and gas drilling licences in the country's Arctic waters in a move which has been welcomed by Greenpeace but will disappoint the industry.
The ban came as one of the Arctic drilling pioneers, the British company Cairn Energy, failed in a bid to keep an injunction on any protests organised against it by Greenpeace.
A coalition agreement signed by prime minister Aleqa Hammond and others
inside a newly elected administration said it would be "reluctant" to
hand out any new permits, while exploration under existing
licences could only be done under much heavier safety scrutiny. Oil
industry experts in London said that a new licensing round that would
have opened up waters off the north east of Greenland would not now take
place.
Jon Burgwald, Arctic campaigner for Greenpeace in Denmark,
said it was good news for everyone: "Until now, the people of Greenland
have been kept in the dark about the enormous risks taken by the
politicians and companies in the search for Arctic oil. Now it seems
that the new government will start taking these risks seriously. The
logical conclusion must be a total ban on offshore oil drilling in
Greenland."
The coalition agreement makes clear a parliamentary body will be
established to scrutinise offshore operations while promising oil spill
safety plans will be made publicly available in future.
Greenland, with Alaska and Russia, has been at the forefront of oil
company hopes to uncover an estimated 25% of the world's remaining oil
and gas reserves lying under and around the Arctic ocean.
Early drilling operations by Cairn and Shell infuriated
environmentalists worried about global warming and concerned that the
pristine and icy waters of the far north could be irreparably damaged by
any oil spills.
A decision by the former Greenland government and Cairn not to make
public any spill response plan caused particular concern and led to
Cairn's Edinburgh headquarters being taken over briefly by protestors
dressed as polar bears.
A legal injunction obtained by Cairn against Greenpeace International
was lifted on Wednesday although a parallel one against Greenpeace UK,
which organised the protest back in 2011, remains in place. Cairn spent
$1.4bn (£1bn) drilling without commercial success off Greenland while
Shell has just been forced to drop plans to drill again off Alaska this
summer after it ran into a series of technical problems in the region
during 2012.
Hammond's Siumut party came to power this month following an election
campaign dominated by a debate over the activities of foreign investors
and concerns among the 57,000 population that Greenland's future could
be dictated by the demands of potentially polluting new industries
rather than traditional Inuit fishing and hunting.
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