Demonstrators smeared oil over a faux, human-sized gannet to protest in opposition to plans to develop the Rosebank oil and gasoline subject.
Ocean Rebellion local weather protesters staged the stunt close to Dundee harbour on Thursday, pouring containers stuffed with faux oil over the mock fowl till it turned unrecognisable.
Norwegian oil and gasoline firm Equinor has utilized to the UK Government for approval to work on Rosebank, the most important undeveloped oil subject within the UK, with a call anticipated quickly.
It lies west of Shetland and is able to producing as much as 500 million barrels of oil.
Demonstrators stated the protest highlighted the affect the oil business can have on wildlife, with seabirds usually discovered coated in oil attributable to spillages.
Fellow protesters stood behind the performers with a banner that learn “Stop Rosebank”.
The protest group said the planned development “is a slap in the face not just to nature, marine life and ocean ecosystems, but also to the UN secretary-general and the International Energy Authority, who have both said new oil and gas is incompatible with the Paris Agreement targets”.
Mandy Cairns, from Ocean Rebellion, added: “Equinor state on their website that their environmental work is guided by their commitments to prevent harm to the environment, and yet they intend to develop an oil field which would involve a pipeline cutting through the Faroe-Shetland sponge belt, which is home to sensitive deep sea sponges and 400-year-old clams.
“A major oil spill from Rosebank could risk serious impact to at least 16 Marine Protected Areas.”
Kate Treharne, Ocean Rebellion zoologist, added: “With a million seabirds calling Shetland home, an oil spill from this field would be catastrophic to the animals and birds who live and feed in this area.”
A spokesperson for Equinor refuted the protesters’ claims, stating: “Rosebank is a project that can counteract the decline in domestic production and improve energy security, with oil and gas produced with significant lower carbon footprint than the current average on the UK Continental Shelf.
“It will be developed in line with UK’s North Sea Transition Deal and Equinor’s net-zero ambition, in line with the goals of the Paris Agreement.
“The numbers that the protesters refer to are not correct.
“The environmental footprint of the project has been thoroughly assessed in an environmental statement, published in August last year, and worst case impact assessments have been carried out to ensure that the field can be developed in an environmentally responsible way.
“New oil and gas fields in the North Sea can absolutely be in keeping with the UK’s commitment to net-zero.
“For example, the North Sea Transition Authority (NSTA) uses an ‘effective net-zero test’ which looks at a range of factors including greenhouse gas emissions, lifetime production against UK future demand, and production emissions impacts when assessing applications for a new field.
“We have full confidence in our data, which show that the UK oil and gas industry is currently on track to meet interim emissions reduction targets agreed in the North Sea Transition Deal.
“Our 2022 Emissions Monitoring Report shows that achieving the 2030 goal of a 50% reduction in production emissions is the absolute minimum the NSTA expects from industry, which should aim to surpass it.”
A UK Government spokesperson stated no determination has been made concerning Rosebank but, including it’s the NSTA which can in the end decide.
The NSTA stated it doesn’t touch upon particular person circumstances, however stated in each case it “takes a life cycle approach to net zero regulation, including through our strategy, and our range of regulatory levers”.