July-August 2018
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FTER A long hiatus, last summer Providence Resources drilled for oil
in the Porcupine Basin off the South West coast of Cork and Kerry.
Significant public relations work was done to claim that 5bn barrels
of oil would be found. On 4 August 2017, not only was nothing found
but a watery well, but shares in Providence Resources fell 46%. In
Irish folklore, the Porcupine Basin is believed to be the site of Hy-Brazil for some
it is known as Tír na nÓg. A mythology matched only by the fossil-fuel industry’s
own press on the likelihood of it finding oil in the area.
Indeed the failure of this particular watery well is no surprise: failure is a fun-
damental feature of every fossil-fuel venture off the Irish coast.
by Sinéad Mercier
Ireland's oil and
gas industry:
hot air, watery
wells, and
empty rhetoric
ENVIRONMENT
A new Act will prohibit new licences for
Ireland’s offshore oil and gas industry
Providence Resources' Barry Roe0 well: the fields with the most
potential have already been given out on generous terms for periods
up to 2030 – cutting it close to the zero-carbon 2050 scenarios
demanded by climate agreements. Pic: Finbarr O'Rourke/RollingNews.ie
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July-August 2018
Ireland – no country for oil barons
Out of around 160 wells drilled since 1962, only two commercial discover-
ies have been found. This is a record low that has existed in a country with
the second most attractive scal terms in the world and a governing Depar t-
ment of “Climate Action and Environment” that has never once conducted
an Environmental Impact Assessment of industry activities offshore.
Gas has been found off Kinsale in 1971, and Corrib in 1996, but they are
no example to follow. Not only was there a 25-year gap between discover-
ies, but they resulted in reputational damage to the industry. Corrib in
particular led to social and political upheaval. Corruption and a lack of con-
cern for public or environmental safety dogged the project nally leaving
Shell with losses of 12.5bn.
The fields with the most potential have already been given out, and on
extremely generous terms. Many licence periods will go as far as 2028 or
2030 cutting it close to the zero-carbon 2050 scenarios demanded by EU
and UN climate agreements. Some accounts state that under the 2011 Licenc-
ing Round, companies can hold licences for 47 years up until the year
2058.
The only oily thing in the Irish Atlantic is its abundance of sh. The number
one reason why fossil fuel companies operating in Ireland can’t secure a
business partner is because there is simply nothing there. According to the
2012 Oireachtas Committee Offshore Oil and Gas Exploration Report which
heard extensively from the Irish Offshore Operators Association (IOOA) -
Ireland has a mere 4.8% overall success rate for a commercial find. The
IOOA, Providence Resources and PwC have all admitted – in many repre-
sentations to Oireachtas Committees and the public – that there is only a
1 in 32 chance of nding anything commercial. Compared to a 1 in 7 chance
in Norway and 1 in 6 for the UK. Even the Government’s own 2012 Harness-
ing Our Ocean Wealth policy lists offshore oil and gas as having not only
the lowest growth potential of any marine industry, but a minus growth of
-4.8%.
Climate Change
Ireland's seas are some of the most inhospitable in Europe, perfect for
reclusive Skellig monks, but with major storms and difficult geology. No
present fossil fuel technology can cope with such a testing environment.
The technology is unlikely to ever be developed due to climate change
targets.
The majority of the world’s countries (193 to be exact) agree with 97%
of scientists that we need to keep global temperatures below a 1.5C or 2C
degree rise to avoid catastrophic climate change. In practice, this is widely
known to mean that 75 to 80% of the known fossil fuels have to stay in
the ground. Ireland’s fossil fuel resources are unknown, and therefore
unusable.
The millions that it costs to set up new fossil fuel infrastructure represent
what the Bank of England calls “stranded assets”. In the past five years
investment funds, public institutions and individuals have divested around
US$6.15 trillion (15.2 trillion) of fossil-fuel assets and the Irish Government
itself is fast-tracking Trócaire and Thomas Pringle's Fossil Fuel Divestment
Bill to divest the state pension fund from fossil fuels. Any investment in
further fossil-fuel infrastructure, instead of renewables, locks in reliance on
a ailing industry.
ENVIRONMENT
Ireland’s seas suffer storms and difficult
geology. No fossil-fuel technology can cope nor
will it ever be developed because of existing
climate-change targets
July-August 2018
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Energy Security
A genuine concern stated by Government is the need for Ireland to have
its own resources for reasons of energy security. However, this is naïve.
Fossil-fuel extraction is a privatised industr y and any fuel found in Irish
seas will go to the highest bidder, not to the Irish people. Furthermore,
with the prospect of much of the fuel being immediately shipped over-
seas with the development of new technologies such as Liquied Natural
Gas (LNG), it is likely our resources will boost the security of supply of
other countries more than our own. Ireland has no oil refineries and
planned drill sites such as the Newgrange prospect are located 260 km
off the south-west coast of Ireland. Why would companies risk another
Corrib scandal by bringing anything ashore?
Most of our gas already comes from friendly neighbours in Scotland
and Norway, not Russia, and we have more than enough to last us to
the extent demanded by climate targets.
There is not even a wealth of taxes to be gained from the industry.
Since 2013, new licences are subject to a 25% corporation tax on profits
which can be written off against costs. The tax take in sub-Saharan
Africa ranges from 44% to 85%. Once a field starts producing it will be
subject to a Petroleum Production Tax that ranges from 5-55% depend-
ing on the field’s commerciality. This again can be written off against
costs and corporation tax payments.
However, many oil and gas licences like the Newgrange prospect in
the ecologically sensitive Porcupine Basin and the Kish Basin near the
Dun Laoghaire Forty Foot were given out before 2013 and benefit from
a historic no-tax regime set up to encourage investment in exploration.
As a result, if there is an unlikely success, the millions of euro that are
being poured into exploration by Providence Resources and others will
undermine any Government tax bill.
Whatever paltry taxes remain have also been undermined by Govern-
ment spending to facilitate the oil and gas industry. One egregious
example is the Regional Seismic Survey which was originally a “jointly
funded project between the Department of Climate Action and ENI Ire-
land (a fossil fuel company currently embroiled in a Nigerian human
rights scandal – few surprises there). Government and industry were to
share the 120 million cost of mapping the sea-floor with dangerous seis
-
mic testing. In the end, the industry gave only 13.99million to the project
though it awarded the subservient Department a 2015 Maritime Indus-
try Award for the privilege of depleting our plankton and fish stocks.
Environmental Damage
No doubt all these arguments of nothing there served the industr y well
when seeking a non-existent tax rate and countering public demands
that the Irish State should own its own energy resources. An argument
made in Oireachtas hearings and newspaper articles by the IOOA. But
with ever increasing knowledge of the damage being done, the policy
looks like expensive posturing by pin-striped suits playing JR in Dallas.
One indefensible example of this feckless macho approach to our
environment is the seismic testing that occurs in Irish waters every
summer.
To map the seabed for fossil fuel deposits, sonic cannons, also known
as seismic airguns, are towed behind boats creating dynamite-like blasts
— repeated every ten seconds, 24 hours a day, for weeks and months
at a time. At acoustic levels 100,000 times more intense than a jet
engine.
As highlighted by the Irish documentaries
Ireland’s Deep Atlantic
and
Atlantic the Film
, seismic testing blasts are essentially waves of death
that cause disorientation and internal bleeding in cetaceans for distances
of up to 100 miles. Causing unknown damage to the 24 species of
whales, dolphins (including Fungie) and porpoises that bless Ireland’s
seas with their presence.
New evidence from
Nature Journal
in 2017 shows that a single blast
kills 100% of zooplankton larvae – the basis of the marine ecosystem
– and 64% of adult krill for at least 0.7 miles. It destroys fundamental
aspects of the ocean’s fabric. This is merely the most recent of many
peer-reviewed scientic studies showing the extensive ef fects of seismic
testing on all levels of the ocean food-chain. As long as ten years ago,
in 2007, the International Whaling Commission found that 250 male fin
whales appeared to stop singing for up to several months during seis-
mic testing.
The full damage being done is as yet unknown – the Irish Whale and
Dolphin Group reported 2017 as the worst year on record for beach
strandings with a 30% rise in dolphin deaths. Fewer n and blue whales
have also been recorded in the Porcupine Basin potentially a key
mating ground - since seismic testing began there in 2013.
Faced with a Department in thrall to fossil fuel industry executives, it
is ordinar y Irish shing communities in Kerr y and Galway that are having
to take on the role of watchdog as their sh stocks rapidly deplete. They
are calling for the Petroleum Affairs Division (PAD) to place a morato-
rium on seismic testing until an EIA is conducted that takes into account
the cumulative effect of decades of seismic testing on the Irish ocean.
Despite powers granted to do so in 2013, the PAD has never once
required an Environmental Impact Assessment or a Stage 2 Appropriate
Assessment to assess the oft-reported damage.
The National Parks and Wildlife Service has not even bothered to
update its guidelines to incorporate new information on plankton,
though seismic testing conducted in Ireland is likely to be the most dan-
gerous in the world.
No new licences
Why would Government want to allow a completely unproductive indus-
try drill along our Wild Atlantic Way? Even if only tiny amounts of oil are
found, these wells produce toxic chemicals like benzene, arsenic, and
radioactive pollutants, and toxic metals like mercury and lead that may
accumulate in our seafood supply.
The answer is simple, lobbying. In the main this lobbying is by former
Department officials that take up roles in private industry once they
leave the Department. A pathway char ted in detail by Dr Amanda Slevin
from Queens University Belfast in her book Gas, Oil and the Irish State.
This lobbying is made all the more effective by the general global shift
towards selling off natural resources to private interests termed
‘extractivism’ by Naomi Klein.
Fossil fuel lobbyists are obsessed with building an image of their
industry as eternally youthful – a mythical Tír na nÓg that will survive
against all the evidence that their industry is dangerous, damaging and
defunct. The worst irony is that today’s youth will suffer most from the
short-sighted selfishness of their endeavours. We are now moving to
stop this with the Climate Emergency Bill from Brid Smith which will ban
all new oil and gas licences. Like Costa Rica and New Zealand let us
move forward to a better, safer world.
Sinéad Mercier is a Green Par ty researcher and member of Not Here, Not
Anywhere
To map the seabed for fossil-fuel deposits, sonic
seismic-testing blasts cause disorientation and
internal bleeding 100 miles to 24 species of
whales and dolphins

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