Saturday 3/6/2016, 7:30 a.m. My alarm clock rings, it’s
time to get up. The narrow corridors inside the Greenpeace ship Arctic
Sunrise are unusually empty. Almost the entire ship crew is up on deck
working double time to get the ship ready to set sail.
Before I get down to my daily work I have breakfast with
the rest of the crew in the dining room. Even as a vegan there are
plenty of choices; the ship’s cook is doing an amazing job. At 8 a.m.
it’s time to grab a rag; after all we have alleyways, bathrooms and
toilets to keep tidy. Everyone joins in, no matter what position he or
she is in. Suddenly I feel a movement, it’s subtle, barely perceptible
over the din of the engine, but our voyage has begun. We leave the
harbour of Tromsø headed for the oil fields off the Norwegian coast.
Yesterday evening I sat up with Iain, a British engineer
aboard. We talked at length about literature and politics – but we kept
circling back to the shocking things that go on up here in the Arctic
Ocean on a daily basis. Iain’s been at sea for years, and to the Arctic
several times before. Nonetheless his eyes light up when we talk about
what lies ahead of us.
Our first destination is the oil rig Transocean
Spitsbergen. The Austrian energy corporation OMV have been here since
January conducting exploratory drilling. Looking for oil in the Arctic
is already dangerous enough. Doing so in the middle of the Arctic winter
is irresponsible and nonsensical. The days during this time of the year
are short, four to six hours of daylight is the rule. Just 180
kilometres away from the drill site there’s a nature reserve, Bear
Island.
As we navigate our way out of the network of inlets we spot
whales close by the ship. In the evening we sail by an array of wind
turbines almost as white as the snow behind them; I hadn’t expected to
see them so far north. They just makes it harder for me to understand
why anyone would put this unique biosphere at risk in search of a fuel
source that is all but extinct.
For a long time we cruise along the fjords that augustly
rise out of the sea. As darkness falls I’m having a hot tea below deck
when there’s a flurry of activity. “Northern Lights!”, a crew member
yells as another brushes past me. I quickly adjust myself, step on deck
and am immediately entranced by this play of nature in the clear night
sky. It takes my breath away, I stand still for minutes staring in the
air.
OMV have tried to hide its risky operations under the cover of Arctic darkness, but the Sunrise is on its way. Join the call to save the arctic.
Stefan Kerschbaumer is a Campaigner with Greenpeace Central and Eastern Europe.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.