industry secrets or meeting investors, Greenpeace activists around the world did their bit too. Because oil and whales – and sharks, seals and the global climate, for that matter – really don’t mix.
So besides the obvious, what links these three oil industry sob stories?
Firstly, there’s people power: incredible stories of people and communities determined to take on and hold to account some of the biggest and most influential companies in the world. We’re in the middle of a climate emergency and with our very future at stake, people will take action when governments and businesses refuse to.
COSL Prospector Arrives in New Zealand. © Greenpeace / Geoff Reid
A drilling rig commissioned by oil giant OMV arrives in New Zealand to drill 12 exploratory drilling wells off the coast of Taranaki. © Greenpeace / Geoff Reid
Then there is the bigger picture. These are all signs that the industry is tipping into a spiral of decline. No longer confidently striding out into new risky, remote and fragile waters, the big oil players are entering a new chapter. We can tell they are spooked not least because across the sector the PR greenwashing has gone into overdrive. They are talking themselves up but totally failing to put their money where their mouth is. Companies like these caused the climate crisis but are showing no real signs of transitioning fast enough.Trek, Equinor and OMV’s bad news are signals that change is coming whether they like it or not – there will be no place for oil and gas companies in the future if we want to avoid climate chaos.
They know it. And we know it.