A fishing boat enters the harbour at the Arctic port of Svolvaer in northern Norway. Europe has rejected a call to ban oil and gas exploration in the Arctic. Alister Doyle / Reuters
A fishing boat enters the harbour at the Arctic port of Svolvaer in northern Norway. Europe has rejected a call to ban oil and gas exploration in the Arctic. Alister Doyle / Reuters
A fishing boat enters the harbour at the Arctic port of Svolvaer in northern Norway. Europe has rejected a call to ban oil and gas exploration in the Arctic. Alister Doyle / Reuters
A fishing boat enters the harbour at the Arctic port of Svolvaer in northern Norway. Europe has rejected a call to ban oil and gas exploration in the Arctic. Alister Doyle / Reuters

Arctic oil and gas ban rejected by Euorpean Parliament


  • English
  • Arabic

The European Parliament rejected a call to ban Arctic oil and gas exploration on Thursday, in a symbolic vote seen as a barometer for future moves by Brussels to regulate to protect the region.

Policymakers who back the ban, which had drawn the ire of Norway, say the European Union needs a strategy for future developments in a region being transformed by climate change.

Policymakers voted 414-180 to reject the non-binding motion calling for the European Commission and member states to work with international forums towards “a future total ban on the extraction of Arctic oil and gas”.

The European Parliament did, however, endorse a call to ban oil drilling in the region’s “icy” waters – wording Norway says does not concern its current plans.

The Arctic is estimated to hold more hydrocarbon reserves than Saudi Arabia, and countries including Russia, Norway and Denmark are keen to stake their claim over the icy waters.

Norway, which on Monday announced plans to nominate a record number of blocks for oil and gas exploration in the Barents Sea, says it only allows drilling in the Arctic away from the area that is vulnerable to sea ice in winter.

The motion to ban exploration in the Arctic was brought by the Estonian liberal policymaker Urmas Paet and the Finnish centre-right policymaker Sirpa Pietikainen. But even Mr Paet said that, while there was a need for cautious management of the environment, oil and gas extraction in the Arctic was “a decision of sovereign states”.

The motion also called for greater cooperation among Arctic states to safeguard indigenous people in the region from the worst impacts of global warming, protect the environment from fossil fuel exploration, and reduce military tensions.

Oil majors are resuming their search for giant offshore fields in the region after a two-year lull as a recent stabilisation in oil prices revives appetite for exploration – alarming environmental groups.

* Reuters

business@thenational.ae

Follow The National's Business section on Twitter