First Turtle Death in Chevron Gorgon Natural Gas Project in Australia
Endangered hawksbill sea turtle killed by dredging June 9th, 2010
A rare hawksbill sea turtle is the first reported death of a sea turtle caused by Chevron's massive Gorgon natural gas project in Western Australia. The Sunday Times of Australia and Perth Now reported the sea turtle death on Sunday, June 6. Click to read the story or see below.
This story broke just after Chevron's shareholder meeting in Houston where sea turtle activists protested Chevron's harm to people and the environment. Read more.
Anger over first turtle death at Barrow Island Gorgon gas
project
INQUIRY: An investigation has been launched after a juvenile
hawksbill turtle was found dead near dredging works for Chevron's Gorgon gas
project on Barrow Island. Source: PerthNow
THE first death of an endangered species turtle at
Chevron's controversial Gorgon gas site on Barrow Island has sparked a major
investigation.
The juvenile hawksbill turtle was sucked into equipment
during dredging to deepen the port for shipping access to the Class A nature
reserve for construction of the $43 billion liquefied natural gas project.
The Department of Environment and Conservation has confirmed
it the turtle death is under investigation.
The turtle was discovered on Thursday in a dredging overflow
tank 3km off Barrow Island.
The island is home to a host of rare, endangered and endemic
species and is surrounded by gardens of unique coral. The discovery of the dead
turtle has sparked outrage from conservation groups who strongly opposed
Australia's biggest resource project being at such an environmentally fragile
site.
The Barnett Government approved the location despite advice
from the Environmental Protection Authority that it should be built on the
mainland.
Conservation Council marine expert Tim Nicol said dredging
was also destroying pristine coral reef.
"It is hard to understand how you can have a situation
where a critically endangered animal can be sucked up and spat out by dredging
machinery," Mr Nicol said.
"If the turtle was killed by the dredging works, then
it would have suffered a cruel death."
Gorgon is expected to produce 15 million tonnes of LNG,
while creating up to 10,000 jobs.
Chevron said in a statement that it did not know what had
killed the turtle.
"Dredging activities started last month. We are not
aware of any other turtle incident in that period," it said.
"There are a range of measures being taken to limit the
impact of construction activities on the environment."
Last week The Sunday Times revealed on its PerthNow website
that despite stringent rules, nearly 60 quarantine breaches had been recorded
by environmental officials.
Biohazards including soil, seeds and mould have been
accidentally transported on to the island since work began last September.
A Chevron spokesman said the quarantine events showed the
company's management system was working.
"It highlights why our quarantine program consists of
three elements - inspection, detection and control," the spokesman said.
Conservation Council director Piers Verstegen said the
operations of the oil and gas industry were extremely damaging to the
environment no matter what measures they put in place to mitigate the risk.