North Sea oil leak biggest in decade

An oil spill from a platform off Scotland in the North Sea is the biggest in the region in a decade, the British government said yesterday as energy giant Shell battled to close off the leak completely. The spill from the Gannet Alpha platform, 180...

An oil spill from a platform off Scotland in the North Sea is the biggest in the region in a decade, the British government said yesterday as energy giant Shell battled to close off the leak completely.

The spill from the Gannet Alpha platform, 180 kilometre east of Aberdeen, likely amounts to more than 100 tonnes, said a spokesman for Britain’s Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC).

Anglo-Dutch oil giant Shell, which runs the platform, has got the leak under control and is working to “completely halt any further leakage,” the spokesman said.

The subsea well was shut on Wednesday.

“Although small in comparison to the Macondo, Gulf of Mexico, incident, in the context of the UK continental shelf the spill is substantial,” the DECC spokesman said.

However, “it is not anticipated that oil will reach the shore and indeed it is expected that it will be dispersed naturally.” “The UK continental shelf oil spill record is strong, which is why it is disappointing that this spill has happened,” the spokesman added.

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