Your browser does not support this video. Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Arvid-Nygaard-Soundbite-2-27MZIF2TFWQM.htmlConceptually similarArvid Nygaard Soundbite 1GP03X44Completed★★★★Harald Zindler and Arvid Nygaard GP03X9DCompleted★★★★10 Years Brent SparGP0487HCompleted★★★★Brent Spar PlaqueGP03X57Completed★★★★Decommissioning Brent Spar PhotoGP03X7CCompleted★★★★Brent Spar Scrap Metal GP03X58Completed★★★★Brent Spar Arrives in Erfjord GP03X54Completed★★★★Brent Spar Oil Platform DismantlingGP03X56Completed★★★★Harald Zindler Soundbite 1GP03X9ECompleted★★★★View AllGP03X45Arvid Nygaard Soundbite 2Arvid Nygaard, Project Manager Maritime GMC AS soundbite. Locations:Europe-Norway-Port of MekjarvikDate:20 Apr, 2005Credit:GreenpeaceDuration:32sAudio format:NaturalProduction Type :SOUNDBITEKeywords:Brent Spar-Climate (campaign title)-KWCI (GPI)-OSPAR-Recycling-Shell (commercial business)-Toxics (campaign title)Shoot:Brent Spar Recycled in NorwayThe Brent Spar is being used as the base for a new quay in Norway, after it was brought ashore in 1998 and recycled. The Brent Spar campaign is remembered as one of the most significant Greenpeace successes of the 1990s. Greenpeace called for the offshore industry to take proper environmental responsibility for its obsolete platforms and other wastes, rather than using the oceans as a dumping ground. All the evidence has since shown that, as Shell itself later concluded, recycling the Brent Spar was the most environmentally sound option. Ten years after Greenpeace activists first occupied the Brent Spar on 30 April 1995, Greenpeace continues its mission to defend ocean life.Related Collections:Brent Spar Recycled in Norway (Photo & Videos)