Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Esperanza-in-the-North-Sea---ROV-Sediment-Sampling-27MZIFJ8ODW7P.htmlConceptually similarEsperanza in the North Sea - ROV Sediment SamplingGP0STUP7FCompleted★★★★Esperanza in the North Sea - ROV Sediment SamplingGP0STUP7GCompleted★★★★Esperanza in the North Sea - ROV Sediment SamplingGP0STUP7HCompleted★★★★Esperanza in the North Sea - ROV Sediment SamplingGP0STUP7JCompleted★★★★Esperanza in the North Sea - ROV Sediment SamplingGP0STUP7KCompleted★★★★Esperanza in the North Sea - ROV Sediment SamplingGP0STUP7ICompleted★★★★Esperanza in the North Sea - ROV TestingGP1SU9OZCompleted★★★★Sediment Sampling near an Abandoned Wellhead in the North SeaGP0STUQ9PCompleted★★★★Sediment Sampling near an Abandoned Wellhead in the North SeaGP0STUQC8Completed★★★★★View AllGP0STUP7EEsperanza in the North Sea - ROV Sediment SamplingCrew on the Esperanza retrieve sediment samples from the ROV (ROUV, Remotely operated underwater vehicle) after a flight in the UK waters of the North Sea. The Esparanza is gathering Samples from the Industrialized parts of the North Sea.In original language:Esperanza in der Nordsee - ROV ProbennahmeDie Besatzung auf der Esperanza entnimmt dem ROV (ROUV, Remotely operated underwater vehicle, ferngesteuertes Unterwasserfahrzeug), nach einem Einsatz im britischen Teil der Nordsee Sedimentproben. Die Esparanza sammelt Proben aus den industrialisierten Teilen der Nordsee.Locations:Europe-North Sea-United KingdomDate:11 Aug, 2020Credit:© Marten van Dijl / GreenpeaceMaximum size:3441px X 2387pxKeywords:Climate (campaign title)-Fossil fuel (product)-Gloves-Hands-Indoors-KWCI (GPI)-MY Esperanza-Natural gas-Oceans (campaign title)-One person-Samples-SeasShoot:Protect the North Sea: Esperanza Tracking the Fossil Fuel IndustryThe Greenpeace ship Esperanza is on its way to a month-long documentation and peaceful protest tour in the North Sea. Teams on board will gather evidence of the extreme industrialization of the region by the oil and gas industry, which has been polluting the ocean and fuelling the climate crisis with a “business as usual” attitude for several decades.