Close
Contact Us
Help
Login
Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Hide details
Add to lightbox
Add to cart
Get URL
Keywords
Aerial view
British Petroleum (BP)
Coastal Plains
Coastlines
ConocoPhillips
Day
Destruction
ExxonMobil (Esso)
Industrial cranes
Industrial landscapes
Industries
KWCI (GPI)
Landscapes
Oil (fossil fuel)
Oil (Industry)
Oil exploration
Oil pipelines
Outdoors
Save the Arctic (campaign title)
Prudhoe Bay Oil Field in Alaska
Prudhoe Bay oil fields.
One of the largest oil fields ever discovered, Prudhoe Bay has been in production for over 30 years. The amount of oil being pumped through the 800-mile (1,287-kilometer) BP, ExxonMobil and ConoccoPhillips owned Trans Alaska Pipeline has dropped to around 500,000 barrels a day in 2011 compared to 2 million barrels a day in the eighties, as output from onshore fields fall.
Restrictions
Ok for Greenpeace use and for approved external Greenpeace campaign related use. Contact the photographer directly or Greenpeace UK (photo.uk@greenpeace.org) for any other external licensing or sales.
Unique identifier:
GP04BID
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
28/09/2011
Locations:
Alaska
,
Arctic
,
Arctic Coastal Plain
,
Beaufort Sea
,
Prudhoe Bay
,
United States of America
Credit line:
© Rose Sjölander / 70°
Size:
5616px × 3744px 13MB
Ranking:
★★★★ (E)
Containers
Shoot:
70° North - Arctic Documentation
70° North is a multimedia project documenting the impact of climate change and resources exploration in the Arctic.
Shell's plans to drill offshore in the Alaskan Arctic in 2012 has divided the native communities who now stand at a crossroads between continued benefits from industry generated revenues and protecting the marine environment they have depended on for thousands of years. Shell's proposed offshore drill site is in the path of the bowhead whale's migration route. Many Inupiat hunters are concerned about Shell's lack of spill response capabilities if licenses are granted to drill offshore in the Arctic's Beaufort and Chukchi seas
Greenpeace is campaigning for a global sanctuary to be declared around the uninhabited area of the North Pole to save the Arctic from attempts by oil companies to exploit the region’s resources for short term profit.
Conceptually similar