Jerusalem Post
 
Activists  protest oil shale project at Knesset 
By _SHARON  UDASIN_ (http://www.jpost.com/Authors/AuthorPage.aspx?id=71)  
03/21/2012 11:59 
Developer says shale is a "national treasure," mining will cause no  harm 
to Israel's natural resources. 

 
 
About 100 people wearing fluffy bunny ears gathered for a picnic-style  
protest in Jerusalem’s Wohl Rose Garden at Wednesday noontime, to voice their  
objections to the oil shale project proposed for Israel’s Adullam  region.

Many of the protesters had walked 40 kilometers that morning from  Adullam 
to Jerusalem – with others joining at the Jerusalem International  
Convention Center – ending up in the green nook overlooking the Knesset, where  
pet 
dogs were happily romping around and hopping on activists’ laps.  Among  the 
protesters were members of Greenpeace, "For Adullam" group, Adam Teva V'Din  
(Israel Union for Environmental Defense), Green Course and Life and 
Environment,  as well as Adullam-area residents.

“It’s the most beautiful region in  Israel,” said Hallel Shahar, an artist 
who lives in Moshav Zafririm for the past  12 years and has his studio 
there. “Every summer is getting warmer and now they  want to heat the land to 
300-degrees.”




The in-situ oil shale process works in such a way that heating drills  
gradually melt the shale to temperatures of 300-degrees Celsius over the course 
 
of three years, in a process that causes no harm to the aquifer below and  
minimal damage to the surface above, the company responsible for the oil 
shale  project, Israel Energy Initiatives (IEI) has explained to The Jerusalem 
Post in the past.

In  Hallel’s opinion as a local resident, however, there is no way to know 
what  permanent damage heating the underground to such temperatures must 
cause on the  area.

“I think it 110 percent will destroy all the plants and trees whose  roots 
are under the soil,” he told the Post, noting that he is afraid the activity 
 will turn the region into an “ecological Holocaust.”

“I live in this  place and I see all the animals – it’s the most 
ecological place in Israel,” he  said.

Hallel advocated holding protests actually in his hometown Ela  Valley 
area, particularly on Saturdays when thousands of tourists fill the  region, 
rather than additional such demonstrations in front of a government  building.

“In this country nothing happens if you put on pink ears  of a rabbit and 
stand in front of the Knesset,” he said.

In addition to  the pink bunny ears, many of the protesters were sporting 
shirts that read “we  are not bunnies in an oil shale experiment,” with the 
Hebrew phrase “we are not  bunnies” equivalent to the English phrase “we 
are not guinea pigs.” As of the  afternoon, the activists had garnered 17,505 
signatures to their online "Oil  Shame" petition, which features the same 
slogan as the t-shirt, with the logo of  a bunny with an X over its mouth.

Calling the oil shale project a  “dangerous experiment,” Greenpeace 
campaign manager Hila Krupsky said that the  public needs to continue to 
influence 
decision-makers, through modes such as the  petition.

“Even the company says when you start an experiment you don’t  know how it’
s going to end,” Krupsky told the Post after the demonstration, stressing 
that  accidents do happen.

While she acknowledged that oil shale drilling has  occurred in Colorado, 
this state has many open fields; whereas, the State of  Israel’s small size 
makes experimenting with rare open space in such a way quite  irresponsible, 
she argued.

“Here we don’t have so many natural resources  that we can risk this,” 
Krupsky said.

It is the responsibility of the  government to hire an outside expert, 
completely unrelated to the company, to  evaluate the environmental 
implications 
of performing the project, she  added.

Such separation is crucial in this type of project, Keren  Halperin-Museri, 
attorney for Adam Teva V'Din, stressed.

“The oil shale  project is a clear example of the relationship between 
money and power, which  endangers the environment and public health,” 
Halperin-Museri said. “The close  cooperation, which arose through Knesset 
discussions, of the [Energy and Water]  Ministry with project developers is 
suspicious 
and disturbing."

Two  Knesset members, Nitzan Horowitz (Meretz) and Dr. Rachel Adatto 
(Kadima) also  showed up to the protest to express their opposition to the oil 
shale  project.

“This project is borderline hallucinatory, its health and  environmental 
impact is likely to be very harsh and irreversible,” Horowitz  said. “Its 
economic efficiency is not proven anywhere in the world; therefore,  it is 
necessary to remove this from the agenda."

Adatto agreed, adding,  “I as a physician am against experiments that are 
not tested properly and that  are likely to have awful consequences.”

In response to the protest, IEI  emphasized that the targets of the 
upcoming pilot it aims to launch are  technical viability, environmental 
effects 
and economic viability.

"We  think that 99.9% of Israelis will support an examination of the 
viability of  having Israeli oil at minimal environmental impact," said Relik 
Shafir, CEO of  IEI.

IEI has been waiting for three-and-a-half years for a permit to  begin its 
pilot program, and has found "a geological formation unique to Israel  that 
ensures that there can be production of oil and gas from oil shale without  
environmental damage, as demonstrated in series of tests of the best 
scientists  in the world," according to the company's official reaction to the 
Greenpeace  event.

The results of these tests, conducted by renowned research  institutions 
both in Israel and abroad, were submitted in a report to the  Environmental 
Protection Ministry and showed that there would be no harm  whatsoever to the 
aquifer below, the company explained. Should the project  occur, it will 
span only 0.7 to 0.8 hectares (1.73 to 1.98 acres), of which the  facilities 
will only be actively using 0.5 hectares (1.24 acres). The section  containing 
heating and production drilling will be only 80 square meters,  according 
to IEI.

"Abandoning this national treasure, while avoiding its  analysis, will be 
regretted for generations," the company statement  said.

At a conference held the day before at Netanya Academic College,  Shafir 
had said that the plant will cause very few emissions, no harm to lands  and 
absolutely no damage to the aquifer, which is located below an impermeable  
layer of chalk.

“There is not one hydrologist in Israel who thinks so,”  he said.

IEI has the technology to protect the aquifer entirely, and will  be able 
to be producing 50,000 barrels of oil per day for 25 years, helping  ensure 
Israel’s energy security, according to Shafir.

“It’s not a vision,  it’s not a bird on the tree,” he said. “We don’t 
have to look for it, we already  found it.”

But the protesters could not disagree more with this vision,  with 
Horowitz, who placed bunny ears on his head in support of their cause,  saying 
that 
the project would be nothing less than “a national tragedy.”

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to