Friday, January 13, 2012

Fishermen sue ConocoPhillips over China spill

Posted on by Bloomberg in Accidents, Oil, Oil spill

A Chinese man holds up oil residue found in his shrimp farm in the coastal Leting county in the Bohai Bay near northern China's Hebei province. China's oceanic agency has ordered ConocoPhillips China to do more to prevent and clean up offshore spills that occurred June 4 and June 17, 2011 in the Bohai Bay that have raised an outcry among fishermen and environmentalists. (AP Photo)

China National Offshore Oil Corp. said 29 fishermen had sued the country?s biggest offshore energy explorer for $34 million for economic losses following oil leaks in Bohai Bay last year.

The state-controlled parent of Cnooc Ltd. has received notification from Tianjin Maritime Court that the fishermen are seeking compensation from the company and ConocoPhillips, owners of Penglai 19-3 field, China National Offshore said in a statement on its website today.

The leaks at China?s largest offshore oilfield tainted about 336 square miles of Bohai Bay, prompting the State Oceanic Administration to shut the field Sept. 2. The Tianjin court accepted a complaint from fishermen alleging the spilled oil killed their clams and sea cucumbers, the official Xinhua News Agency reported Dec. 30.

China National Offshore has submitted an application to the Ministry of Civil Affairs to start a maritime environmental protection fund, the company said Dec. 30. The fund won?t be used to compensate economic losses to fishermen, it said. The field, operated by ConocoPhillips, is 51 percent owned by Cnooc.

Source: http://feeds.chron.com/~r/houstonchronicle/topheadlines/~3/YdC0baeqBss/

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