LITHUANIA BOTHERED WITH RUSSIAN OIL WELL PROXIMITY TO COURLAND SPIT
Published:
29 July 2004 y., Thursday
On Tuesday the Lukoil-Kaliningradmorneft subsidiary of the Russian Lukoil concern will put into operation the entire technological chain, beginning from the production of oil at the D-6 field on the Baltic shelf near Lithuania, the administration of the Kaliningrad region has said.
Lithuania will one more time ask Russia to provide the results of independent examination on the impact of the oil well on the environment and information on the exact time of putting into operation of the well, lying adjacent to the Lithuanian national park Courland Spit. It is listed among the UNESCO world heritage and Lithuania is concerned over possible oil leaks, threatening with an irreparable damage to the unique ecological system.
In the interview to the National Radio Alexandras Spruogis, secretary of the Environmental Protection Ministry, said that Russia has not carried out an independent examination of the well's impact on the environment.
The ministerial spokesman said that Russia has been obliged before February to conduct the examination with the inclusion of international experts in the assessment commission. If not, the Courland Spit will be automatically listed as an endangered global object.
Lithuania and Russia included the Courland Spit in the UNESCO list in 2000.
Discovered in 1983, the D-6 oil field is the largest on the sea shelf on the coast of the Kaliningrad region. By preliminary information, it can annually yield about 600,000 tons of oil. The well is located 23 kilometers away from the Courland Spit and five kilometers off Russia's sea border with Lithuania.
Inspecting the D-6 service forms and records last November, UNESCO experts found its operation being a danger to the environmental security of the Courland Spit national park.
Šaltinis:
RIA Novosti
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The president of TEPCO gets an angry reaction over Japan's nuclear crisis from people forced from their homes because of it.
more »
Keeping up with the global trend, a creative dessert shop in Beijing sells the most fashionable iPhone cookies and Chanel bag cakes.
more »
A Cuban cigar roller tops his previous world record for rolling the longest cigar and looks forward to being crowned with his fifth Guinness World Record.
more »
Gaza residents are hopeful that the Rafah border crossing will be opened after Hamas and Fatah sign an Egyptian-brokered unity deal.
more »
Fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld creates a hotel suite made entirely from chocolate.
more »
Music fans in Poland attempt to beat the Guinness World Record for the largest guitar ensemble.
more »
Clarence House releases official portraits of the Royal Wedding as the newlyweds emerge on the morning after and the clean-up begins.
more »
U.S. President Barack Obama announces the U.S. has captured and killed Osama Bin Laden in Pakistan.
more »
German cycling fanatic Didi Senft presents his Royal Rikshaw, a bicycle created in honor of the wedding between the UK's Prince William and Kate Middleton.
more »
Officials in Afghanistan show a tunnel dug by Taliban insurgents through which hundreds of prisoners escaped.
more »