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2011/2072(INI)

Facing the challenge of the safety of offshore oil and gas activities

Procedure completed

Activites

  • 2011/09/13 Text adopted by Parliament, single reading
    • T7-0366/2011 summary
    • Results of vote in Parliament
  • 2011/09/12 Debate in Parliament
  • 2011/07/26 Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
  • 2011/07/26 Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
  • 2011/07/12 Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
  • 2011/05/12 Referral to associated committees announced in Parliament
  • 2011/05/12 Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
  • 2011/05/10 Deadline Amendments
  • 2011/04/07 EP officialisation
  • 2011/03/10 Committee draft report
  • 2010/10/12 Non-legislative basic document published
    • COM(2010)0560 summary
  • 2010/10/12 Date
  • 2010/10/12 Non-legislative basic document
    • COM(2010)0560 summary
    • DG Energy, OETTINGER Günther

Documents

Votes

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - § 2

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 558 68 49 14 1 14 248 159 5 2
Against 94 8 0 0 22 6 0 12 46 2
Abstain 22 3 0 9 7 2 0 0 1 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Paragraph 2

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 558 68 49 14 1 14 248 159 5 2
Against 94 8 0 0 22 6 0 12 46 2
Abstain 22 3 0 9 7 2 0 0 1 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - § 19/1

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 653 80 49 12 29 9 248 174 52 1
Against 12 0 0 2 0 9 1 0 0 0
Abstain 14 0 0 9 2 3 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Paragraph 19/1

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 653 80 49 12 29 9 248 174 52 1
Against 12 0 0 2 0 9 1 0 0 0
Abstain 14 0 0 9 2 3 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - § 19/2

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 555 73 1 1 25 9 242 158 46 1
Against 72 0 46 13 2 10 0 0 1 1
Abstain 15 0 1 9 0 3 0 0 2 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Paragraph 19/2

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 555 73 1 1 25 9 242 158 46 1
Against 72 0 46 13 2 10 0 0 1 1
Abstain 15 0 1 9 0 3 0 0 2 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - § 19/3

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 588 79 1 13 30 10 241 169 45 5
Against 59 0 47 1 0 5 0 0 6 0
Abstain 16 0 0 9 0 6 0 0 1 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Paragraph 19/3

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 588 79 1 13 30 10 241 169 45 5
Against 59 0 47 1 0 5 0 0 6 0
Abstain 16 0 0 9 0 6 0 0 1 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - § 47/1

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 664 79 49 14 31 16 248 175 52 1
Against 12 0 0 9 0 3 0 0 0 0
Abstain 3 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Paragraph 47/1

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 664 79 49 14 31 16 248 175 52 1
Against 12 0 0 9 0 3 0 0 0 0
Abstain 3 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - § 47/2

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 590 75 0 12 31 13 241 168 50 2
Against 58 0 44 10 0 3 1 0 0 0
Abstain 6 0 0 1 0 5 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Paragraph 47/2

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 590 75 0 12 31 13 241 168 50 2
Against 58 0 44 10 0 3 1 0 0 0
Abstain 6 0 0 1 0 5 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - § 47/3

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 427 76 49 13 30 15 24 170 50 0
Against 232 0 0 9 0 3 220 0 0 4
Abstain 3 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Paragraph 47/3

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 427 76 49 13 30 15 24 170 50 0
Against 232 0 0 9 0 3 220 0 0 4
Abstain 3 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - § 47/4

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 367 80 2 10 31 12 11 169 52 0
Against 300 0 45 11 0 8 236 0 0 1
Abstain 4 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Paragraph 47/4

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 367 80 2 10 31 12 11 169 52 0
Against 300 0 45 11 0 8 236 0 0 1
Abstain 4 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - § 47/5

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 361 77 2 9 31 12 11 171 48 0
Against 292 0 45 11 0 5 231 0 0 2
Abstain 7 0 0 2 0 5 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Paragraph 47/5

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 361 77 2 9 31 12 11 171 48 0
Against 292 0 45 11 0 5 231 0 0 2
Abstain 7 0 0 2 0 5 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Am 2

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 407 72 49 14 0 9 248 8 7 1
Against 261 6 0 9 29 5 0 167 45 4
Abstain 10 1 0 0 2 7 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Amendment 2

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 407 72 49 14 0 9 248 8 7 1
Against 261 6 0 9 29 5 0 167 45 4
Abstain 10 1 0 0 2 7 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - § 76/1

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 658 79 49 14 30 16 247 171 52 1
Against 15 0 0 9 0 6 0 0 0 0
Abstain 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Paragraph 76/1

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 658 79 49 14 30 16 247 171 52 1
Against 15 0 0 9 0 6 0 0 0 0
Abstain 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - § 76/2

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 591 75 3 12 29 16 241 166 49 3
Against 61 0 45 11 0 4 1 0 0 0
Abstain 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Paragraph 76/2

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 591 75 3 12 29 16 241 166 49 3
Against 61 0 45 11 0 4 1 0 0 0
Abstain 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - § 76/3

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 225 75 2 11 30 15 9 32 51 1
Against 429 0 45 10 0 5 238 131 0 1
Abstain 5 0 0 0 0 2 0 3 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Paragraph 76/3

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 225 75 2 11 30 15 9 32 51 1
Against 429 0 45 10 0 5 238 131 0 1
Abstain 5 0 0 0 0 2 0 3 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - § 76/4

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 159 19 1 12 31 10 6 29 51 1
Against 502 61 47 9 0 5 241 139 0 1
Abstain 9 0 1 2 0 5 0 1 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Paragraph 76/4

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 159 19 1 12 31 10 6 29 51 1
Against 502 61 47 9 0 5 241 139 0 1
Abstain 9 0 1 2 0 5 0 1 0 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Résolution ITRE

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 602 78 49 15 26 10 247 172 5 2
Against 64 2 0 8 2 6 0 1 45 0
Abstain 13 0 0 0 3 6 2 0 2 0

A7-0290/2011 - Vicky Ford - Resolution ITRE

2011/09/13
Position Total ALDE ECR EFD GUE/NGL NI PPE S&D Verts/ALE correctional
For 602 78 49 15 26 10 247 172 5 2
Against 64 2 0 8 2 6 0 1 45 0
Abstain 13 0 0 0 3 6 2 0 2 0
AmendmentsDossier
261 2011/2072(INI) Facing the challenge of the safety of offshore oil and gas activities
2011/01/06 EMPL 32 amendments...
source: PE-466.973
2011/05/05 JURI 6 amendments...
source: PE-464.814
2011/05/13 ITRE 144 amendments...
source: PE-462.887
2011/05/23 ENVI 79 amendments...
source: PE-465.013

History

(these mark the time of scraping, not the official date of the change)

2012-02-09
activities added
  • date
    2010-10-12
    docs
    • url
      http://eur-lex.europa.eu/smartapi/cgi/sga_doc?smartapi!celexplus!prod!DocNumber&lg=EN&type_doc=COMfinal&an_doc=2010&nu_doc=0560
      text
      • PURPOSE: to respond to the challenge of the safety of offshore oil and gas activities.

        BACKGROUND: the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig in the Gulf of Mexico on 20 April 2010 and the subsequent massive leak from the oil well on the sea bottom caused significant environmental, economic and social damage

        The scale and gravity of the Deepwater Horizon accident prompted the Commission to launch an urgent assessment of safety in offshore oil, as well as gas, exploration and production activities in European waters.

        The review has shown that offshore oil and gas activities in the EU are partly governed by a heterogeneous health, safety and environmental regime. Such a fragmented regime may not provide an adequate response for the risks posed by the evolution of offshore oil and gas industrial activities. It leaves areas of legal uncertainty with regard to companies' obligations and responsibilities and does not allow using to the full extent opportunities offered by EU agencies and instruments.

        While some Member States' regulatory regimes feature high levels of accident prevention through strict health, safety and environment protection requirements, further action is needed to ensure the spread of such best practices throughout the EU by a clear state-of-the-art framework at EU level, clarifying EU legislation and filling identified gaps.

        CONTENT: the review of applicable European legislation and consultations with industry and Member States' competent authorities, five main areas where action is needed to maintain the safety and environmental credentials of the EU were identified:

        • thorough licensing procedures,
        • improved controls by public authorities,
        • addressing gaps in applicable legislation,
        • reinforced EU disaster response, and
        • international cooperation to promote offshore safety and response capabilities worldwide.

        This communication presents the first steps towards the achievement of these objectives:

        1) Ensuring "state-of the-art" practices across Europe: the Commission proposes to work towards an overhauled and more coherent legal framework for offshore exploration and production activities in Europe which ensures EU-wide application of state-of-the-art practices. The risks at stake, the need for legal certainty and the principles of "better regulation" speak in favour of a single new piece of specific legislation for offshore oil and gas activities, possibly supported by soft legal measures (guidelines). In this context,

        • key requirements for the licensing of hydrocarbon exploration and production should be defined at EU level. The Commission will make proposals to that effect in 2011 supported by an impact assessment;
        • the Commission will examine ways of strengthening environmental legislation with regard to combating pollution, inspections, accident prevention and the management of offshore installations;
        • the Directive on Environmental Liability must ensure without any ambiguity that offshore operators are under strict liability, not only for damage caused to protected species, natural habitats and to the waters covered by the Water Framework Directive, but also to all marine areas under the jurisdiction of Member States;
        • the industry should work, where appropriate, in partnership with public authorities, on new emergency response tools which will be deployable and usable on equipment and sites in all marine environments in Europe;
        • industry oversight by public authorities should build on best administrative practices already available in Europe and can be reinforced by actions at EU level. For example, the inclusion of inspection tasks similar to those performed in maritime transport in the activities of the European Maritime Safety Agency (EMSA) could be usefully evaluated.

        2) Application of the precautionary principle: until complete investigation results into the causes of the Deepwater Horizon accident are available, industry efforts in enhancing the safety of operations bring tangible results, and the campaign to duly reinforce the regulatory framework across Europe has run its course, particular restraint and additional caution should be applied both to ongoing exploration or production operations and to new planning and permitting procedures.

        3) Reinforcing the EU's intervention capacity for offshore accidents: in case of a serious accident off any Member State's shores, its response teams must be able to call on all available capacities at hand, including those of the industry and other Member States. In 2010, the Commission will present a Communication with the objective of bringing the wealth of expertise and resources - available at local, national and the EU levels - together into a strengthened EU disaster response system.

        The Commission will seek ways to enhance the availability of emergency response capacities, e.g. by requiring that emergency response equipment be available in each relevant region in the EU, working in cooperation with the industry and Member States and building on existing instruments of the EU Civil Protection Mechanism and EMSA.

        4) New partnerships for offshore safety also outside European waters:

        • the Commission will intensify dialogues with EU neighbours on offshore safety, aiming at new common initiatives establishing emergency information channels, information sharing on exploration and production, promotion of high levels of safety and prevention, and joint enforcement measures such as inspections of installations;
        • industry and Member States will be invited to adopt transparent and binding obligations on companies with headquarters in the EU to follow European standards of safety and accident prevention in all their operations worldwide;
        • existing energy partnerships and dialogues with EU's international partners will be leveraged to initiate an EU-driven global initiative for offshore safety and to agree on general terms of reference of such global action.

        The Commission invites the European Parliament and the Council to support the course of action outlined in this Communication. It will hold further consultations with national regulators and other stakeholders on the scope of the proposed initiatives in view of tabling proposals for concrete legislative and/or non-legislative measures before summer 2011.

      title
      COM(2010)0560
      type
      Non-legislative basic document published
      celexid
      CELEX:52010DC0560:EN
    body
    type
    Non-legislative basic document published
  • body
    EP
    date
    2010-10-12
    type
    Date
  • date
    2010-10-12
    docs
    • url
      http://eur-lex.europa.eu/smartapi/cgi/sga_doc?smartapi!celexplus!prod!DocNumber&lg=EN&type_doc=COMfinal&an_doc=2010&nu_doc=0560
      text
      • PURPOSE: to respond to the challenge of the safety of offshore oil and gas activities.

        BACKGROUND: the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig in the Gulf of Mexico on 20 April 2010 and the subsequent massive leak from the oil well on the sea bottom caused significant environmental, economic and social damage

        The scale and gravity of the Deepwater Horizon accident prompted the Commission to launch an urgent assessment of safety in offshore oil, as well as gas, exploration and production activities in European waters.

        The review has shown that offshore oil and gas activities in the EU are partly governed by a heterogeneous health, safety and environmental regime. Such a fragmented regime may not provide an adequate response for the risks posed by the evolution of offshore oil and gas industrial activities. It leaves areas of legal uncertainty with regard to companies' obligations and responsibilities and does not allow using to the full extent opportunities offered by EU agencies and instruments.

        While some Member States' regulatory regimes feature high levels of accident prevention through strict health, safety and environment protection requirements, further action is needed to ensure the spread of such best practices throughout the EU by a clear state-of-the-art framework at EU level, clarifying EU legislation and filling identified gaps.

        CONTENT: the review of applicable European legislation and consultations with industry and Member States' competent authorities, five main areas where action is needed to maintain the safety and environmental credentials of the EU were identified:

        • thorough licensing procedures,
        • improved controls by public authorities,
        • addressing gaps in applicable legislation,
        • reinforced EU disaster response, and
        • international cooperation to promote offshore safety and response capabilities worldwide.

        This communication presents the first steps towards the achievement of these objectives:

        1) Ensuring "state-of the-art" practices across Europe: the Commission proposes to work towards an overhauled and more coherent legal framework for offshore exploration and production activities in Europe which ensures EU-wide application of state-of-the-art practices. The risks at stake, the need for legal certainty and the principles of "better regulation" speak in favour of a single new piece of specific legislation for offshore oil and gas activities, possibly supported by soft legal measures (guidelines). In this context,

        • key requirements for the licensing of hydrocarbon exploration and production should be defined at EU level. The Commission will make proposals to that effect in 2011 supported by an impact assessment;
        • the Commission will examine ways of strengthening environmental legislation with regard to combating pollution, inspections, accident prevention and the management of offshore installations;
        • the Directive on Environmental Liability must ensure without any ambiguity that offshore operators are under strict liability, not only for damage caused to protected species, natural habitats and to the waters covered by the Water Framework Directive, but also to all marine areas under the jurisdiction of Member States;
        • the industry should work, where appropriate, in partnership with public authorities, on new emergency response tools which will be deployable and usable on equipment and sites in all marine environments in Europe;
        • industry oversight by public authorities should build on best administrative practices already available in Europe and can be reinforced by actions at EU level. For example, the inclusion of inspection tasks similar to those performed in maritime transport in the activities of the European Maritime Safety Agency (EMSA) could be usefully evaluated.

        2) Application of the precautionary principle: until complete investigation results into the causes of the Deepwater Horizon accident are available, industry efforts in enhancing the safety of operations bring tangible results, and the campaign to duly reinforce the regulatory framework across Europe has run its course, particular restraint and additional caution should be applied both to ongoing exploration or production operations and to new planning and permitting procedures.

        3) Reinforcing the EU's intervention capacity for offshore accidents: in case of a serious accident off any Member State's shores, its response teams must be able to call on all available capacities at hand, including those of the industry and other Member States. In 2010, the Commission will present a Communication with the objective of bringing the wealth of expertise and resources - available at local, national and the EU levels - together into a strengthened EU disaster response system.

        The Commission will seek ways to enhance the availability of emergency response capacities, e.g. by requiring that emergency response equipment be available in each relevant region in the EU, working in cooperation with the industry and Member States and building on existing instruments of the EU Civil Protection Mechanism and EMSA.

        4) New partnerships for offshore safety also outside European waters:

        • the Commission will intensify dialogues with EU neighbours on offshore safety, aiming at new common initiatives establishing emergency information channels, information sharing on exploration and production, promotion of high levels of safety and prevention, and joint enforcement measures such as inspections of installations;
        • industry and Member States will be invited to adopt transparent and binding obligations on companies with headquarters in the EU to follow European standards of safety and accident prevention in all their operations worldwide;
        • existing energy partnerships and dialogues with EU's international partners will be leveraged to initiate an EU-driven global initiative for offshore safety and to agree on general terms of reference of such global action.

        The Commission invites the European Parliament and the Council to support the course of action outlined in this Communication. It will hold further consultations with national regulators and other stakeholders on the scope of the proposed initiatives in view of tabling proposals for concrete legislative and/or non-legislative measures before summer 2011.

      title
      COM(2010)0560
      type
      Non-legislative basic document
      celexid
      CELEX:52010DC0560:EN
    body
    EC
    commission
    • DG
      Energy
      Commissioner
      OETTINGER Günther
    type
    Non-legislative basic document
  • date
    2011-03-10
    docs
    • url
      http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE460.753
      type
      Committee draft report
      title
      PE460.753
    body
    EP
    type
    Committee draft report
  • body
    EP
    date
    2011-04-07
    type
    EP officialisation
  • body
    EP
    date
    2011-05-10
    type
    Deadline Amendments
  • date
    2011-05-12
    body
    type
    Referral to associated committees announced in Parliament
  • date
    2011-05-12
    body
    EP
    type
    Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
    committees
  • date
    2011-07-12
    text
    • The Committee on Industry, Research and Energy adopted the own-initiative report by Vicky FORD (ECR, UK) on facing the challenges of the safety of offshore oil and gas activities, in response to the Commission Communication on the subject.

      Regulatory approach: whilst acknowledging that issuing licences and other authorisations for the exploration and exploitation of hydrocarbon resources is a Member State prerogative, the report stresses that licensing procedures must conform to certain common EU criteria and highlights the fact that Member States should apply the precautionary principle when issuing authorisation for the exploration and exploitation of hydrocarbon resources. Members  insists, therefore, that the introduction of an EU-wide moratorium on all new deep-sea oil drilling in EU waters would be a disproportionate reaction to the need to secure high safety standards across the EU.

      The committee stresses that all Member States' legislative and regulatory frameworks should adopt a robust regime in line with the current best practice where all drilling proposals are accompanied by a safety case, which must be approved before operations can begin, including independent third-party verification procedures and reviews at regular and appropriate intervals by independent experts (at least every five years). It recommends that EMSA be designated as an independent third party to increase the level of coordination in the event of an accident.

      The report goes on to recommend :

      • an extension of the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Directive to cover all offshore projects phases (exploratory and operational) and specific requirements for EIAs in the case of deep water, complex wells;
      • examining the current regulatory framework regarding the decommissioning of existing drilling infrastructure, and to clarify, if necessary by way of legislation, the responsibility of operators;
      • considering the case for extending the sound principles contained within its legislation for the control of onshore hazards (SEVESO II and III) to legislation aimed at offshore oil and gas activities.

      Members welcome the fact that the Commission intends to review Directive 92/91/EEC, and calls for an approach based on common standards, in order to avoid disparities in treatment between workers within the same company, depending on their place of work. They call, furthermore, for a transparent, efficient, consistent set of rules applying to all employees working in the offshore sector.

      The report stresses the importance of regular, varied and rigorous inspections carried out by independent, trained specialists acquainted with local conditions. ; believes that an operator's inspection regimes must also be subject to third-party verification; supports the efforts already undertaken by certain Member States to increase the number of rigorous inspections; stresses the importance of the independence of the national authorities, and of the transparent handling of possible conflicts of interests faced by inspectors with potential future employers. It emphasises the need for systems providing for effective checks by inspection bodies, using innovative methods such as specific audits of working time or rescue operations, and for the possibility of applying sanctions in the event of violations of worker health and safety.

      Prevention, exchange of information and best-practice: Members believe that fora akin to the NSOAF in the North Sea should be established for Member States around the Mediterranean, Baltic and Black Seas to oversee the adoption and enforcement of minimum standards. In this regard they welcome the Commission's initiative to establish the Mediterranean Offshore Authorities Forum (MOAF) and encourage the participation of non-EU countries. They also welcome the Commission's initiative to establish joint EU/NSOAF meetings as an opportunity to exchange best practices across the EU.

      The report states that a preventive health and safety culture needs to be developed by engaging employers and trade unions and securing the active participation of workers, in particular by consulting them, involving them in devising and applying safety procedures and informing them of the potential risk involved. It encourages therefore regular training programmes for all permanent and contract employees as well as employers.

      National competent authorities are asked to collate, share and publicise information from incident-reporting, with due regard for commercial sensitivities. The Commission for its part should assess: the efficacy of the various existing information channels, the case for rationalisation and/or the case for establishing new international regimes, with due regard for the ensuing administrative burden.

      Licensing and consent to drill: the report recommends that licensing and health and safety functions should be separated in all Member States. It considers that oil and gas operators must be required, in the licensing procedure and throughout the operational period and at all phases of offshore projects, to demonstrate that they have sufficient financial capacity in place to secure remediation in relation to environmental damage caused by the specific activities they carry out - whether through mandatory industry mutual schemes, through mandatory insurance, or through a mixed scheme which guarantees financial security.

      Contingency planning: the report advocates the use of site-specific contingency plans that identify hazards, assess potential pollution sources and effects, outline a response strategy and outline drilling plans for potential relief wells. For complex wells, or challenging drill conditions, the contingency plan should be assessed, consulted and approved contemporaneously with other regulatory approval processes (e.g. those related to environmental impacts or well design). in all cases, operations must not commence until a contingency plan has been approved by the Member State in which they are to be conducted.

      Members suggest that available equipment for capping all potential spills should be an essential part of contingency plans and that such equipment should be available in proximity to installations to allow for timely deployment in the event of a major accident. They take the view that the use of the EMSA's response capabilities should be explicitly extended to cover prevention and response to pollution originating from offshore oil and gas exploration and production activities. They urge companies to continue to set aside funds for research and development relating to new prevention and accident remediation technologies.

      Disaster response: the report recognises that industry bears the primary responsibility for reacting to disasters. It welcomes joint industry initiatives to develop, mobilise and deploy resources to counter oil spills. It stresses that the public sector has an important role in the regulation, safety and coordination of a disaster response. The committee recommends that more emphasis should be placed on systematic training, particularly on the practical application of disaster response equipment. It calls on Member States and the Commission to ensure that the licensing system includes protection financing instruments apt to ensure that in the event of major incidents the necessary financial resources can be urgently mobilised to compensate for the economic, social and environmental losses occasioned by an oil spill or gas leak.

      Liability: Members stress that while in principle financial guarantees can be provided through either insurance or industry mutualisation, it is important to ensure that operators demonstrate that financial guarantees are in place to cover the full cost of clean-up and compensation in the case of a major disaster, and that risks and liabilities are not externalised to smaller companies that are more likely to declare insolvency in the event of an accident. They recognise the merit of communal funds such as OPOL in the North Sea and calls for such funds to be established in each EU sea area. The report calls for membership to be mandatory for operators and for legal certainty to be ensured so as to provide a safety-net mechanism designed to reassure the Member States, the maritime sector, in particular fishermen, and taxpayers.

      The committee considers that the scope of the Environmental Liability Directive should be extended so that the "polluter pays" principle and strict liability apply to all damage caused to marine waters and biodiversity, so that oil and gas companies can be held accountable for any and all environmental damage they cause, and can assume full liability, without any upper limit, for potential damage, secured by reserves held by the operators. It recommends that Member States consider adopting and strengthening deterrents against negligence and non-compliance such as fines, withdrawal of licences, and criminal liability for employees.

      Relationship with third countries: Members urge the industry to employ at least EU environmental and safety standards or their equivalent wherever in the world they are operating. They urge the Commission and the Member States to continue to contribute to offshore initiatives within the framework of the G20, while taking into consideration the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

      The Commission is also asked to: (i) to engage actively with other states bordering EU sea areas to ensure that regulatory frameworks and supervision provide equally high levels of safety; (ii) to launch a debate on regulations in the areas of liability for environmental damage and financial guarantees that would also include third countries; iii) to work with partners and neighbours to achieve a special regime for any operations in the Arctic.

    body
    EP
    committees
    type
    Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
  • date
    2011-07-26
    docs
    • url
      http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A7-2011-0290&language=EN
      type
      Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
      title
      A7-0290/2011
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    type
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      Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
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    Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
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    Debate in Parliament
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    Text adopted by Parliament, single reading
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other added
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dossier_of_the_committee
ITRE/7/04889
reference
2011/2072(INI)
title
Facing the challenge of the safety of offshore oil and gas activities
legal_basis
  • Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 048
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Procedure completed
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