Text Only
Search

 
Oil Firm Total May Appeal French Court Ruling


18 January 2008

The oil company Total SA suggests it may appeal a ruling by a court in France to pay almost three-hundred million dollars for a 1999 oil spill. Lisa Bryant reports from Paris that environmentalist said Thursday the ruling may create a key precedent for future spills.

Total said in a statement there were numerous grounds to appeal Wednesday's verdict by a French court that ordered the oil company and three other defendants to pay a total of $285 million in fines and compensation for the damages of a vast 1999 spill off the coast of Brittany.

The spill occurred after an aging ship, Erika, split in two in the Bay of Biscay. It was carrying 20-thousand tons of toxic heavy fuel oil which polluted 250 miles of French coast, causing major environmental damage.

The court blamed Total for carelessness in leasing Erika, a 23-year old vessel registered in Malta, which sailed under various names and owners. But Total was acquitted for charges of complicity in endangering people related to the vast spill.

Pascal Husting, director of Greenpeace France, one of the plaintiffs in the case, has hailed the decision, predicting a virtual revolution in maritime transport. He says it will set a groundbreaking precedent when it comes to future liability for pollution damaged.

"We expect this ruling to revolutionize maritime transport in such a way that all parties of maritime transport will be held responsible if something happens. So they can no longer hide (behind) almost mafia-like constructions, like the ship owner being in one country, the flag of a ship being in another country, the operations manager being in a third country. This will no longer be possible because the court in France has ruled that whatever (damage occurs) they will be held responsible," he said.

The French government has also praised the court's decision. Concern about aging tankers is not new in Europe. Another 2002 oil spill off the coast of Galicia in northern Spain, again caused by an aging vessel, pushed the European Union to ban single-hulled tankers carrying heavy fuel oil.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Top Story
French President, Barack Obama Meet in Paris

  More Stories
Lawyers for Karadzic to Appeal Extradition to The Hague
US Expands Sanctions Against 'Illegitimate' Zimbabwe Government  Audio Clip Available
Rice Urges Pakistan to Clamp Down on Militants Along Border  Audio Clip Available
US Warns Iran Time Running Out for Nuclear Deal  Audio Clip Available
Serial Explosions Hit Southern Indian City  Audio Clip Available
Cyprus' Rival Leaders Agree to Start Historic Reunification Talks  Audio Clip Available
North Korean Silence Creates Gaps in Tourist Killing Probe  Audio Clip Available
Indian Government Expected to Revive Economic Reform After Confidence Vote  Audio Clip Available
Scientists Solve Mystery of Brilliant Northern, Southern Lights  Audio Clip Available