Shell and the environmental marketing campaign group Greenpeace have settled a multimillion-pound lawsuit introduced over an at-sea protest.
The oil agency introduced the case, described by Greenpeace as an act of “intimidation”, in London over an incident in January final yr that noticed four activists board a production vessel whereas in transit close to the Canary Islands.
The 4, who have been campaigning towards oil drilling, used ropes to hoist themselves on to the vessel from inflatable boats that chased the ship at excessive velocity.
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They stayed aboard till it reached Norway two weeks later.
Shell introduced the case on the grounds that boarding a transferring vessel at sea was “illegal and intensely harmful”.
It additionally complained of a spike in prices, akin to for wider safety, within the wake of the protest.
Greenpeace confirmed it had agreed to pay £300,000 to the Royal Nationwide Lifeboat Institute in settlement of the case.
It additionally agreed to keep away from protesting for a interval at 4 Shell websites within the northern North Sea.
Nevertheless, it stated there have been no plans to desert protests within the wider North Sea.
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The group claimed the corporate, which was understood to have been searching for round £700,000, backed down because the case had change into a “PR millstone tied round its neck”.
Greenpeace Worldwide stated: “The settlement follows over a yr of sustained campaigning by Greenpeace towards Shell’s lawsuit.
“Consultants have described the case as a strategic lawsuit towards public participation (SLAPP), a kind of abusive lawsuit generally introduced by rich firms to silence critics.
“The Greenpeace defendants confronted over $11m in damages and authorized prices on account of the lawsuit.
“As a part of the ultimate settlement, they may settle for no legal responsibility and pay no cash to Shell.”
Shell stated Greenpeace’s settlement to make a cost to the RNLI recognised its concern that Greenpeace’s protest at sea was “a severe danger to security and life”.
“Shell is happy that the dispute has been settled and {that a} cost in lieu of the prices it incurred can profit a charity engaged on security at sea.
“For Shell, the precise to protest is prime and has by no means been at subject. As a substitute, this case was about an unlawful boarding by protesters which a Excessive Court docket decide described as “placing their lives and, not directly, the lives of the crew in danger”.
“He was additionally clear that Greenpeace may nonetheless protest from a secure distance and their human rights weren’t infringed.”
The settlement was reached as Greenpeace stays concerned in a separate case towards the federal government’s approval of growth plans for Shell’s Jackdaw fuel discipline.