Earlier this month the Entity said it had been taken by surprise that the Algarve’s Intermunicipal Community had “expressed concerns” about the alleged “secrecy” surrounding the concessions for prospecting in the region.
Earlier in 2015, a collective of environmental associations came together to form a group against oil exploration in the Algarve, in the wake of news that companies could be drilling off the Algarve coast in the very near future.
The Platform for an Oil Free Algarve (PALP) brought together the informal citizens group Glocal-Faro, the national conservation NGO Quercus, the regional NGO with the same goals Almargem, the bird protection association SPEA and News Loop, to challenge the “deafening silence” surrounding the situation.
According to a statement made by PALP: “There was no public debate about the consequences for the region regarding drilling for oil, nor have there been any social or environmental impact reports.”
The collective added that “nothing is known of the contract between the state and oil exploration companies. The silence and secrecy regarding this subject from national, regional and local government is deafening”.
Some of the major concerns from PALP regarding Algarve oil exploration surround the “potential environmental impacts” and the “incompatibility between the Algarve being a tourist region of excellence while also one of oil drilling”.
The associations claim that any drilling for oil in the Algarve should be considered to be “high risk” because of the area being in a “high seismic hazard zone” and warned of the consequences of any possible accidental oil spill on the coast, which would represent a “loss of resources” to “equally important activities in the Algarve, such as fishing, aquaculture and salt production.”
While the environmental ramifications are key to the collective, equally so are the social consequences with the association saying that Algarve citizens had been left to one side without any public debate on the oil issue.
One of the areas in the Algarve that is expected to be targeted for oil exploration is located around 8.3 kilometres from the shore and at this distance it is expected that the gas towers and flames they emit will be visible from a number of beaches in the Algarve.
Repsol is one of the companies that has signed a contract with the Portuguese State for exploration and exploitation of natural gas and oil in the Algarve and the president of the Spanish multinational, Antonio Brufau, said last July that the company would start drilling and natural gas exploration in the Algarve “in 2016”.
Algarve seeks answers over fuel prospecting
in Algarve · 23 Dec 2015, 12:39 · 1 Comments

I have just seen an article about an incident, which could have been the North Seas’ Deepwater Horizon, but for favourable winds. The article in the Guardian does mention petroleum condensate causing damage to marine life: http://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/dec/22/oil-company-total-fined-1m-north-sea-gas-leak. But the official press release from the HSE (Health and Safety Executive) does not mention any environmental impacts of the release: http://press.hse.gov.uk/2015/total-ep-uk-ltd-received-record-fine-following-largest-ever-north-sea-gas-release/. There was another incident reported earlier this year: http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/energy-giant-shell-fined-22000-6890636. This is how the incident was reported in the Guardian, which includes other failures by Shell: http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2011/aug/22/shell-north-sea-oil-leak.
Another major incident in a mature oil and gas field, by a major oil and gas company. There a numerous incidents that occur in the oil & gas fields, that the public never hear about: http://www.hse.gov.uk/offshore/statistics.htm.
So how can any politician allow oil and gas or even unconventional production in environmentally sensitive areas with a clear concisions? There is also another group of concerned citizens who have formed ASMAA: http://www.asmaa-algarve.org/index.php/en/,
By Patrick Sudlow from Algarve on 24 Dec 2015, 13:00