ƶijϻ

Turkey Extends Seismic Survey in Contested Waters in Eastern Mediterranean

Tuvan Gumrukcu and Ezgi Erkoyun
Monday, November 23, 2020

Turkey said it was extending the seismic survey work being carried out by its Oruc Reis ship in a disputed part of the eastern Mediterranean until Nov. 29, a move that could add to tensions in the region.

NATO members Turkey and Greece are locked in a dispute over the extent of their continental shelves and conflicting claims to hydrocarbon resources in the eastern Mediterranean.

The row erupted in August when Turkey sent the Oruc Reis into waters also claimed by Greece and Cyprus.

It had been expected to finish its survey work by Nov. 23, but a Turkish naval maritime notice said on Saturday the vessel would continue work in an area west of Cyprus for six days longer.

Ankara pulled the vessel out in September to allow for diplomacy with Greece, but then sent it back to the area, prompting an angry reaction from Greece, France, and Germany.

President Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey had acted patiently on the eastern Mediterranean issue despite what he called provocations by Greece and Greek Cypriots.

"EU accusations... about our determined research and drilling activities in the eastern Mediterranean to protect Turkey's rights and Turkish Cypriot interests do not reflect history, law and reality," Erdogan said in a speech.

 (Reporting by Tuvan Gumrukcu and Ezgi Erkoyun Editing by Mark Potter and Helen Popper)

Categories: Legal ƶijϻ Energy Geoscience Activity Regulations Seismic Mediterranean Sea

Related Stories

Scarborough FPU's Topsides and Hull Come Together in Major Engineering Feat (Video)

Seatrium, Höegh Evi Agree LNG Tanker Conversion Job into FSRU Bound for Egypt

US Firm Debuts 20K Intervention Solution at Gulf of America Deepwater Field

Current News

Industry Leaders Set to Discuss Future of US ƶijϻ CCS Market

Polish Shipbuilder Lays Keel for DOF’s New ƶijϻ Support Vessel

ADNOC Partners with ExxonMobil, Occidental to Boost UAE Oil and Gas Capacity

Estonia Grants First ƶijϻ Wind Construction Permit

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News