Turkey Says Greece Has No Right to Oppose Its Seismic Work in the Mediterranean

Tuvan Gumrukcu
Tuesday, October 13, 2020

Turkey said on Monday Greece had no right to oppose Turkish seismic exploration work 15 kilometers (9.3 miles) from its mainland in the Eastern Mediterranean and on its continental shelf, as tensions between the NATO members spiked again.

Greece and Turkey traded barbs again on Monday over offshore rights. Athens vowed to push the EU to activate sanctions against Ankara after the departure of a Turkish vessel to conduct work south of the Greek island of Kastellorizo, which is close to Turkey's southern coast.

In a statement, Turkey's Foreign Ministry said the activity range of its Oruc Reis seismic survey vessel lied 15 kilometers from Turkey and 425 kilometers from Greece, and that it was "fully within Turkish continental shelf".

"It is unacceptable for there to be opposition against our country, which has the longest coastline to the Eastern Mediterranean, operating 15 kilometers from its mainland," it said adding Greece's criticisms were "baseless accusations with no standing in international law."

(Reporting by Tuvan Gumrukcu; Editing by Jonathan Spicer)

Categories: Energy Vessels Geoscience Activity Seismic Mediterranean Sea

Related Stories

DEME’s Orion Vessel Heads to US After Finishing Scottish Offshore Wind Job

First US-built WTIV Charybdis Launched

Saipem Completes Ops on LNG Scheme Offshore Greece

Current News

CBED Signs Up Siemens Gamesa for Wind Creation SOV’s First Job

Deal in Place for 1GW+ Offshore Wind Farm in Southeast Australia

TotalEnergies Grows Stake in Giant Moho Field Offshore Congo

Eni Agrees to Merge UK Upstream Assets with Ithaca Energy

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News