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Valentine’s themed protest targets Rosebank oil field

The Canary by The Canary
13 February 2026
in Environment, News, UK
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Climate campaign group Fossil Free London has held a Valentine’s Day themed protest in St. Dunstan’s in the East churchyard. The stunt comes ahead of the UK government’s decision on whether to approve or reject the Rosebank oil field.

Campaigners stood in couples – wearing suits and pastel frilly dresses – holding up oversized love heart sweet placards that read: ‘Save Me’, ‘Hot Earth’ and ‘Stop Rosebank’.

Rishi Sunak’s Conservative government originally approved the oil field in 2023. But the Scottish courts overturned this decision in January 2025. The ruling demanded that Rosebank’s primary owner, Norwegian state oil giant Equinor, provide a more detailed assessment of the project’s full climate impacts.

Burning Rosebank’s total estimated oil and gas reserves would emit more carbon dioxide than the world’s 28 lowest-income countries combined release annually.

Rosebank: UK pays, Norway profits

Equinor would sell the vast majority of Rosebank’s oil on the international market for export. It would neither lower energy bills nor increase energy security in the UK. Meanwhile, UK public money would pick up the bill for most of its development costs.

Ahead of Equinor’s profits announcement at the start of February, Fossil Free London staged a protest over its role in Rosebank.

Most of Rosebank’s profits would flow into Norway’s substantial sovereign wealth fund. This potential megapolluter could also send profits of over £200m to the Delek Group. Delek is an Israeli fuel conglomerate that the UN has flagged for human rights violations in Palestine.

Robin Wells, Director of Fossil Free London, said:

This Valentine’s Day the U.K. government will be deciding whether Rosebank is hot…or not. But we know that Rosebank will be too hot to handle…Labour, save us from all new oil projects, because Rosebank will kill millions!

Featured image via Fossil Free London

Tags: climate crisisfossil fuels
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