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Author Topic: Oil stirs troubled waters  (Read 3009 times)
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Donna
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« on: 27-Apr-10, 08:27:23 AM »



As anyone who's ever dressed a salad in vinaigrette will testify, oil and water just don't mix.

That's especially true of crude oil and sea water that supports sea lifeforms from fish to birds to plankton to mammals.

So when we discover that 42,000 gallons of oil are leaking daily from a stricken well at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, and that it could take months to stem the flow, a little concern is entirely natural.
If the pessimistic "several months" timeline turns out to be correct, and if the oil continues to gush at its current rate, we could be looking at an eventual volume of 4 million or so gallons - which puts it in the same league as the Exxon Valdez spill of 1989 (11 million gallons) or the Hebei Spirit incident of 2007 (2.8 million).

However, past experiences may be a poor guide when it comes to projecting damage from the Deepwater Horizon rig.

Firstly, this is what you might term a slow, sustained release some 60km from the edge of land, whereas most recent spills have resulted from the sudden, catastrophic impacts of tankers close to the shore.

So whereas the oil from the Exxon Valdez, or the Prestige that impaled itself on Galician rocks in 2002, was virtually certain to come on shore, there's no guarantee the coasts around the Gulf of Mexico will be impacted this time. So far, weather conditions have confined the slick offshore.

The coast of Louisiana, seen from the air, is one of the planet's most extraordinary pieces of topography. (Have a look on the Google map satellite view).

Long tendrils of land curl out into the sea like some skeletal fern, encompassing channels that carry Mississippi water far out into the gulf.

The inaccessibility of these extremities and the fertile waters have created ideal nesting grounds for birds such as the locally endangered brown pelicans.

The unusual topography of land and water in the Breton National Wildlife Refuge, about 100km to the north of the stricken oil well, supports an unusual mix of seabirds, wading birds, rabbits and loggerhead turtles in vegetation that includes mangroves.

Exxon_Valdez_spillIf the slick heads east, it will eventually encounter the equally ecological important Florida Keys - and beyond that, the Bahamas.

Whether it does end up in one of these important areas, or whether it disperses quickly and relatively innocuously in open water, is conjecture for the moment.

However, the possibility of environmental damage plus the loss of 11 lives during the rig fire is already prompting questions about the oil industry's place around US coasts.

Just three weeks ago, President Barack Obama outlined plans to relax bans on oil exploration along huge stretches of US coast.

Areas of the Gulf of Mexico just east of the Deepwater Horizon site are among those where rigs could be permitted in future.

The measure was, in large part, a concession aimed at securing wider support for the climate and energy bill being re-framed by the cross-party Senatorial triumvirate of Joe Lieberman, Lindsay Graham and John Kerry (co-incidentally, a process that appears in some disarray right now).

Key aims of the new bill are support for the US energy industry and a desire to reduce US dependence on oil imports.

But even as these measures promise to create employment along US shores, the risks attendant on oil exploration and production have the potential to take away livelihoods, such as those of fishermen who are already expressing concern about the leaking well.

So it's not a simplistic equation. It's about risks and uncertainties, including the vagaries of currents and tides. It's about political and economic trade-offs, and about balancing short-term and long-term risks and benefits.

The US authorities are deploying a battery of tools against the Deepwater Horizon slick - when weather permits - including booms and dispersants.

Will they prove effective? Will the submersibles now being deployed to block the well's flow be able to finish the exacting task?

The fishermen, the bird-lovers and the oilmen all have an interest in the answers.
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Bobbie Ireland
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« Reply #1 on: 27-Apr-10, 08:36:08 AM »

Donna, I was about to email and ask whether anyone had an update on this situation. Thanks for this!

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Donna
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« Reply #2 on: 28-Apr-10, 11:37:42 PM »

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/04/100427-energy-gulf-oil-rig-spill-burn-fire/

  A NASA satellite picture shows the oil spill as a silvery region near the U.S. Gulf Coast.

HOME TO ALLIGATORS, BROWN PELICANS,
PEREGRINE FALCONS, AND PIPING PLOVERS
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Donna
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« Reply #3 on: 29-Apr-10, 09:29:13 PM »

US oil leak far worse than first thought

An oil leak in the Gulf Of Mexico threatening the coast of Louisiana, Texas and the Mississippi estuary is five times worse than previously thought.

The oil is spewing from a rig that exploded and sank last week.

It is now estimated that 5,000 barrels a day are spilling into the ocean rather than the 1,000 the US Coast Guard previously announced.

On Wednesday (local time) clean-up crews conducted a controlled burn of some parts of the slick to stop it reaching environmentally sensitive wetlands.

But authorities have not been able to plug the leak which began when the explosion sank the Deepwater Horizon oil rig leased by BP.

The woman leading the response is Rear Admiral Mary Landry of the US Coast Guard.

"Initially we agreed the estimate was 1,000 barrels per day; working with NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) daily with overflights, applying disbursements, looking at the trajectories, where the oil going," she said.

"Factoring in the weather, there's a lot of variables in this; this is not an exact science when you estimate the amount of oil.

"However, NOAA is telling me now they prefer we use 5,000 barrels a day as an estimate for what's actually leaked from this well and will continue to leak until BP secures the source."

Complicating matters for BP and the clean-up crews is that previously it was thought there were two leaks - now there are reports of a third.

Authorities are desperate to stop oil polluting the Louisiana coast which is just 37 kilometres away.

Environmental impact

Burning the oil is one way to do it, but that is not enough says Jacqueline Savitz from Oceana, an ocean conservation group.

"This oil spill is a no-win proposition. It's pumping oil into the ocean. We don't know when it will stop," she said.

"The alternatives that have been proposed, such as burning the oil off, may or may not work. They're experimental but they may be the lesser of two evils.

"It will take some of the oil out of the picture, but there'll still be some oil remaining in the ocean and washing up on the beach."

Director of the Oiled Wildlife Care Network in Los Angeles, Michael Ziccardi, says a small group of whales has travelled through the slick, but so far no other animals have been affected.

"If the oil does reach the shore, it's likely animals will be. If it remains offshore, or if the disbursement and the in-situ burning are successful to dissipate the oil, really the highest-risk animals at this point would be the sea turtles because they do feed at the water's surface out there," he said.

Mr Ziccardi says it is vital to keep the oil offshore to stop large-scale environmental damage.

He is going to Louisiana to help plan the emergency response if animals are affected by oil.

"The impact could be extremely large. The marshlands there are very sensitive, very difficult to clean up once it enters that area," he said.

"Certain barrier islands in that area have thousands of breeding pairs of brown pelicans for example, lots of shore birds, lots of other wading birds in the area.

"So, in addition to that you've got impacts on reptiles, amphibians, all the different animals in the ecosystem, so the impact could be very large."

The Gulf of Mexico spill is drawing comparisons to last year's leak from a rig off the coast of Australia that could not be plugged for 10 weeks.

An inquiry has just wrapped up into that incident and the findings are expected to be handed down at the end of the month.

The explosion on the rig in the Gulf of Mexico is the subject of an investigation, but for now that will have to wait.

It is feared changes in the currents and winds could see oil reach land by the weekend.

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jeanne
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« Reply #4 on: 29-Apr-10, 11:40:08 PM »

When they first reported that it was not leaking badly, I doubted it.  Then today came this report.  Sheesh. confused
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« Reply #5 on: 30-Apr-10, 05:17:16 AM »

I was up most of the night watching CNN and how awful this will be for the food chain. How devastating for nesting birds....dolphins, whales and just about everything....and they can't FIX it YET! May take weeks or even months to cap it. On a slightly lighter note...wildlife enthusiasts are prepared for what's about to happen.  crying
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