Log in

View Full Version : Oil Spill: Gulf of Mexico Disaster "Growing by the Moment"



Jacobinist
28th April 2010, 03:39
The oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico has tripled in size in 24 hours. Company officials remain confident that they can contain it before it hits land, but environmentalists are increasingly doubtful.

Atlanta - Capping the renegade wellhead spewing 42,000 gallons of oil a day into the Gulf of Mexico will take an unprecedented effort by British Petroleum and federal agencies, who face mounting difficulties to contain the oil spill that threatens both environmental and political disaster.
The explosion, the sinking, and now the spill from the Transocean Deepwater Horizon oil rig couldn't have come at a worse time for President Obama and other proponents of expanding deepwater oil exploration off the US.

Though the accident is largely an aberration for the industry, which has made significant safety improvements during the past 40 years, it has raised tensions in states that could be affected by the president's decision last month to expand offshore drilling.

"If this doesn't give somebody pause, there's something wrong," Florida Gov. Charlie Crist tells the Miami Herald.

"This is really sort of one of the nightmares for all the companies involved, and obviously the people who live along the coast are sort of helpless," says Tyler Priest, an oil industry historian at the University of Houston. "I'm sure it's going to galvanize the political opponents of expanded offshore leasing."

Louisiana's Fisheries

The spill endangers the fragile fish and shrimp nurseries of the Louisiana wetlands, which could be affected as early as Saturday. Up until this weekend, the Coast Guard and rig operator British Petroleum remained adamant that the spill could be contained. But environmentalists and lawmakers who oppose more coastal drilling are growing skeptical.
"The explosion, ensuring fire, and continuing spill raise serious concerns about the industry's claims that their operations and technology are safe enough to put rigs in areas that are environmentally sensitive or are critical to tourism or fishing industries," Sen. Bill Nelson (D) of Florida writes in an April 26 letter requesting congressional hearings on exploration safety.

The spill presents a paradox for Louisiana. Avid defenders of the oil industry, Louisiana shoreline communities now face the greatest danger from the spill, which could threaten the region's prolific commercial and sport fishing industries.

"We're very concerned that east of the Mississippi River, based on currents and winds we're dealing with now, this oil will reach the shore," Chuck Wilson, a Louisiana State University oceanography and coastal sciences professor, tells CNN. "That could be a huge environmental problem and a significant financial blow to fisheries."

Deeper Exploration, Harder Cleanups

A blowout on the Ixtoc I rig in 1979 off the coast of Mexico spilled 33,000 barrels of oil a day, threatened the coast of Texas, and took nine months to contain. Technologies and techniques for containing oil spills have improved since then, but challenges have also increased.

The current incident demonstrates the risks and degree of difficulty of the global gambit to go ever further afield into the earth's deep crevasses to find oil. Trying to shut off a well 5,000 feet below the ocean surface has never been done.

"The depth complicates everything," says Robert Bryce, author of "Power Hungry: The myths of 'green energy' and the real fuels of the future." "This is a disaster that appears to be growing by the moment."
Shut out of more traditional exploration fields in developing countries, Transocean, the driller, and BP, the field developer, are at the forefront of efforts to expand the search for hydrocarbons.

Early reports were that BP workers using four remote-piloted subs had managed to jam the 5,000-foot "riser" from the well to the surface, These reports were wrong, with the Coast Guard saying Monday that the leak was not contained, but had, in fact, tripled in size in 24 hours.
The riser is now crumpled like an old garden hose in the Mississippi Canyon, leaking crude from at least two places, and feeding a spill that now measures 80 by 42 miles, more than six times the footprint of Los Angeles.

Attempts to stem the flow will focus on using another semi-submersible rig to drill a "relief" well to depressurize the main wellhead so it can be capped. The company is also already building a kind of "sombrero" dome to contain the oil. BP is also increasing hydraulic pressure to emergency-trigger various valves at the wellhead site to stem the flow, but those efforts have so far been unsuccessful.

BP CEO Tony Hayward remained confident the company could contain the spill before it caused environmental damage. In a statement, Mr. Hayward said

TheSultan
30th April 2010, 03:01
I could be wrong but I think I heard on the news this morning that they were planning on burning some of it off... Also this whole thing is a real shame, it's wreaking havoc on the aquatic ecosystem there :\

Jacobinist
30th April 2010, 06:23
I could be wrong but I think I heard on the news this morning that they were planning on burning some of it off... Also this whole thing is a real shame, it's wreaking havoc on the aquatic ecosystem there :\

Yeah I know. Fucking corporate media. Yea, lets allow BP to 'clean' up the mess. Fucking idiots.

Klaatu
30th April 2010, 06:49
'Drill, Baby, Drill' Champions Silent On Gulf Oil Spill

The Huffington Post | Nico Pitney First Posted: 04-29-10 11:39 PM | Updated: 04-29-10 11:46 PM

More than a week has passed since the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded 50 miles off the Louisiana coast, killing 11 workers, injuring over a dozen more, and causing a massive oil spill that may eclipse the Exxon Valdez.

Yet the two most prominent political champions of offshore drilling -- Sarah Palin and Michael Steele -- appear not to have uttered a word about the incident.

Not that either one of them has been completely silent. Sarah Palin has published four new messages on her Facebook page since the initial explosion, including a post on Thursday titled "The Straight-talking 'Hockey Dad' with a Message for Reform" and another defending Rev. Franklin Graham after he was asked not to attend a Pentagon prayer event.

Likewise, Michael Steele has issued at least six statements over the past week, including one on a new Republican National Committee web video, "Mr. Obama's Wild Ride."

And yet, if they do comment, it's hard to imagine that Palin and Steele would take the same tone that they've typically used when discussing offshore drilling.

"Drill, baby, drill! And drill now!" Steele memorably chanted at the Republican National Convention in 2008. "Do you want to put your country first? Then let's make decisions about our security based on what keeps us safe and not on what's politically correct," he told the crowd.

And during that year's vice presidential debate, Palin told Joe Biden, "You even called drilling -- safe, environmentally-friendly drilling offshore -- as raping the outer continental shelf. There -- with new technology, with tiny footprints even on land, it is safe to drill and we need to do more of that."
source
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/04/29/drill-baby-drill-champion_n_558014.html

mlgb
30th April 2010, 10:34
acording to msnbc, it reached the coast last night.

its spewing out 5,000 barrels of oil a day and it may take three months to drill a new well to even begin slowing it down. its an absolute disaster. the gulf fishing industry is pretty much scratched for the next half a century.

Mumbles
30th April 2010, 22:49
Is it even worth it to try and clean it up before that three month thing is drilled?

Because if it is I am very much wanting to go down there and help. Anyone know of orgs taking volunteers for something like that if it is worth it?

Jacobinist
30th April 2010, 23:01
Is it even worth it to try and clean it up before that three month thing is drilled?

Because if it is I am very much wanting to go down there and help. Anyone know of orgs taking volunteers for something like that if it is worth it?

There probably is; but I believe it will become a huge PR blitz by BP to 'redeem' its image. Not saying helping wouldn't help, but do be aware of the upcoming media frenzy showing fake scientists swabbing down a duck.

Obrero Rebelde
30th April 2010, 23:04
The Gulf shorelines of the U.S.A. are already receiving the oil. It's all fucked up now. It will be years before this mess is completely "disappeared". Tens of thousands will be out of work as the fishing industry closes up now.

Mumbles
30th April 2010, 23:14
True, true. This is why we hate the media.

In fact, kinda off subject, but related, my teacher was telling us a story about how her son got in trouble because of a prank he had done involving baby powder around the time of the anthrax scares, he truly didn't know because his life was basketball/college/basketball and no time for news, so when he did get in trouble the cops just kinda laughed it off and sent him on his way. But a few weeks later Homeland Insanity came down and filmed their people in hazmat suits walking down the halls of the school and showed it on the news with his mugshot. And they had to have a criminal lawyer represent him and when the lawyer asked about it her son told him the truth, that he had no idea, and when the lawyer came out he nearly cried because he knew it was true but they were bound to get screwed by Homeland Insanity anyways.

But yeah, if you see anything on the news, back it up with the facts.

...I wanna give a duck a bath :wub:

Klaatu
1st May 2010, 01:19
Keith Olbermann (MSNBC) calls this "The Sarah Palin Oil Spill." :D

BP = Bad Pollution

GX.
2nd May 2010, 01:40
As of today, the spill now surpasses the Exxon Valdez disaster by at least 1 million gallons, and is still growing.

http://blog.skytruth.org/2010/05/gulf-oil-spill-new-spill-rate.html

If all the controls on the well fail the rate of flow could go even higher. This is already one of the worst environmental disasters of our time but if (or rather when) the slick flows into the Atlantic it will be all out catastrophe.

GX.
2nd May 2010, 01:50
source
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/04/29/drill-baby-drill-champion_n_558014.html

Okay, but what about Obama? He's eating his words right now about offshore exploration being environmentally sound.

Klaatu
2nd May 2010, 01:59
Okay, but what about Obama? He's eating his words right now about offshore exploration being environmentally sound.

I predict that this is the excuse he needs in order to get out of this offshore drilling thing (He did campaign against it? I don't recall)

Jacobinist
2nd May 2010, 06:43
I predict that this is the excuse he needs in order to get out of this offshore drilling thing (He did campaign against it? I don't recall)

Well you are forgetting that Obama is analogues to defeatist compromise and weak leadership. So I doubt he'll do anything to piss of his corporate masters.