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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: geode00 who wrote (194480)8/2/2006 5:52:51 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Former Prime Minister Shimon Peres said yesterday in an interview that he was against Israel bombing things like oil depots in Lebanon...Why aren't the right wingers who are running Israel listening to him...? Israel is creating a MASSIVE environmental disaster along the coast of Lebanon...The Bushies should NEVER allow this to happen...Anyone remember the Exxon Valdez oil spill and how long it took to do a successful cleanup...? Who will pay for this mess...?

<<..."We are really talking about an environmental massacre here, with about 15,000 tons of heavy fuel oil," said Edgard Chehab, head of the U.N. Development Program unit for energy and the environment. By comparison, the tanker Exxon Valdez released about 38,000 tons of crude oil after running aground in Alaskan coastal waters in 1989...>>

Power Plant Airstrike Leaves a Noxious Mess
By Nora Boustany
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, August 1, 2006

BEIRUT -- The fires continued to burn Monday at a seaside power plant, the source of 15,000 tons of heavy fuel oil that spilled into pristine Mediterranean waters after an Israeli attack two weeks ago. The resulting slick has fouled close to 50 miles of beaches and rocky coastline, and threatens aquatic life and the fishing industry.

Emergency teams at the Jiyah plant on the southern Lebanon coast are allowing oil to burn, sending up towering plumes of black smoke, in an effort to prevent further spills into the sea. But it is too late for the coastline from Damour in the south to the prime beach district of Amchit and Byblos north of the capital.

"This is a catastrophe of the highest order for a country as small as Lebanon," said Berge Hatjian, director general of Lebanon's Environment Ministry, who has visited the scene to oversee emergency steps.

The smelly black tar has disrupted the season not only for Lebanon's fancy swimming and yachting clubs, fashioned after resorts in the French Riviera and Acapulco, but also for ordinary citizens. Beaches in the capital, normally crowded at this time of the year, are deserted in the face of wave-swept oil marring white sand.

Shiny pools of black the consistency of molten licorice lap against boats and yachts anchored in marinas.

"We are really talking about an environmental massacre here, with about 15,000 tons of heavy fuel oil," said Edgard Chehab, head of the U.N. Development Program unit for energy and the environment. By comparison, the tanker Exxon Valdez released about 38,000 tons of crude oil after running aground in Alaskan coastal waters in 1989.

"This is affecting algae, rocky and sandy beaches, as well as aquatic life," he said. Because of the thickness of the oil, "oxygen cannot enter the water and the life chain of aquatic vegetation that fish eat to survive will die. Fishermen who make their daily living off this sector are doomed," he added.

The power plant, supplying southern Lebanon, was hit early in the war as Israeli forces targeted public infrastructure on grounds it was helping Hezbollah guerrillas.

Tareq Ghattas, an employee at the plant, said Israeli warplanes and gunboats were operating in the area and it was unclear which hit the plant, which had five large fuel tanks. Workers immediately raised sandbags around the generating plant. It was saved but has been shut down for now, he said.

> Until the war between Israel and Hezbollah broke out, Lebanon was on its way to improving its environment. Public awareness was built through billboards that read: "Do a Good Deed, Don't Toss Things into the Sea," an adaptation from a local proverb encouraging anonymous charity ("Perform good deeds and throw them into the sea").

According to the Environmental Performance Index of Yale and Columbia universities, Lebanon had climbed into the top 25th percentile among 140 countries in pollution control and resource management, ranking 36th, the leading Arab country.

This summer, said Hatjian of the Environment Ministry, he had planned to focus on programs to help farmers and industrialists use environmentally friendly pest control, to reforest parts of the country with cedars and to improve a coastline reserve that had thrived around a freshwater spring.

"Instead, our resources, time and ideas are consumed by this," he said in a telephone interview, shortly after leaving the Jiyah plant. "I am actually putting out fires."

Ghada Mitri, a spokeswoman at the Environment Ministry, said that countries with expertise in limiting damage from oil fires, such as Kuwait, were dispatching equipment, but "their crews are on standby until the security situation improves."

Officials estimate that a cleanup would cost close to $50 million and last three to four weeks.

Hatjian estimated the loss from the strike on Jiyah to be about $210 million, in addition to about $2 billion worth of damage that Israeli airstrikes have caused to Lebanon's bridges and roads.

When the plant went off-line, hospitals and other emergency facilities in the region switched to backup generators. With Israel's naval blockade of Lebanon's coast continuing, officials cautioned that local fuel supplies could run out in 10 days.

Nadim Cortas, dean of the medical school at the American University of Beirut Hospital, cited concerns that Israeli airstrikes could shut down power in the capital as well.

"The most critical supply to the hospital is fuel," he said. If the power grid goes down, the hospital's own supply "will only last for 10 days and the hospital will have to shut down," he warned. The 420-bed hospital is one of the top medical institutions in the region.

On Saturday, Hatjian said that the controlled burn-off of fuel could continue for several more days. "We are moving from sea to air pollution," he warned. "I am hoping against hope that the fog and smog of emissions will blow out to sea."

© 2006 The Washington Post Company



To: geode00 who wrote (194480)8/2/2006 9:39:01 AM
From: Hawkmoon  Respond to of 281500
 
This is a consequence of not building them from the ground up by yourself.

And I guess that explains why you constantly choose Quicksand upon which to build your "arguments"?

Hawk