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Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rock_nj who wrote (190567)4/30/2010 11:11:39 AM
From: koan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361952
 
In order to kick our habit on oil, in any meaningful way, we need help from our government.

I agree with stockman scott we need a Manhatten project.



To: Rock_nj who wrote (190567)4/30/2010 11:15:37 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Respond to of 361952
 
Drill, Baby...Oops!
by Sharon Astyk
The news from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill is not good. If the NOAA estimates are right about the size of the spill it could dwarf Exxon Valdez:
Over the last few days, estimates had held that the Gulf of Mexico oil spilling was leaking about 1,000 barrels, or 42,000 gallons, into the water each day--bad, but still not historically bad on a scale like the spill caused by the Exxon Valdez. Except now, after closer investigation, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration says that oil company BP's estimate might in fact be five times too low.
Rear Adm. Mary Landry, the Coast Guard's point person, gave the new estimate yesterday as the Coast Guard began its planned controlled burn of some of the oil. While emphasizing that the estimates are rough given that the leak is at 5,000 feet below the surface, Admiral Landry said the new estimate came from observations made in flights over the slick, studying the trajectory of the spill and other variables [The New York Times]. Because the oil below the surface is so hard to measure or estimate, NOAA's numbers are still rough estimates, too. BP's chief operating officer told ABC News he thinks the number is probably somewhere between the two estimates.
But if NOAA's high-end number right, the oil spill caused by the explosion and sinking of the Deepwater Horizon just entered a new class of awful. Do the math: At the previous estimation--1,000 barrels (42,000 gallons) of oil per day--it would have taken this spill 261 days, or more than eight continuous months, to dump as much oil into the sea at the Exxon Valdez did near Alaska in 1989. But, if it's true that 5,000 barrels (210,000 gallons) are entering the Gulf each day, it would take just 53 days to top the Valdez' total of 11 million gallons. Already 9 days have passed since the explosion.
Moreover, as the Wall Street Journal Reports, the well doesn't have a particular sort of emergency automatic shut-off standard in Norway and Brazil - although there's some question of whether the shut off would have worked, the oil industry in the US apparently argued against the necessity of these devices:
The efficacy of the devices is unclear. Major offshore oil-well blowouts are rare, and it remained unclear Wednesday evening whether acoustic switches have ever been put to the test in a real-world accident. When wells do surge out of control, the primary shut-off systems almost always work. Remote control systems such as the acoustic switch, which have been tested in simulations, are intended as a last resort.
.Nevertheless, regulators in two major oil-producing countries, Norway and Brazil, in effect require them. Norway has had acoustic triggers on almost every offshore rig since 1993.
The U.S. considered requiring a remote-controlled shut-off mechanism several years ago, but drilling companies questioned its cost and effectiveness, according to the agency overseeing offshore drilling. The agency, the Interior Department's Minerals Management Service, says it decided the remote device wasn't needed because rigs had other back-up plans to cut off a well.
The U.K., where BP is headquartered, doesn't require the use of acoustic triggers.
On all offshore oil rigs, there is one main switch for cutting off the flow of oil by closing a valve located on the ocean floor. Many rigs also have automatic systems, such as a "dead man" switch as a backup that is supposed to close the valve if it senses a catastrophic failure aboard the rig.
As a third line of defense, some rigs have the acoustic trigger: It's a football-sized remote control that uses sound waves to communicate with the valve on the seabed floor and close it.
Meanwhile, the potential effect on fisheries and associated livelihoods, thousands of unique species and residents are likely to be disastrous. Among the potential victims:
The Gulf region contains about five million acres of wetlands, which are an essential habitat for three quarters of all of the migrating waterfowl that cross the US.
There are more than 3,300 marine species in the Gulf, including six endangered species of whale. Its shores include the only known nesting beach of Kemp's Ridley, the world's most endangered sea turtle. There are also populations of protected Hawksbill, Loggerhead and Leatherback turtles, which are about to begin their nesting season and would be particularly vulnerable to oil washed up on beaches.
There are several shark species declared to be "of concern" because of declining populations. The Gulf is also home to one of the world's largest populations of bottlenose dolphins, with an estimated 45,000 in its waters.
It is interesting that this emerging situation is occurring at the same time as the final approval of Cape Wind, the controversial wind farm held up by NIMBYism and shortly following Obama's opening of offshore drilling. Our future as a society is going to involve a certain measure of raping the environment - we know this. We have been casual about the consequences we can see, and reluctant to make visible the full consequences of our extraction - we assume that our resources are clean if we don't have to live near the pollution they engender. This, of course is not true.
It is easy to cry "Drill, baby, drill" and harder to live with the real world consequences of our consumption - increasingly hard. And there aren't a lot of good answers - but one of the things I think is essential is that we understand what we are talking about. It is easy to march to close a coal plant - and it is necessary that we do close them. But unless we are prepared to bring our electrical generation home, to do with less and to find ways to live with less, that march is meaningless. We can't oppose offshore drilling and drive around as much as we like, nor can we support offshore drilling...except when it might affect our lives and livelihood.
Americans live in a world where there's so much "away" - we laud ourselves for reductions in pollutants that we have merely offshored, we laud ourselves for costs that we have merely deferred upon the next generation. We throw "away" so many things, and push "away" so much knowledge. I'm deeply grieved about this oil spill, and I hope from it may emerge a little more knowledge, a little more recognition that there is no such place as "away"
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energybulletin.net
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To: Rock_nj who wrote (190567)4/30/2010 2:56:26 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361952
 
When Oil Spills, All Things Are Connected

by Brenda Peterson

Published on Friday, April 30, 2010 by The Huffington Post

As I watch the live coverage of the disastrous Gulf coast oil spill -- 5,000 barrels a day poisoning waters that are vital to people and wildlife -- I look past my television screen to my little waterfront studio window. I live on the shores of the spacious, but troubled Salish Sea, right across from the birthplace of Chief Seattle. It was this revered native statesman who two centuries ago said, "All things are connected like the blood that unites one family."

Now the East and West coasts are connected by the worst oil spills to date in America: An estimated four million gallons, which could leak into the Gulf of Mexico; and 11 million gallons, which polluted Alaska's pristine Prince William Sound in 1989. Both spills happened in the spring and those of us here in the Far Northwest well remember the oil-slicked birds and otters, the starving peregrine falcons and eagles, the food chain and fisheries decimated.

School children in Alaska were so traumatized by the oil spill and blackened wildlife that they believed all the birds had died forever. A psychologist friend of mine was hired to fly up to Prince William Sound for grief counseling in elementary schools. These two decades later, Alaska's waters are still not fully recovered. We in the Far Northwest keenly feel the fear and anguish of our Gulf of Mexico fellow citizens. We feel connected to them by the grief and memory of our own experience and loss.

Here's another compelling connection: This explosion of a deep-ocean oil rig comes weeks after President Obama announced his plans to open offshore drilling in previously protected waters off the East Coast.

This Gulf Coast leaking oil rig is an exploratory well. It is not a container ship spill with a known quantity of oil cargo; this is a deep-ocean well spewing 200,000 gallons a day. How will we stop it? If we cannot cap or block the flow somehow, it will take at least 90 days to drill a relief well. Do the math: 90 days multiplied by 5,000 barrels a day.

As Environmental Network News points out, "This is a challenge never faced before." The bureaucrats can debate the differences -- that oil-spill containment and technology has vastly increased since 1989; that the industry is now required by law to have clean-up plans (never mind that BP is unable to clean up its own mess, they must now turn to the U.S. military and government agencies); and the public is again assured of "state-of-the-art" environmental safeguards.

In the live press conference with gathered federal agency heads -- from NOAA, to Homeland Security, to Department of Interior to Coast Guard -- reporters kept drilling -- oops, I mean grilling, "Will this explosion and oil spill affect the government's plans for more offshore drilling?"

Instead of engaging in this debate, the Press Secretary deflected it by insisting we must "stay focused" on what's happening right now. After all, the tar balls, oil slicks, and noxious, greasy strips are seeping ever closer to us: Our homeland, our oyster beds, our crab fisheries, a coastline still vulnerable and not yet fully recovered from Hurricane Katrina. Who knows what marine mammals are already suffering?

"This is an incident of national significance," say the feds as they finally kick in to take over what British Petroleum has so slowly and surely proven it cannot handle. The Coast Guard says that we must assume a "worst-case" scenario.

So as the oil slides into our home land security, why not engage in the vital environmental conversation about future offshore drilling? Why not now when offshore drilling is the most relevant and we are witnessing the consequences? Because the "Drill, Baby, Drill" advocates are banking on the short-term memory loss of a nation still addicted to oil.

While we may bemoan this tragedy, we are still dependent upon oil to maintain our way of life. So each of us is connected to this spill by our hunger for it. Blood may be thicker than water, but oil is thickest of all. Just as oil darkens our waters, our need for it also obscures our ability to see the future clearly.

The Iroquois nation's leaders made their present-day decisions based on protecting and providing for their next seven generations. One doesn't have to be a rabid environmentalist or philosopher to pragmatically connect a catastrophic deep-water oil-drilling explosion with more plans for such offshore rigs.

Remember the Valdez and the Gulf of Mexico. Then connect the current-day 1,000-plus oil rigs already in our waters with future rigs. Multiply this explosion by that much more deep-water drilling. How many more generations will watch these same fiery images play out on their television screens, their same fisheries and wildlife and shorelines slimed by an energy source that is slowly destroying us and our ecosystems?

The ancient sage of "The Water Way," Lao Tzu wrote: "The supreme good is like water, which nourishes all things without trying to." Healthy waters nourish us; our waterways connect us all. Can the same health and connection be said of oil?

As the oil spill makes landfall off Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, or Texas, we must keep our focus not just on the current anguish and outrage over this leak, but clearly eye our future: Connect the dots, the spills.

*Brenda Peterson is the author of Living by Water and the new memoir I Want To Be Left Behind: Finding Rapture Here on Earth. www.IWantToBeLeftBehind.com

Copyright © 2010 HuffingtonPost.com, Inc.



To: Rock_nj who wrote (190567)4/30/2010 4:33:27 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361952
 
Wake up, Obama. The Gulf spill is our big chance

grist.org