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Politics : President Barack Obama -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: SiouxPal who wrote (76742)5/30/2010 11:31:01 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 149317
 
The government should have taken over the operation during week one...Have BP and other world class industry experts focus on capping the well...Have the Government coordinate the cleanup on the water and on the shoreline -- no expense would be sparred and BP would get all the bills.

Outsourcing decision making to BP is very dangerous when you're dealing with the worst environmental disaster in North America -- BP will do EVERYthing in their power to downplay what is happening, use toxic dispersants to hide parts of the spill, and use expensive lawyers to tie up hundreds of legitimate lawsuits...BP is focussed on surviving as a company but it's run like a ruthless mafia crime family and cost cutting is ingrained in the BP corporate culture...BP will not change it's ways if they just have to a pay a few fines and settle a few class action lawsuits...the government must prosecute BP to the fullest extent of the law...and the government must fine BP and take away some of BP's drilling rights and fuel contracts - hit BP where it really hurts and that might start to send a message.



To: SiouxPal who wrote (76742)6/1/2010 8:24:35 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 149317
 
Oil Spill Poses Risk to Gulf Power Plants
_______________________________________________________________

By Marianne Lavelle
National Geographic News
Published May 27, 2010

Even before the big Deepwater Horizon spill, an oil boom stretched across the intake canal at the Anclote power plant near Holiday, Florida, just east of the Gulf of Mexico. It’s there to keep the oil in, should there be any accidental spill at the oil-fired electricity station. But now it’s part of Progress Energy’s defense plan for keeping the oil out.

The Anclote facility, which provides electricity to about 600,000 households north of Tampa-St. Petersburg, is just one of at least six power stations along the Gulf Coast that could be at risk from the crude spreading out from BP’s wrecked well site.

Progress Energy spokesman Scott Sutton emphasized that the current forecasts are for the strong loop current to carry oil south and away from its facilities in central Florida. But given the unpredictable Gulf weather, the size of the spill and electricity plant reliance on water, Progress has a team of environmental and systems experts meeting daily to track the spill’s progress and plan how to protect its power stations.

“We can’t wait until we physically see oil and say, ‘What do we do now?’ ” Sutton said. “It would take a pretty severe wind storm to push it this way, but obviously, anything weather-dependent is pretty unpredictable.”

Power’s thirst for water

All power plants that use steam to turn turbines to produce electricity rely on water for cooling, regardless of the fuel source—coal, nuclear, natural gas or oil. (In fact, production of electric power represents one of the largest uses of water worldwide.)

In its May 12 situation report on the BP oil spill, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) noted that there was a risk to “a number of power plants” that draw cooling water directly from the Gulf of Mexico or adjacent salt water sources. “If the water supply for these facilities becomes contaminated with oil, cooling water systems could be damaged,” the report said. It’s just one of many risks to business and infrastructure in the Gulf that could long persist even after the flow of oil is stopped.

Maura McGillicuddy, a DOE communications specialist, said the department would not release a list of the threatened power plants “due to market sensitivities and security concerns.” But the names of all U.S. thermal power plants and their cooling water sources are readily available in the U.S. Energy Information Administration’s annual electric generator database.

One of the facilities closest to the spill site is Southern Company’s Watson coal power plant on the Back Bay of Biloxi, Mississippi. The plant suffered significant flooding damage in Hurricane Katrina in August 2005; one major unit was closed for 46 days, and another was not restored for nearly four months. . But Michael Harvey, a compliance and support manager with Southern’s Mississippi Power unit, says that the company is confident it can protect Watson from oil encroachment with diversion booms and skimmers. “We daily evaluate the progress, and at this point we’re still evaluating,” Harvey said. “But we don’t feel there’s a threat to this facility.”

Farther east, on the Florida panhandle, Southern Company’s Gulf Power unit has put up precautionary oil booms at its coal-powered Crist plant off the Escambia River near Pensacola—even though it draws water upstream from the Gulf of Mexico. And booms are on standby at two other coal plants that don’t draw directly from the Gulf: the Scholz plant on the Apalachicola River in Sneads and the Smith plant on the North Bay in Southport. Jeff Rogers, a Gulf Power spokesman, said the oil spill has had another impact: the coal deliveries it usually receives by barge from the Mississippi River are being diverted to avoid the oil-saturated Gulf near Louisiana. Instead, the barges are traveling a more complicated route, diverting from the Mississippi onto the Tennessee River, then the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway to the Tombigbee River, then the Mobile River to Mobile Bay, then east on the Intercoastal Waterway to Pensacola Bay.

On Florida’s west coast, Progress Energy has two facilities in addition to its Anclote plant that draw water from the Gulf of Mexico or adjacent water through intake canals. They are its Bartow natural gas power plant in St. Petersburg, which draws from Tampa Bay, and its huge Crystal River energy complex in Citrus County, which has four coal units and a nuclear generating station (now down for maintenance). The plants at Crystal River, which draw directly from the Gulf like Anclote, serve half of the company’s 1.6 million Florida customers. Officials at TECO Energy’s Big Bend coal plant, also on Tampa Bay, likewise are monitoring the oil spill situation closely, even though forecasts call for the oil to bypass the area, says spokesman Rick Morera.

Pom-pom booms and air barriers

In addition to oil boom, Progress has lined up other protective measures, because so much of the oil from the BP spill appears to be suspended beneath the surface of the water. Among the options for detection and monitoring are pom-pom booms, floats with long pieces of absorbent material to capture oil or tar balls under water. Plant officials would be able to gauge from contamination of those booms whether further steps are needed to keep oil from entering the plant and contaminating the equipment. If needed, Sutton also said the company could deploy directional booms, skimmers, or an air current barrier; hoses would be placed underwater to create a wall of air bubbles in an effort to keep oil from entering the canal.

Even if the oil encroachment were so great that the plants would have to shut down to avoid contamination, said Sutton, Progress would be able to keep the lights on for its customers. The company anticipates that its inland power plants would keep running, and it has the option of purchasing power from other generators.

Of course, even if electricity keeps flowing, there could be impacts on homes and businesses. For example, several power plants shut down or reduced output in the summer and fall of 2007 because they couldn’t draw enough cooling water due to severe drought in the southeastern United States. According to a report by DOE’s National Energy Technology Laboratory, the Tennessee Valley Authority had to purchase

electricity on the open market at an increased cost, and then passed those costs along to its customers.

Water expert Peter Gleick, president of the Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment, and Security in Oakland, California, said he has not heard of another case where a large oil spill threatened the cooling water supply for multiple power stations. “But just about everything about this spill is unprecedented,” he said. Still, he said, the spill underscores a point he has long been making. “We’ve ignored the connections between energy and water for far too long,” he said. “And as our water shortages, and this crisis in the Gulf show us, we can’t ignore those connections any longer.”



To: SiouxPal who wrote (76742)6/3/2010 3:08:09 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 149317
 
Cameron Says BP Turned Down Offer to Help on Spill

abcnews.go.com

By Alexei Oreskovic
Reuters
June 3, 2010

PALOS VERDES, Calif -- Film director and deep-sea explorer James Cameron said on Wednesday that BP Plc turned down his offer to help combat the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

"Over the last few weeks I've watched, as we all have, with growing horror and heartache, watching what's happening in the Gulf and thinking those morons don't know what they're doing," Cameron said at the All Things Digital technology conference.

Cameron, the director of "Avatar" and "Titanic," has worked extensively with robot submarines and is considered an expert in undersea filming. He did not say explicitly who he meant when he referred to "those morons."

His comments came a day after he participated in a meeting at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency headquarters in Washington to "brainstorm" solutions to the oil spill.

Cameron said he has offered to help the government and BP in dealing with the spill. He said he was "graciously" turned away by the British energy giant.

He said he has not spoken with the White House about his offer, and said that the outside experts who took part in the EPA meeting were now "writing it all up and putting in reports to the various agencies."

The film director has helped develop deep-sea submersible equipment and other underwater ocean technology for the making of documentaries exploring the wrecks of the ocean liner Titanic and the German battleship Bismarck some two miles below the surface.

'REALLY SMART PEOPLE'

Cameron suggested the U.S. government needed to take a more active role in monitoring the undersea gusher, which has become the worst oil spill in U.S. history.

"I know really, really, really smart people that work typically at depths much greater than what that well is at," Cameron said.

The BP oil spill off the U.S. Gulf Coast is located a mile below the surface.

While acknowledging that his contacts in the deep-sea industry do not drill for oil, Cameron said that they are accustomed to operating various underwater vehicles and electronic optical fiber systems.

"Most importantly," he added, "they know the engineering that it requires to get something done at that depth."

Among the key issues that Cameron said he is interested in helping the government with are methods of monitoring the oil leak and investigating it.

"The government really needs to have its own independent ability to go down there and image the site, survey the site and do its own investigation," he said.

"Because if you're not monitoring it independently, you're asking the perpetrator to give you the video of the crime scene," Cameron added.

Cameron made two documentaries about the wreck of the Titanic as well as the blockbuster 1997 movie "Titanic" using a small fleet of specially designed remotely operated underwater vehicles. He said his qualifications are not based on his background as a movie director but on his years of involvement in the deep-sea industry.

(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic, with additional reporting by Jill Sergeant)

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