Tag Archives: ocean

Gulf Coast Oil Disaster: Tropical Storm Could Mean Two-Week Halt to Oil Recovery | Video

Tropical storm, oil slick equal more fear, uncertainty By the CNN Wire Staff June 26, 2010 2:34 p.m. EDT New Orleans, Louisiana (CNN) — As much as 2.5 million gallons of oil could flow into the Gulf of Mexico for two weeks if Tropical Storm Alex forces a work stoppage at the ruptured BP well. Adm. Thad Allen, the government's disaster response manager, said Saturday that gale-force winds near the well head would prompt an evacuation of the thousands of workers and vessels involved in the oil recovery and cleanup effort. It would take 14 days to put everything back in place, Allen said. That means the containment cap would be off for that period, allowing oil to flow freely. Researchers have estimated that between 35,000 barrels — about 1.5 million gallons — and 60,000 barrels — about 2.5 million gallons — of oil are gushing into the ocean every day. Anxiety levels rose Saturday as Alex churned toward Mexico with a potential for hurricane force winds in the coming days. The storm is not on track to directly pass over oil-affected areas but forecasters have not ruled out an easterly shift in Alex's path. “We all know the weather is unpredictable, and we could have a sudden last-minute change,” Allen said. Alex — the first named storm of what is expected to be a fierce Atlantic hurricane season — formed in the Caribbean on Saturday and had maximum sustained winds of 45 mph. It was heading toward Belize and Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. Allen said it would take five days to evacuate more than 38,000 people and 6,000 vessels that are involved in the oil response as well as the two rigs that are collecting about 24,500 barrels of oil a day from the well, Allen said. He told CNN there is “no playbook” when it comes to responding to a massive oil spill as a storm brews. “But I will tell you there's been an extraordinary amount of planning being done,” he said. BP plans to place a third rig called the Helix Producer at the well site next week, which will increase the amount of oil being captured to 53,000 barrels a day, Allen said. That, too, could be disrupted if Alex affects the area. Gulf Coast residents feared that high winds and storm surges could spread the slick and push more oil ashore into bays, estuaries and pristine beaches, exacerbating the oil disaster triggered by BP's ruptured well. “The greatest nightmare with this storm approaching is that it takes this oil on the surface of the Gulf and blows it over the barrier islands into the bays and the estuaries,” Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Florida, told CNN. “And that is where you really get the enormous destruction, because it's just very difficult to clean up those pristine bays.” Americans took to beaches Saturday to protest offshore oil drilling. They held hands and formed lines in the sand. “I believe Americans need to stand together and take our energy future back from the grip of the oil industry,” said Dave Rauschkolb, a restaurant owner from Seaside, Florida, who founded Hands Across the Sand. Deepwater drilling could resume by the end of July after U.S. District Judge Martin Feldman in New Orleans, Louisiana, on Thursday denied a request to keep a six-month moratorium imposed by President Barack Obama on May 27 in place, pending a government appeal. The government has 30 days to show it is beginning to comply with Feldman's order and start issuing permits. The appeals process can continue, but until the appeal, the government must act as if Feldman's order will be upheld. While protesters lined the sand, Alex moved toward Mexico, no one knowing whether it would make a sudden turn north into the open Gulf. Meteorologist Karen Maginnis said the “preferred scenario” actually would be for Alex to head to northern Florida. That's because the oil spill has been gradually rotating counterclockwise. If the storm heads to the east of it, it would send the oil farther out to sea. If the storm heads more directly towards the central Gulf and Louisiana, it might push the oil toward Florida. “We've never been in this situation before,” Maginnis said. “We've never seen an oil spill that encompassed the Gulf like this, end up so close to shore.” A powerful storm would also complicate efforts to clean up miles of coastline. “It's going to mean we're going to have to find a way to maneuver all our resources, change things,” said Grover Robinson, chairman of the Escambia County Commission in Pensacola, Florida. “We won't be able to fight the oil for a couple of days. And we have no idea about winds and current and what it will do to the oil in the gulf. So obviously, it's a very big concern for us.” Allen said he and some top Obama administration officials, including Vice President Joe Biden, will be headed back to the Gulf region next week to assess the oil relief efforts. But in a new blow to fishermen, Mississippi officials announced that waters east of the Gulfport shipping channel would be closed to shrimping, because of oil sighted in the area. In one Vietnamese fishing community in Biloxi, the oil spill has been devastating. Jennifer Le said her father has known nothing but shrimping since coming to America. He doesn't know how he would succeed in any other career and his checks from BP have not been enough. “I mean, everything was based on the waters and now it's just, it's just gone,” Le said. Aside from state closures, the federal government has banned fishing in 78,597 square miles of the Gulf, which is about 32.5 percent of of federal waters. Like Le, many oil-affected residents face an ominous future. But this week, there was some promising news for potentially tens of thousands of people seeking claims against BP. Kenneth Feinberg, who is administering the $20 billion compensation fund set up by BP under White House prodding, says that people who work in support of oil rigs will be able to file claims — and not just fishermen and businesses along the coast. Employees of businesses that brings tools to oil rigs, for example, also would be able to file a claim. The company previously agreed to set aside the $20 billion in an escrow account for spill-related costs, a sum that does not cover fees and penalties that could be imposed by the federal government. BP had resisted approving claims by people who said they were affected by the moratorium on oil drilling, saying it was imposed by the Obama administration. But Feinberg said BP and the administration now have agreed those claims will be covered. “I now have discovered — I didn't realize this until yesterday, but the moratorium claims will fall under my jurisdiction,” he told CNN. To date, almost 74,000 claims have been filed and more than 39,000 payments have been made, totaling almost $126 million, according to the company. CNN's Brandon Miller, T.J. Holmes and Moni Basu contributed to this report. added by: EthicalVegan

Sports Illustrated Model — Bottoms Out in Spain

Filed under: Hot Bodies , Paparazzi Photo , Stars In Heat It’s summer … and it’s really, really hot in Spain … which is why 24-year-old Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Edition model Melissa Satta put on a teeny tiny bikini and splashed around in the ocean yesterday. You’re welcome. Read more

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Sports Illustrated Model — Bottoms Out in Spain

Ian Somerhalder on Gulf Oil Spill: It’s Time to Change

On The Vampire Diaries , Ian Somerhalder play Damon Salvatore, an often-scary blood sucker. But in real life, the actor isn’t frightened by garlic or stakes to the heart – he’s simply taken aback by the disastrous oil spill in the Gulf. A native of Louisiana, Somherlader was front and center at the CNN telethon that raised $1.8 million this week. He’s also devoted the last few weeks to doing all he can to call attention to this region and this catastrophe. “You know when something bad happens in your life, or something goes wrong – that weird kind of really uneasy feeling you have in the pit of your stomach? I’ve had that for two months,” he told Zap2It, adding: “Basically, the entire area is shut down. Everyone from the waitress who serves you breakfast to the guy who owns the charter boat to the shrimpers – they all literally rely on the ocean to keep their industry going… Think about how frightening it is when you suddenly, though no fault of your own, can’t feed your children or pay your mortgage.” Somerhalder is especially outraged over how and why this accident took place. “All of this happened due to human error – the error is cutting corners, saving money at the expense of safety measures, and a nonexistent regulatory commission,” he said. “The [U.S. Minerals Management Service] gets royalties from the oil industry. How is that any kind of regulatory body?” It’s a question the admistration most definitely has to answer, as many believe this is the prime to enact a serious climate change bill and convince America that government can – nay, must! – play an important role in the free market. Concluded Ian, who we greatly admire for putting himself out there in this manner: “It’s time to change, and I think this disaster is the game changer. It feels like this is one of those catastrophic events that truly changes the way that we think.”

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Ian Somerhalder on Gulf Oil Spill: It’s Time to Change

Chanelle Hayes Oversized Bikini Pictures

As far as bikini pictures go these aren’t very exciting, unless you’re into fat disgusting pregnant chicks. Here’s busty Big Brother UK nobody Chanelle Hayes on the beach in Greece looking like she needs to be covered in wet towels and rolled back into the ocean by a team of marine biologists. I’m just kidding, I’m fully aware that when a woman gets pregnant she starts to get a little chubby, it’s perfectly natural. By the looks of things, her thighs are having twins. more pictures of Chanelle Hayes here

‘The Hills’ Recap: Audrina Reconsiders The Justin Bobby Question

Meanwhile, Kristin nearly came to blows with Allie. By Amy Wilkinson Audrina Patridge and Ryan Cabrera on “The Hills” Tuesday Photo: MTV Many months ago, while standing on a pier overlooking the ocean, Audrina predicted that she and Justin Bobby would never speak again after that day. Boy, was she wrong. The drumming hairstylist continues to pop up in Audrina’s life, and on Tuesday’s episode of “The Hills,” it seemed she was having second thoughts about ending their relationship. Continuing last week’s debate, Audrina wondered if she should tell current boyfriend Ryan Cabrera about her run-ins with JB. Lo thought she should tell him, while Stephanie wasn’t so sure. Then Lo posed the real question: “If Justin got to the point where he could be the guy you wanted him to be, would you ever go back to him?” Audrina had no answer. It wouldn’t be long before Ryan had his own Justin Bobby meet-and-greet, as the couple ran into him at Les Deux while out partying. “I’m guessing this is supposed to be the big meeting,” Ryan joked as JB approached and shook their hands. “Did you really just shake his hand?” Lo chided Audrina. After several minutes of awkwardness, Audrina and Ryan decide to leave, but not before Ryan and Justin Bobby shared an ill-timed handshake/high-five/fist bump exchange. And in a very astute observation, JB told Brody how nice of a girl Audrina is, and how she shouldn’t be hurt by a rocker again. Words to live by, Justin. Later, when rehashing the night with Kristin, Audrina said she couldn’t help but feel like Ryan had missed his golden moment at Les Deux. “Even though it was really uncomfortable, it was Ryan’s opportunity to stand his ground,” she said. Kristin wondered whether Justin Bobby were trying to win Audrina back. When Audrina and Ryan finally sat down to discuss the uncomfortable evening, Ryan revealed that he was worried about what may happen once he’s away on tour. “If we caught each other at the wrong time, we need to figure it out,” he said. Later, when Audrina went to see Ryan in concert, she broke down in tears as he sang “On the Way Down.” When asked by Stephanie what was wrong, she couldn’t seem to articulate her thoughts, simply replying, “Everything.” When everyone met up later at the Nylon party, Audrina still wasn’t sure what to do about the Ryan/Justin Bobby situation. Meanwhile, McKaela, who showed up with trouble-making friend Allie, confronted Brody about their flagging relationship. “You left out of my life,” she accused him. Kristin told McKaela she must not be the sweet girl she pretends if she’s hanging out with Allie. At this, Allie and Kristin got into a heated argument. “What was that?” McKaela later asked Allie. “I’m humiliated, and they all hate me. Why didn’t you just walk away?” After the altercation, Kristin thanked Brody for having her back, to which Brody said he’d always have Kristin’s back. Then he really laid the charm on thick: “Can I drive you home? No. Can I take you home? Yes.” And the two left hand-in-hand. “The Hills: Final Season” airs at 10 p.m. ET/PT every Tuesday, followed by “The City” at 10:30 p.m. ET/PT on MTV. Related Videos The Hills: Live After Show (Season 6) | Ep. 8 Related Photos The Hills (Season 6) | Ep. 8 | ‘Between A Rocker And A Hard Place’

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‘The Hills’ Recap: Audrina Reconsiders The Justin Bobby Question

Bill Maher Goes Out with Another Conspiracy: ‘We Need a War All the Time So We Can…Buy Oil’

Catching up from Friday night, on the last Real Time with Bill Maher until September, Maher insisted “I’m not trying to be a conspiracy theorist,” but then proceeded to assert the Defense Department “uses more oil than anywhere else to kill people in the Middle East to get fuel to fight wars,” so “I do think there’s something — just the way the pharmaceutical companies sometimes come up with a pill before they come up with the disease — I think maybe we need a war all the time so we can wear out equipment and buy oil.” Maher’s claim came during a one-on-one with far-left film director Oliver Stone, who is producing a ten-hour documentary for Showtime, Secret History of America, about how, as Maher agreed, “America always does seem to need an enemy.” When Stone maintained the Cold War was fueled by an exaggerated fear of communism, Maher jumped in: “I’d like to blame it on oil.” He expounded: The United States Defense Department is the largest procurer of oil in the world, it uses more oil than anywhere else to kill people in the Middle East to get fuel to fight wars. It’s sort of a cycle of life thing. Now, I’m not trying to be a conspiracy theorist. But I do think there’s something — just the way the pharmaceutical companies sometimes come up with a pill before they come up with the disease — I think maybe we need a war all the time so we can wear out equipment and buy oil. Three weeks earlier, on the May 21 program, Maher offered this great insight into the Gulf of Mexico oil leak: Do you think BP could end this oil gushing out of the ocean if they just blew up the well and tapped it and they are not doing so because there’s still money to be made from the oil coming out of the well? Remember these the next time a MSNBC lefty derides a conservative for some “crazy” belief.

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Bill Maher Goes Out with Another Conspiracy: ‘We Need a War All the Time So We Can…Buy Oil’

Abby Sunderland Blogs: I Am Safe and Sound

Following almost a full day in which the loved ones of Abby Sunderland feared this 16-year sailor was lost at sea, a search plane made contact with Sutherland last week and assured the world: Abby is alive and well . Reports indicate a giant wave knocked Abby unconscious for a short period of time on Thursday before she recovered and activiated a pair of emergency satellite beacons. Since then, a French fishing vessel has scooped up Sunderland and rescued her from the harsh conditions of the Indian Ocean. Aboard this new boat, Sunderland found time to update her blog and wrote: “As you probably already know I had a pretty rough couple of days. The long and short of it is one long wave, and one short mast (short meaning a two-inch stub)…. I just wanted to let everyone know I am safe and sound on a great big fishing boat headed I am not exactly sure where.” Abby has spoken to her parents and the family is trying to figure out the most logistical way of getting her home to California. In her blog entry, the teenager – who was attempting to become the youngest person to ever navigate the globe on a solo sail – also addressed critics who believed she was too young to take on such an adventure. “The truth is, I was in a storm and you don’t sail through the Indian Ocean without getting in at least one storm,” she wrote. “Storms are part of the deal when [you] set out to sail around the world alone. “Since when does age create gigantic waves and storms?” You tell us, readers: Should Abby Sunderland ever have been on the ocean by herself in the first place?

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Abby Sunderland Blogs: I Am Safe and Sound

Scientists Hope BP Oil Spill Offers Clues about Global Warming

Image: The Chronicle of Higher Education While everyone else worries about the toxicity of the oil, the physics of plume dispersion, and the costs to wildlife and workers across the gulf, one crew of scientists see a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. The obvious ethical restrictions to releasing large amounts of methane (which contributes 25 times more greenhouse effect than carbon dioxide) into the ocean has complicated study of how seepage of natural gas at the ocean floor contributes to global wa… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Scientists Hope BP Oil Spill Offers Clues about Global Warming

Stewart On Latest BP Developments: "We Are So F–ked" (VIDEO)

Funny, but sad! added by: kennymotown

Secret ingredients of Corexit now revealed by feds after their dumping on the Gulf

After weeks of silence on the issue, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) finally decided to go public with the list of ingredients used to manufacture Corexit, the chemical dispersant used by BP in the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster. There are two things about this announcement that deserve our attention: First, the ingredients that have been disclosed are extremely toxic, and second, why did the EPA protect the oil industry's “trade secrets” for so long by refusing to disclose these ingredients until now? As reported in the New York Times, Brian Turnbaugh, a policy analyst at OMB Watch said, “EPA had the authority to act all along; its decision to now disclose the ingredients demonstrates this. Yet it took a public outcry and weeks of complaints for the agency to act and place the public's interest ahead of corporate interests.” On the toxicity question, you could hardly find a more dangerous combination of poisons to dump into the Gulf of Mexico than what has been revealed in Corexit. The Corexit 9527 product has been designated a “chronic and acute health hazard” by the EPA. It is made with 2-butoxyethanol, a highly toxic chemical that has long been linked to the health problems of cleanup crews who worked on the Exxon Valdez spill. A newer Corexit recipe dubbed the “9500 formula” contains dioctyl sodium sulfosuccinate, a detergent chemical that's also found in laxatives. What do you suppose happens to the marine ecosystem when fish and sea turtles ingest this chemical through their gills and skin? And just as importantly, what do you think happens to the human beings who are working around this chemical, breathing in its fumes and touching it with their skin? The answers are currently unknown, which is exactly why it is so inexcusable that Nalco and the oil industry giants would for so long refuse to disclose the chemical ingredients they're dumping into the Gulf of Mexico in huge quantities (over a million gallons dumped into the ocean to date). But it gets even more interesting when you look at just how widespread this “chemical secrecy” is across Big Business in the USA… and how the U.S. government more often than not conspires with industry to keep these chemicals a secret. It's time to end chemical trade secrets Armed with the accomplices in the FDA, EPA, FTC and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, powerful corporations have been keeping secrets from us all. It's not just the toxic chemicals in Corexit, either: Large manufacturers of consumers products — such as Unilever, Proctor & Gamble and Johnson & Johnson — routinely use toxic chemical ingredients in their products — ingredients which are usually kept secret from the public. Similarly, virtually every perfume, cologne and fragrance product on the market is made with cancer-causing chemicals that their manufacturers refuse to disclose, claiming their formulas are “trade secrets.” Throughout Big Business in America, the toxic chemicals used in everyday products such as household cleaners, cosmetics and yard care remain a dangerous secret, and the U.S. government actually colludes with industry to keep these chemical ingredients a secret by, for example, refusing to require full disclosure of ingredients for personal care products. The FDA offers us virtually no enforcement in this area, depending almost entirely on companies to declare their own chemicals are safe rather than requiring actual safety testing to be conducted. This is why the following statement is frightening yet true: What BP is doing to the Gulf of Mexico, companies like Proctor & Gamble are doing to the entire population. We are all being mass poisoned by the toxic chemicals in personal care products, foods, medicines, fragrance products and other concoctions created by powerful corporations that use toxic chemicals throughout their product lines… but who refuse to disclose those ingredients in the public. continued added by: JanforGore