Tag Archives: spill

Contractor Vents About BP’s Shady Spill Response (Video)

Image via Kid K Adam Dillon was a contractor for BP, and worked to help coordinate the spill cleanup of effort. His first appearance on television found him chasing reporters of a spill-impacted sight in the middle of a news segment for WDSU in New Orleans. Now, the tides have turned, and Dillon is willfully going to the press himself. After seeing firsthand how BP is orchestrating its cleanup effort, and bearing witness to some of its more secretive policies — and getting fired for photographing sensitive sites — he’s decided to go public with the story. Video is after the jump. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Contractor Vents About BP’s Shady Spill Response (Video)

Computer simulations show oil reaching up the Atlantic coastline and toward Europe

“The possible spread of the oil spill from the Deepwater Horizon rig over the course of one year was studied in a series of computer simulations by a team of researchers from the School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST) at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. The simulations suggest that the coastlines near the Carolinas, Georgia, and Northern Florida could see the effects of the oil spill as early as October 2010, while the main branch of the subtropical gyre is likely to transport the oil film towards Europe, although strongly diluted. Eight million buoyant particles were released continuously from April 20 to September 17, 2010, at the location of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig. The release occurred in ocean flow data from simulations conducted with the high-resolution Ocean General Circulation Model for the Earth Simulator (OFES). “The paths of the particles were calculated in 8 typical OFES years over 360 days from the beginning of the spill,” says Fabian Schloesser, a PhD student from the Department of Oceanography in SOEST, who worked on these simulations with Axel Timmermann and Oliver Elison Timm from the International Pacific Research Center, also in SOEST. “From these 8 typical years, 5 were selected to create an animation for which the calculated extent of the spill best matches current observational estimates.” http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/07/100706103408.htm added by: DeliaTheArtist

BP Oil Spill Sparks a Crude Awakening (VIDEO)

Check out this powerful video—made as an unsolicited donation to the National Wildlife Federation —that drives home the impact that the BP oil spill is having on wildlife in the … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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BP Oil Spill Sparks a Crude Awakening (VIDEO)

Gulf Oil Spill Update: Just the Facts

“How much oil is still gushing? No one knows exactly how much oil is escaping BP's oil collection system (series of pipes drawing oil from leak to surface ships) and entering Gulf waters. Government estimates peg the leak at 35,000 to 60,000 barrels per day, which translates to between 1.5 million and 2.5 million gallons. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)'s nearshore trajectory predictions for the spill show it hovering off the Gulf Coast as far west as the Rockefeller State Wildlife Preserve and Game Refuge in the western part of Louisiana. The oil slick stretches as far east as Port St. Joe in northwestern Florida. NOAA is no longer forecasting the movement of oil out at sea, but the slick is not currently expected to enter the Loop Current, which could draw it around the Florida Peninsula and into the greater Atlantic. However, giant plumes of oil and gas are still present thousands of feet below the surface of the Gulf. The plumes are made of a mixture of oil, gas and seawater. They've been spotted radiating out from the blown well in all directions, University of Georgia marine scientist Samantha Joye said at a June 22 media briefing. The southwest plume has been traced over 20 miles from the well, while another plume extends more than 30 miles (48 kilometers) to the Northeast. The plumes are rich in methane gas, which is an energy source for some undersea microbes. These microbes seem to be noshing on the methane and multiplying, depleting the oxygen in the water column. In the long run, Joye said, that oxygen deprivation could affect the Gulf ecosystem by harming populations of plankton, the base of the oceanic food chain. (READ THAT LAST SENTENCE AGAIN!) How many animals have been affected by the spill? Gulf wildlife is still facing fallout from the oil spill. According to NOAA, 583 sea turtles were stranded in the oil spill area between April 30 and June 28. Of those, 432 were found dead and four died after being rescued. A total of 136 turtles are currently in rehabilitation centers, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is coordinating an effort to remove up to 70,000 turtle eggs from at-risk beaches. [Animals affected by oil spill] In the same April-to-June time period, 55 dolphins were found stranded in the oil spill area. Only two survived. While cause of death has not been determined, dolphin strandings are up this year, according to NOAA. According to U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and NOAA numbers, 1,185 visibly oiled birds had been pulled from Gulf waters and beaches as of June 29. More than 300 of those were found dead, as were another 829 without external evidence of oil. ” More at link! http://www.livescience.com/environment/gulf-oil-spill-update-100702.html added by: DeliaTheArtist

Media Spin Supreme Court Gun Ruling as Loss for States’ Rights

Don’t look now, but it seems the media have suddenly discovered a respect for states’ rights. All it took was a Supreme Court ruling affirming the Second Amendment’s role in protecting gun owners’ rights from state or local infringement. Newsweek  called the ruling  “bad news” for gun controllers because “the right to ‘keep and bear arms’ in the U.S. Constitution’s 2 nd  Amendment restricts state and local power to impose gun controls.” The ruling found that local and state governments cannot simply ban gun ownership. It left the door open for some restrictions, but the extent of those restrictions remains largely untested. CNN  declared the ruling  “a potentially far-reaching case over the ability of state and local governments to enforce limits on weapons.” MSNBC’s Morning Joe contributors were devastated by the court’s ruling. “Gun owners win. Gun rights win. Big cities lose. I mean, any time you make it easier for guns to be on the streets of big cities or any city, actually, we lose as citizens,” Mike Barnacle said. Richard Haass said there was a “gap” between “the theory that the Court is deciding on about a fairly broad interpretation of Second Amendment rights and the realities as mayors see it.” He bemoaned that “this is obviously going to have repercussions in every city and every state across the country.” A  recent MSNBC report , however, found that gun ownership has increased over the years while gun homicides have decreased. Like this article? Sign up for “Culture Links,” CMI’s weekly e-mail newsletter, by   clicking  here.

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Media Spin Supreme Court Gun Ruling as Loss for States’ Rights

Matt Lauer Lectures: ‘Our Appetite for Oil’ Caused Spill

NBC’s Matt Lauer, on Tuesday’s Today show, blamed America’s “appetite for oil” as the reason for the spill in the Gulf and asked former NBC Nightly News anchor Tom Brokaw if the country will finally “take away the proper message” from the mess? For his part Brokaw responded that he hoped “young people who are coming of age” and entering public service and the corporate world will view the spill as a “defining moment” and warned if they didn’t make the needed changes “we’re gonna have these kinds of ecological disasters in waves coming year after year.” The following exchange was aired on the June 29 Today show: MATT LAUER: Yeah I want to touch back on this oil spill as, before I let you go. You know we’re, we’re seeing the blame game. A lot of blame going around. We’re seeing the villainization of a major corporation. We’re seeing the limits of our technology- TOM BROKAW: Right. LAUER: -played out in front of our eyes. But on that live camera, right there, we’re seeing something else. We’re seeing our seeing our appetite for oil. And do you think at the end of all this Americans are gonna take away the proper message? BROKAW: I hope so. I really believe that younger people are gonna be much more affected by all of this than people of a certain age, that includes you and me. Because we’ve grown up used to the idea of having oil and relying on it. I think young people who are coming of age who may want to go into public service at some point or go into the corporate world, this is a defining moment in their lives and they’re going to be thinking about this in a much different fashion than the rest of us might. And I think if anything good comes out of that, that might be the case. A new generational wave of determination to find an alternative to fossil fuel. I think that the oil blow-out is a metaphor for our times. It’s complex. It’s everything that we’ve been told has turned out not to be true and it really is a signal to the rest of us that we’ve got to do something about energy and the future or we’re gonna have these kinds of ecological disasters in waves coming year after year, decade after decade.

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Matt Lauer Lectures: ‘Our Appetite for Oil’ Caused Spill

Open Thread: An Oily Rebuke of Big Government

The Washington Examiner’s Mark Tapscott argues that ” Big Government is dying in the Gulf oil spill .” It’s not just millions of gallons of black gold spilling into the Gulf of Mexico that are being lost. Also disappearing into watery despair are the last shreds of credibility for progressive Big Government. It’s Day 65 of the Deepwater Horizon spill and the only hope of stopping the flow of thick, gooey crude remains the relief well being drilled by the private sector. None of the ass-kicking political speeches by President Obama, bureaucratic edicts by Interior Secretary Ken Salazar or EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, or hypocritical posturing for the cameras in Congress has plugged the hole to stop the flow of suffocating oil headed to the beaches. We see this week a remarkable confluence of events signaling the eventual end of Big Government: The bureaucrats and politicians can spend trillions but they can’t plug the Gulf oil spill, agree on a budget in Congress or end the Great Recession’s foreclosures and unemployment. Is Tapscott reading too much into the spill, or will the spill be the straw that breaks the big government camel’s back?

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Open Thread: An Oily Rebuke of Big Government

AP: "Oil Leak Wouldn’t Fill Superdome" – Who Cares?

Image Source: Boston.com A new AP article out on Monday had my jaw on the ground. The article, By the numbers: Oil leak wouldn’t fill Superdome by Seth Borenstein seemed to play down the severity of the BP oil leak and support BP CEO Tony Hayward’s statement that the amount of oil spilled was “relatively tiny” by providing comparisons to everyday measures that we can relate to. Overwhelmed and saddened by the gargantuan size of the Gulf oil spill? A little mathematical context to the spill size can put the envi… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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AP: "Oil Leak Wouldn’t Fill Superdome" – Who Cares?

Threadless Sells T-shirt to Fund BP Gulf Oil Spill Recovery

All proceeds from sales of the PeliCAN T-shirt will go to the Gulf Restoration Network. Images via Threadless.com . Guest bloggers Andrea Donsky and Randy Boyer are co-founders of NaturallySavvy.com . Online T-shirt seller Threadless is at it again. Known for pitching in for a good cause, the company is donating all proceeds from the sale of an oil spill-inspired T-shirt to the Gu… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Threadless Sells T-shirt to Fund BP Gulf Oil Spill Recovery

Catching Heat From Left, Obama Meets With Liberal Commentators to Discuss Gulf Spill

President Obama met with a group of prominent liberal commentators on Thursday to discuss the Gulf oil spill and the administration’s response. The meeting came in the midst of a rare firestorm of criticism from the left over the president’s response to the spill. It was surely not coincidence that the journalists seen leaving the White House that afternoon–the New York Times’s Gail Collins , the Washington Post’s Eugene Robinson , MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow , and the Wall Street Journal’s Gerald Seib –were some of the more prominent critics of the president’s Oval Office address on Tuesday. The meeting demonstrates two facts: the White House is trying furiously to spin media coverage of the federal response to the spill in the administration’s favor, and the old White House double standard towards the news media persists. Though hardly shocking, the Obama administration continues to employ a vicious double standard that dubs any news organization that criticizes the president something short of legitimate. Lest anyone has forgotten, two top White House officials–chief of staff Rahm Emanuel and political advisor David Axelrod –both rhetorically negated Fox’s credentials as a legitimate news organization. Thursday’s meeting suggests another layer of partisanship that, though hardly surprising, is still quite telling. While Fox is demonized, some of the left’s most partisan commentators are not only granted the White House’s seal of legitimacy, but are even give privileged access to the president. The meeting also suggests that Obama is devoting more effort to spinning his administration’s policies concerning the gulf spill than he is with actually devising more effective policies. His meeting with these lefty journalists was, after all, roughly three times as long as his meeting with BP CEO Tony Hayward.

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Catching Heat From Left, Obama Meets With Liberal Commentators to Discuss Gulf Spill