With tarballs washing ashore in Mississippi and Alabama, experts are saying the spill is close to making landfall in Florida.

Read more:
Oil Spill Threatens Other Gulf States
PART ONE… http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/06/01/gulf.oil.spill/index.html?hpt=T1 Oil spill spreads to Mississippi, Alabama By the CNN Wire Staff June 1, 2010 6:59 p.m. EDT Tar balls and puddles of oil are reported on Alabama's Dauphin Island. * U.S. begins criminal investigation into oil spill * Robots make latest attempt to stop the oil leak * Spill makes a third of Gulf off-limits to fishing * BP puts cost of spill response at $990 million (CNN) — Oil from BP's massive Gulf of Mexico crude spill reached the shores of Mississippi on Tuesday, Gov. Haley Barbour's office reported. Residents and researchers reported oil in Alabama. In Mississippi, a long, narrow strand of oil came ashore on Petit Bois Island, Barbour's office said. The strand of oil was about 2 miles long but only 3 feet wide, said Laura Hipp, a spokeswoman for Barbour's office. Cleanup crews were on the scene Tuesday evening, she said. Petit Bois Island is off Pascagoula, Mississippi. It's about five miles west of Dauphin Island, Alabama, where oil was also washing ashore Tuesday afternoon. But Hipp said most of the oil remained more than 35 miles off Horn Island, the largest of Mississippi's barrier islands. The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration had warned earlier this week that the spreading slick from an undersea BP oil well was heading toward the Alabama and Mississippi coasts. Tar balls associated with the Gulf spill had hit Dauphin Island, about 35 miles south of Mobile, in early May, but residents said that Tuesday was the first time they had seen oil hitting the beach. Nevertheless, people were still on the beaches and swimming in the blue-green waters. BP began its latest attempt to curtail the flow of oil from an underwater well in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday, using robot submarines to cut into a damaged pipe a mile down. The operation carries the risk that the flow of crude from the ruptured well, already the largest oil spill in U.S. history, will increase — but if successful, the company says it will be able to catch most of that oil with a cap it plans to place over the severed lower marine riser pipe. “Even with an increased flow rate, this cap will be able to handle this,” BP Managing Director Bob Dudley told CNN's “American Morning.” Meanwhile, the Obama administration distanced itself from BP by announcing it would no longer hold joint news conferences with the company; and Attorney General Eric Holder, after meeting with Gulf-Coast-state attorneys general, told reporters the Justice Department has launched a criminal investigation into the oil spill. The engineering involved in the latest work on the damaged well has never been attempted at a depth of 5,000 feet. But Dudley said Tuesday the latest attempt is “more straightforward” than previous, unsuccessful efforts. A mechanical claw began squeezing the heavy riser pipe late Tuesday morning, the first step in a series of planned cuts. After that, a diamond-cut saw was being brought in to make a “clean cut,” preparing the way for the custom-made cap to be fitted over the lower marine riser package. Oil has been gushing from the undersea well since April 20 when the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded and later sank. Government estimates are that up to 19,000 barrels (798,000 gallons) of oil a day are flowing into the Gulf of Mexico. Dudley said that could increase by up to 20 percent — nearly 160,000 gallons — when the pipe is cut, but he said the company has learned lessons from its earlier attempts that it is applying to the new process. Warm water and methanol will be pumped into the cap to limit the growth of gas hydrate crystals that thwarted an earlier attempt to cap the spill, he said. And a second line is planned to draw more oil off the well's blowout preventer, a critical piece of safety equipment that has so far failed to shut down the well, using equipment involved in last week's failed “top kill” operation. BP's handling of the spill and its statements regarding the status of operations have been sharply criticized by some in recent weeks. The Obama administration announced Tuesday that it would no longer hold joint news briefings with the company and that Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, its point man on the spill, will now become the face of the government's response effort. Allen told reporters in New Orleans, Louisiana, that his job is to speak “very frankly with the American public.” “I think we need to be communicating with the American people through my voice as the national incident commander,” he said. Rear Adm. Mary Landry, who has been the Coast Guard's on-scene coordinator for five weeks, will be returning to her duties as chief of the service's New Orleans district office. Coast Guard Commandant Robert Papp said the plan always has been for Landry to resume that role in preparation for the Atlantic hurricane season, which began Tuesday. Allen praised Landry's work leading “an anomalous and unprecedented response” to the spill, but said Landry now needs to focus “on the larger array of threats” to her district, which includes the U.S. Southeast and Midwest. CONTINUED… added by: EthicalVegan
Posted in Celebrities, Hot Stuff
Tagged bennyhollywood, celeb news, coast-guard, Hollywood, mma, severe-damage, spill, tuesday
PART ONE… http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/06/01/gulf.oil.spill/index.html?hpt=T1&iref=BN1 U.S. begins criminal investigation into oil spill By the CNN Wire Staff June 1, 2010 4:24 p.m. EDT (CNN) — U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said Tuesday that the Justice Department has launched a criminal investigation into the massive oil spill spreading through the Gulf of Mexico. Holder said the investigation would be comprehensive and aggressive. He promised that the federal officials will prosecute anyone who broke the law. Holder, who made the announcement during a visit to the Gulf, called early signs of the spill heartbreaking and tragic. The attorney general was in the Gulf to survey the BP oil spill and meet with state attorneys general and federal prosecutors from Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi, according to the Justice Department. In May, a group of senators — including Environment and Public Works Committee Chair Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-California — sent Holder a letter expressing concerns “about the truthfulness and accuracy of statements submitted by BP to the government in its initial exploration plan for the site,” and asking Holder to investigate possible criminal and civil wrongdoing. In a reply to that letter last week, a Justice Department official did not say whether a criminal investigation had begun. “The Department of Justice will take all necessary and appropriate steps to ensure that those responsible for this tragic series of events are held fully accountable,” Assistant Attorney General Ronald Welch wrote. Holder said in May that the Justice Department would “ensure that BP is held liable.” BP began its latest attempt to curtail the flow of oil from an underwater well in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday, using robot submarines to cut into a damaged pipe a mile down. The operation carries the risk that the flow of crude from the ruptured well, already the largest oil spill in U.S. history, will increase. But if successful, the company says it will be able to catch most of that oil with a cap it plans to place over the severed lower marine riser pipe. “Even with an increased flow rate, this cap will be able to handle this,” BP Managing Director Bob Dudley told CNN's “American Morning.” While the engineering has never been attempted at a depth of 5,000 feet, Dudley said Tuesday the latest attempt is “more straightforward” than previous, unsuccessful efforts. A mechanical claw began squeezing the heavy riser pipe late Tuesday morning, the first step in a series of planned cuts. After that, a diamond-cut saw will be used to make a “clean cut,” preparing the way for the custom-made cap to be fitted over the package. Tar balls and puddles of oil from the oil spill reached the shores of Alabama's Dauphin Island on Tuesday, residents and researchers involved in cleanup efforts reported. Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen said authorities were investigating reports that the outer sheen of oil was reaching coastal waters off Mississippi and Alabama earlier Tuesday, but those reports had not been confirmed when he spoke to reporters in New Orleans, Louisiana. The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration had warned earlier this week that the spreading slick was heading toward the Alabama and Mississippi coasts. Tar balls associated with the Gulf spill had hit Dauphin Island, about 35 miles south of Mobile, in early May. Oil has been gushing from the undersea well since April 20 when the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded and later sank. Government estimates are that up to 19,000 barrels (798,000 gallons) of oil a day are flowing into the Gulf of Mexico. Dudley said that could increase by up to 20 percent — nearly 160,000 gallons — when the pipe is cut, but he said the company has learned lessons from its earlier attempts that it is applying to the new process. Warm water and methanol will be pumped into the cap to limit the growth of gas hydrate crystals that thwarted an earlier attempt to cap the spill, he said. And a second line is planned to draw more oil off the well's blowout preventer, a critical piece of safety equipment that has so far failed to shut down the well, using equipment involved in last week's failed “top kill” operation. BP's handling of the spill and its statements regarding the status of operations have been sharply criticized by some in recent weeks. The Obama administration announced Tuesday that it would no longer hold joint news briefings with the company and that Allen, its point man on the spill, will now become the face of the government's response effort. Allen told reporters in New Orleans, Louisiana, that his job is to speak “very frankly with the American public.” “I think we need to be communicating with the American people through my voice as the national incident commander,” he said. Rear Adm. Mary Landry, who has been the Coast Guard's on-scene coordinator for five weeks, will be returning to her duties as chief of the service's New Orleans district office. Coast Guard Commandant Robert Papp said the plan always has been for Landry to resume that role in preparation for the Atlantic hurricane season, which began Tuesday. Allen praised Landry's work leading “an anomalous and unprecedented response” to the spill, but said Landry now needs to focus “on the larger array of threats” to her district, which includes the U.S. Southeast and Midwest. CONTINUED… added by: EthicalVegan
Posted in Celebrities, Hot Stuff
Tagged bennyhollywood, celeb news, Cnn, custom, environment, government, gulf, Hollywood, mexico, mississippi, News, spill, tuesday, Voice
Image via The Guardian What are potato chips? They’re slices of potatoes with the majority of the water taken out (and in most cases, a lot of oil added in). What happens to all the water – around 80% of a potato? Well, for four potato chip factories in the UK where water is an increasingly significant issue, the water will go straight toward processing the themselves. PepsiCo is planning to take the factories off the water grid entirely, and use the water from the roughly 350,000 tons of potatoes processed each year into products like Walker’s Cr… Read the full story on TreeHugger

Here is the original post:
PepsiCo Using Potatoes to Run UK Chip Factories
Posted in Gossip, Hollywood, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged based-on-how, bennyhollywood, business & politics, good-faith, green news, potato-chip, potato-water, spill, the-water, TMZ, using-potatoes
Stinking whale on beach. Many cases of dynamite later…blubber rains on humans. This old exploding whale video seems like a good metaphor for the occasional failure of technology to solve to Big Problems like the BP leaker, I wanted first to use that scene in Raiders of the Lost Arc when the bad guys open up the box and all hell breaks loose. But, I can’t post… Read the full story on TreeHugger

Here is the original post:
Exploding Whale – A Metaphor For Top Kill, Junk Shot, And All The Rest
BP said on Friday it may need two more days to know if its complex maneuver to plug a gushing Gulf of Mexico oil well has worked, while President Barack Obama warned there was no “silver bullet” solution to the biggest oil spill in U.S. history. Trying to assert leadership in the face of growing criticism over his handling of the spill, Obama toured the Louisiana Gulf coast, where oil has seeped into delicate marshlands and shut down much of the lucrative fishing trade. BP CEO Tony Hayward flew over the Gulf to where his crew and robots worked on the “top kill” — the injection of heavy fluids, materials and ultimately cement to seal the well one mile below the surface. Hayward said the procedure was making progress choking off the five-week-old leak that has already spewed millions of gallons (liters) of oil into the Gulf. “We have wrestled it to the ground but we haven't put a bullet in its head yet,” Hayward told Reuters while aboard a helicopter over the spill site in the Gulf. When the top kill began on Wednesday, BP said it would need up to 48 hours to gauge its success. But Hayward extended the timeline another 24-48 hours on Friday. He said the top kill's chance of success remained at 60 to 70 percent. BP has called the effort to plug the hole “a “rollercoaster ride,” and investors might say the same. BP shares lost 5 percent on Friday, erasing gains made on hopes for a successful top kill, which aims to eventually seal with cement the ruptured well one mile below the surface. On his second visit to the Gulf in the five-week crisis, Obama faced his own steep challenge to convince Americans that he was in command as frustrated Gulf Coast residents loudly criticized federal authorities for being slow to act and offering too little assistance. “You will not be abandoned. You will not be left behind. We are on your side and we will see this through,” Obama said in a televised statement after meeting local and state officials and inspecting the oil spill damage to the coastline. “I am the president and the buck stops with me,” he said. BP 'WORKING FOR THE GOVERNMENT' The buck may stop with Obama, but the key to stopping the environmental catastrophe lies with BP because the federal government has few tools to work at those depths. Hayward, however, made clear that the government is in charge these days. “We are working for the government,” he said. “The government is running it.” BP views the top kill procedure as its best hope of plugging the well and containing a spill that has tarred its reputation and seen some 25 percent, around $50 billion, wiped off its share price. The company said on Friday the cost of the disaster so far was $930 million. That figure is sure to multiply with cleanup of the oily mess, which is now larger than the spill from the Exxon Valdez disaster off the Alaskan coast in 1989. As Hayward flew toward the site of the rig explosion that killed 11 workers on April 20, the sheen of oil and brown patches of crude and dispersant were visible below. Some 50-60 vessels are in the area working on the BP containment and shut-off effort. Hayward said BP had also injected a “junk shot” of heavier blocking materials, such as shredded rubber and golf balls, into the failed blowout preventer of the ruptured wellhead. They were due to pump in more heavy fluids later on Friday. The mud has not stopped the oil leak but at times has slowed the flow. BP began the top kill operation on Wednesday afternoon and then stopped pumping mud overnight to analyze pressure readings. It did not publicize the halt for many hours, drawing fresh accusations it was concealing information from the public. It denied the charges and blamed an oversight. If the top kill fails, BP says it will try other remedies, such as a second attempt at containing the oil so it can be transported by pipe to a ship at the water's surface or placing a new blowout preventer atop the failed one. FEW LIKE GOVERNMENT RESPONSE Obama said a team of government scientists was exploring contingency plans in case the top kill option failed. “There are not going to be silver bullets or a lot of perfect answers for some of the challenges that we face,” he said. “This is a man-made catastrophe that is still evolving.” continued. added by: JanforGore
Posted in Celebrities, Hot Stuff
Tagged failed, lost, louisiana-gulf, mma, president, ruptured, said-on-friday, spill, surface
CNN Report: BP has lost all credibility.. Senate Committee on Energy and Commerce, Rep. Ed Markley, Sen Bill Nelson, criticisms http://www.cnn.com/video/# /video/politics/2010/05/20/bts.oil.spill.video.presser.cnn?hpt=Sbin CNN Oil Spill – CBS Threatened With Arrest For Filming The Oil Spill http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x2VuaGXOlJ0 ============= Yes, but what what are our leaders doing about it? added by: twohawks
BP’s oil isn’t leaking ” four or fives times ” faster than everyone thought—at a rate of 4 million gallons per day —it’s twenty times worse than BP thought. And the chemical they’re using to “disperse” it is toxic, too. More
Posted in Celebrities, Gossip, Hot Stuff, TV
Tagged disasters, everyone-thought, fives-times, nalco, none-solid, oil-isn, spill, stuff, the-chemical, twitter celeb
Oil from a blown-out well is forming huge underwater plumes as much as 10 miles long below the visible slick in the Gulf of Mexico, scientists said as BP wrestled for a third day Sunday with its latest contraption for slowing the nearly month-old gusher. BP, the largest oil and gas producer in the U.S., has been unable to thread a tube into the leak to siphon the crude to a tanker, its third approach to stopping or reducing the spill on the ocean floor. Engineers remotely steering robot submersibles were trying again Sunday to fit the tube into a breach nearly a mile below the surface, BP said. Oil has been spewing since the rig Deepwater Horizon exploded April 20, killing 11 people and sinking two days later. The government shortly afterward estimated the spill at 210,000 gallons — or 5,000 barrels — a day, a figure that has since been questioned by some scientists who fear it could be far more. BP executives have stood by the estimate while acknowledging there's no way to know for sure. BP also owns a rig that operated with incomplete and inaccurate engineering documents, which one official warned could “lead to catastrophic operator error,” records and interviews show. Two months before the Deepwater Horizon accident, 19 members of Congress called on the agency that oversees offshore oil drilling to investigate a whistle-blower's complaints about the BP-owned Atlantis, which is stationed in 7,070 feet of water more than 150 miles south of New Orleans. The Associated Press has learned that an independent firm hired by BP substantiated the complaints in 2009 and found that the company was violating its own policies by not having completed engineering documents on board the Atlantis when it began operating in 2007. Word of huge submerged oil plumes, meanwhile, raised the specter of more damage to the ecologically rich Gulf. It also adds to questions about when large amounts of crude might hit shore. “It's just a matter of time … and the first significant amount of oil is going to show up around the U.S,” said Hans Graber, director of the University of Miami's satellite sensing facility, who has been tracking the oil slick. Researchers from the National Institute for Undersea Science and Technology said Saturday they had detected the underwater oil plumes at depths between just beneath the surface to more than 4,000 feet. continued added by: JanforGore
Posted in Celebrities, Hot Stuff
Tagged bennyhollywood, current, deepwater, ocean, spill, technology, underwater, university