Tag Archives: Water

Deepwater leases/discoveries in Gulf – how many? how deep?

deepest discovery at 9,975 ft , all stats on this post , list of current leases & depth Deepwater discoveries for 2008 Water depth (Feet) . . . . . . Operator – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 9,975 …………………………. .Murphy 7,657 …………………………..Statoil/ExxonMobil 6,302 ……………………………Noble Energy 6,095 ……………………………British Petroleum 5,876 …………………………..Murphy 4,986……………………………British Petroleum 3,266 …………………………..LLOG 3,116……………………………Newfield Exploration 3,099 …………………………..LLOG 2,820 …………………………..Marine Energy 2,696 …………………………..Newfield Exploration 2,180 …………………………..Deep Gulf Energy 2,013 …………………………LLOG 1,030 ………………………….Water Oil & Gas 1,003 ……………………….. LLOG Discoveries in Water Depths Greater Than 5,000 Feet ( no lease owner/opperator info given ) Water Depth . . .Discovery Year – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 5,001………………….2001 5,116………………… 2004 5,227………………….1999 5,259………………… 2004 5,268………………….2005 5,303 …………………1993 5,313………………….1986 5,329………………….2001 5,413……………….. 2004 5,422 …………………1999 5,532 …………………1999 5,662………………… 2000 5,672………………… 2006 5,714………………… 2004 5,721………………… 2006 5,741………………….1987 5,782………………… 2004 5,881………………….2001 5,876………………….2008 6,082………………… 1999 6,095………………….2008 6,108………………… 2006 6,134………………… 1995 6,203………………… 1995 6,302………………… 2008 6,535………………… 2007 6,541………………… 1993 6,601………………… 1997 6,612………………… 1998 6,623………………… 2001 6,895………………… 1989 6,952………………… 2001 6,962………………….2004 6.991………………….2003 7,051………………….1999 7,068………………….2006 7,087………………… 2007 7,207………………… 1999 7,509………………… 2003 7,588………………….1987 7,620………………….1996 7.657………………… 2008 7,714………………… 2006 7,790…………………. 2001 7,805…………………. 2004 7,926…………………. 2005 7,935………………… 2001 8,082………………… 2003 8,119………………… 2002 8,152……………….. 2002 8,344………………… 2002 8,351………………… 2005 8,362………………… 2004 8,774……………….. 2005 8,778……………….. 2003 8,807………………… 2004 8,831………………… 2005 8,944………………….2003 8,983………………… 2004 9,004………………… 2004 9,226………………… 2004 9,571………………….2005 9,627………………….2004 9,721………………….2001 9,975………………….2008 ACTIVE Leases ………Water Depth 3,096 …………………… < 1,000 152 ........................ 1,000 - 1,499 2,066 ..................... 1,500 - 4,999 1,398 ..................... 5,000 - 7,499 598 ........................ > 7,500 all info taken from Mineral Managment service official website http://www.gomr.mms.gov/homepg/offshore/offshore.html all stats are for Gulf of Mexico only. Wonks & Greenies feel free to look up Alaska, Atlantic & Pacific. ” SPOILER ALERT ” – Big oil has us surrounded. added by: Stoneyroad

Weekday Vegetarian: Making a Warm Weather Supper From Wilted Kale with Lemon and Garlic

Photo: Emma Alter I spent the weekend looking through a new cookbook from Williams-Sonoma called Cooking From the Farmers’ Market. I’ve only made a few things from it so far, but I’m enjoying it. It’s not a vegetarian cookbook, but the emphasis is on the fruits and vegetables that are available in the market. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Weekday Vegetarian: Making a Warm Weather Supper From Wilted Kale with Lemon and Garlic

Lessons From Apartment Therapy’s Small, Cool Kitchen Competition

Apartment Therapy runs the small, cool contests every year, including one for kitchens; cleverly, they break it into categories including owning (American kitchens where people go nuts) renting (where people have more limited options) and international (because they really are different) This year’s … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Lessons From Apartment Therapy’s Small, Cool Kitchen Competition

UK’s First Desalination Plant Opens on Thames to Quench Londoners’ Thirst

Photo by Jaymi Heimbuch The Thames has come a long way from the polluted mess it once was just a few years ago. Clean-up efforts have been so successful, even fragile and fickle seahorses have returned . Now, the citizens of London can even drink the river water, thanks to a new desalination plant that has just opened up. It is the United Kingdom’s first desal plant, and while it will provide the city with much needed drinking water, desalination is not withou… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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UK’s First Desalination Plant Opens on Thames to Quench Londoners’ Thirst

Robert Pattinson: On Location, Minus Long Hair

When Kristen Stewart and Taylor Lautner showed up alone for a press event in Australia this week, some Twilight fans wondered and worried: Where was Robert Pattinson?!? Fret not, though, Twihards. There are no problems between Rob and any of his co-stars. The hunky star is simply on location in California, filming Water for Elephants . The movie is a big step for Pattinson: it’s based on a best-selling novel; it also features Reese Witherspoon; and it forced the actor to shave off his gorgeous locks. See for yourself below, as THG takes you on the set of this drama: What do you think of Robert Pattinson’s new hairdo? It makes him…

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Robert Pattinson: On Location, Minus Long Hair

SECOND OIL PLUME 22L x 6w miles Discovered Last Thurs, Confirmed Friday By Scientists. Obama and BP Remain Mute.

While news from Thurs, May 27 of a Second Oil plume about 22miles long, 6miles wide, moving West of the LA Gulf Spill site is not making major headlines, Obama's lip service continues, and BP remains in control, in spite of Obama's “the buck stops here” rhetoric over the weekend. Neither Obama et al, nor BP et al are making any mention of the Second Oil Plume, confirmed Friday by science research team at Unv So. Fla, in any news feeds I have found. The plume is reported as moving west/inland at a depth anywhere from 1,200 to 4,000 meteres, about 22 miles long by 6 miles wide. The Los Angeles Times report (source Washington Post) below provides some specifics on the constitution of the plume. I am including several other reports. Projections in most mainstream news (sources such as CNN, MSNBC, Google News Page, etc) estimate between 5,000 (BP's est) and 70,000 (other scientist's est) barrels a day. Other scientists have projected much more, as much as 120,000 barrels a day, with speculation of a Second Leak that is not being shown to us being surmised as the only possible explanation of why we are seeing so much emission… and that was reported based only on the estimates of the size of the first plume that is migrating east, not this other westward plume. Those reports can be found referenced here on Current (one of samantha's posts). The only pseudo mainstream news I could find on the “second oil plume” today (May 30 , 10am pst) are from Friday the 28th, …from the Los Angeles Times, USA Today (with a video), AAAS, AP, Huffington, FoxNews, and then some misc ~sources. Udate: Huffington just posted an update, the only one found for today. I am listing them all here / below. I do not usually post full news texts, but I am including full text for all listings here. TwoHawks ======================================================= Scientists find evidence of large underwater oil plume in gulf By David A. Fahrenthold and Juliet Eilperin Washington Post Staff Writer Thursday, May 27, 2010; 4:21 PM http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/05/28/AR2010052802346…. Scientists have found evidence of a large underwater “plume” of oil in the Gulf of Mexico, adding to fears that much of the BP oil spill's impact is hidden beneath the surface. The scientists, aboard a University of South Florida research vessel, found an area of dissolved oil that is about six miles wide, and extends from the surface down to a depth of about 3,200 feet, said Professor David Hollander. Hollander said that he believed the plume might have stretched more than 20 miles from the site of a leak on the floor of the Gulf of Mexico, where the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig sank April 22. It has not yet reached Florida. The plume is clear, with the oil entirely dissolved. “Here is a situation where, unless you're looking at the chemical fingerprints, [the oil] is absolutely not visible,” Hollander said. “It's not some Italian vinaigrette or anything like that. It's absolutely, perfectly clear.” But, Hollander said, even this clear-looking water could contain enough oil to be toxic to small animals at the base of the gulf food chain. He said he was also worried that the oil contains traces of “dispersants,” soap-like chemicals sprayed into the oil to break it up. “You don't want to put soap into a fish tank,” Hollander said. This discovery seems to confirm the fears of some scientists that — because of the depth of the leak and the heavy use of chemical “dispersants” — this spill was behaving differently than others. Instead of floating on top of the water, it may be moving beneath it. That would be troubling because it could mean the oil would slip past coastal defenses such as “containment booms” designed to stop it on the surface. Already, scientists and officials in Louisiana have reported finding thick oil washing ashore despite the presence of floating booms. It would also be a problem for hidden ecosystems deep under the gulf. There, scientists say, the oil could be absorbed by tiny animals and enter a food chain that builds to large, beloved sport-fish like red snapper. It might also glom on to deep-water coral formations, and cover the small animals that make up each piece of coral. “It kills them because it prevents them from feeding,” said Professor James H. Cowan Jr., of Louisiana State University. “It could essentially starve them to death.” The University of South Florida vessel, the Weatherbird II, used sonar and other devices to sample the water below it. Other scientists have said they have little of the equipment necessary to find oil under the water — leading to debates about whether the underwater plumes were even there. ad_icon This week, Mike Utsler, who helps oversee the spill response off the entire Louisiana coast as BP Houma incident commander, said he's only focused on taking oil off the surface. “We don't know there's oil underwater,” he said. But others had seen worrisome evidence. Owen Morgan of Amira, a group that specializes in breaking apart spills with oil-eating microbes, found evidence of the oil plume off Venice when his team sampled water 75 feet beneath the service. Morgan — who said his company is pulling out of Louisiana because of insufficient cooperation from state and federal authorities — showed a thick, gooey sample consisting of 60 percent crude oil. “People don't realize how bad it is,” Morgan said, dipping a fork in the sample to show the goo that hung in midair without sliding off. “This went on for three miles, of that consistency.” William Hogarth, dean of the USF College of Marine Science, said university researchers have sent samples to federal officials for analysis, but it's clear the oil is new because Stanford scientists had sampled the same area a year ago and found no evidence of oil. The Weatherbird II will conduct another tour next week, he said, with different researchers aboard. “This is not natural seep,” he said, adding that scientists will have to study the region for several years in order to properly gauge its impact. “We're talking about probably a three to five-year monitoring program to see what happens to food chain.” ============= USA Today (Posted Below) http://content.usatoday.com/communities/greenhouse/post/2010/05/new-giant-oil-pl… added by: twohawks

Weekend Receipts: Shrek Beats The City

There must be something in the water over at Dreamworks Animation. As happened with the studio’s How to Train Your Dragon in the spring, Shrek Forever After appears like it has legs and knows how to use them. Who — besides David Poland — woulda thunk it?! The big green orge managed to beat the Four Ogres of the Apocalypse — better known as the gals from Sex and the City 2 — over the weekend, meaning Jeffrey Katzenberg is probably having a green-colored cosmopolitan right about now. Mix one up yourself and get ready for some weekend receipts.

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Weekend Receipts: Shrek Beats The City

Which is Worse? Washing Laundry or Spraying Corexit 9500 Dispersant on Oil Spills?

Image: Flickr, Deepwater Horizon Response A lot of the questions surrounding the response to the gulf oil spill address the chemicals being sprayed onto the gulf and pumped out underwater to disperse the spilled oil. These dispersants are intended to break the oil up into smaller bits, which can sink into the water and get eaten up by microbes there. Along with questions about whether “out of sight, out of mind” is really better, there are serious concerns raised about depositing huge quantities of dispersant chemicals … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Which is Worse? Washing Laundry or Spraying Corexit 9500 Dispersant on Oil Spills?

Luxury Green Fashion From Ciel: Sweaters and More For Fall 2010 (Slideshow)

Image courtesy of Ciel Leading green fashion brand Ciel draws inspiration from the North Pole for their fall 2010 Arctic Knit Collection. Comprised of cool colors and warm neutral tones, their classic winter wear promises style, sustainability, and warmth come chilly weather. Click through to see their 2010 runway show at Tokyo Fashion Week , cozy weekend sweaters and scarves made with certified-organic Alpaca wool hand knitted in Peru, and more.

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Luxury Green Fashion From Ciel: Sweaters and More For Fall 2010 (Slideshow)

New Study Suggests Cancer-causing Chemicals in Drinking Water Comes from Shampoo, Detergent

Dishwashing detergent is among the household cleaning products containing ingredients that could form a cancer-causing contaminant in treated wastewater. Photo by rubberglovelover via Flickr. Guest bloggers Andrea Donsky and Randy Boyer are co-founders of NaturallySavvy.com . Ingredients commonly found in shampoo ,

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New Study Suggests Cancer-causing Chemicals in Drinking Water Comes from Shampoo, Detergent