Category Archives: Uncategorized

Huffington Post: Gulf Oil Spill: Gov’t remains blind to underwater oil hazard

This makes me so angry; our government is joining BP in leading this greatest of environmental mishaps with further incompetence and lies…..DV

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/05/18/gulf-oil-spill-government_n_580815.html 

First Posted: 05-18-10 06:14 PM   |   Updated: 05-20-10 09:15 AM
SEE UPDATE BELOW

The Obama administration is actively trying to dismiss media reports that vast plumes of oil lurk beneath the surface of the Gulf of Mexico, unmeasured and uncharted.

But the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, whose job it is to assess and track the damage being caused by the BP oil spill that began four weeks ago, is only monitoring what’s visible — the slick on the Gulf’s surface — and currently does not have a single research vessel taking measurements below.

The one ship associated with NOAA that had been doing such research is back in Pascagoula, Miss., having completed a week-long cruise during which scientists taking underwater samples found signs of just the kind of plume that environmentalists fear could have devastating effects on sea life of all shapes and sizes.

Meanwhile, the commander of the NOAA vessel that the White House on Friday claimed in a press release “is now providing information for oil spill related research” told HuffPost on Tuesday that he’s actually far away, doing something else entirely.

“We are in the Western Gulf doing plankton research,” said Commander Dave Score, reached by satellite phone on his research vessel, the Gordon Gunter. “So I really don’t know. I’m just on orders.”

Indeed, you can track the Gordon Gunter right here.

Two other NOAA research vessels are also in the area, but not monitoring the spill: The Thomas Jefferson, which has spent the last five days in Galveston, Texas; and the Oregon II, which has been under repair in Pascagoula for almost six months.
NOAA director Jane Lubchenco on Monday decried media reports about plumes of underwater oil as “misleading, premature and, in some cases, inaccurate.” (See the Huffington Post and New York Times coverage.)

Lubchenco implicitly criticized scientists on the Pelican, a research vessel operated by the NOAA-affiliated National Institute for Undersea Science and Technology (NIUST), for being hasty in its pronouncements to the media.

“No definitive conclusions have been reached by this research team about the composition of the undersea layers they discovered,” Lubchenco said in her statement. “Characterization of these layers will require analysis of samples and calibration of key instruments. The hypothesis that the layers consist of oil remains to be verified.”

NIUST, while partially funded by NOAA, is a cooperative venture with the University of Mississippi and the University of Southern Mississippi. And it was the Pelican crew’s idea — not NOAA’s — to start taking underwater measurements, although NOAA was perfectly happy to take credit for it, initially.

NOAA officials did not respond to repeated questions from the Huffington Post on Tuesday, and therefore did not explain how they could possibly assess or track underwater oil without having any vessels out taking measurements. Nor did they explain how the Gordon Gunter showed up in an administration press release.

Doug Helton, the emergency response coordinator in Seattle who is NOAA’s trajectory expert, answered his phone but wouldn’t say much. “It’s still a pretty dynamic situation as to what’s in the field today, as opposed to yesterday,” he hedged, before saying he would call back after getting clearance from NOAA’s public affairs office. There was no call back.

“The fact that NOAA has missed the ball catastrophically on the tracking and effects monitoring of this spill is inexcusable,” said Rick Steiner, a University of Alaska marine conservationist who recently spent more than a week on the Gulf Coast advising Greenpeace. “They need 20 research ships on this, yesterday.”

Steiner explained: “This is probably turning out to be the largest oil spill in U.S. history and the most unique oil spill in world history,” on account of it occurring not on or near the surface, but nearly a mile below.

“They should have had a preexisting rapid response plan,” he told HuffPost. “They should have had vessels of opportunity — shrimp vessels, any vessel that can deploy a water-column sampling device — pre-contracted, on a list, to be called up in an event that this happened. And they blew it. And it’s been going on for a month now, and all that information has been lost.”

Steiner gave credit to the scientists on the Pelican, but noted that at most they had sampled less than 1 percent of the affected waters. “The Pelican happened to drop some of their sampling devices into a plume and found it, but there have to be plumes elsewhere, and the biological implication are vast.”

NOAA officials “haven’t picked it up because they haven’t looked in the right places,” he said. “There have to be dozens of these massive plumes of toxic Deepwater Horizon oil, and they haven’t set out to delineate them in any shape or form.”

Frank Muller-Karger, an oceanography professor at the University of South Florida who will be testifying before the House Energy Committee on Wednesday, said that testing for oil beneath the surface should be a top priority.

“I think that should be one of our biggest concerns, getting the technology and the research to try to understand how big this amorphous mass of water is, and how it moves,” he said.

“It’s like an iceberg. Most of it is below the surface. And we just have no instruments below the surface that can help us monitor the size, the concentration and the movement.”

Muller-Karger said there are all sorts of implements that researchers should be deploying, including optical sensors and current meters. “I think that now people are really scrambling to get some vessels out there,” said Muller-Karger. “I think we’re going to need a fleet of research vessels.”

In addition to measuring the amount of oil, researchers need to study the effect on fish larvae and bacteria, he said. “Very big fish and very prized fish are moving in to spawn — it’s a critical time of the year,” he told HuffPost. “Larvae from the fish may end up eating droplets of oil.

On Tuesday, Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla,) released four new videos showing oil billowing out of the Deepwater Horizon blowout site.

Steiner said NOAA is not only failing to fully measure the impact of the spill, but, he said, “if they rationally want to close and open fisheries, then they need to know where this stuff is going.”

As it happens, NOAA announced Tuesday that it is doubling its Gulf fishing ban to encompass 19 percent of the federal waters.

But Steiner said it is quite possible, for instance, that some plumes are being carried by a slow deepwater southwest, toward the coast of Texas. More oil than is already visible could be entering the Loop Current, which could carry it past the Florida Keys and up the Atlantic coast.

“And truly, they really need 20 or 30 vessels out there yesterday,” Steiner said. “And I think they know that. And so all the spin — that they have this under control, that there’s no oil under the surface to worry about — they’re wrong, and they know it.”

UPDATE:

The New York Times on Thursday reported that boats under contract to BP have taken some underwater samples, and top ocean scientists are complaining that the government has failed to make public a single test result:

Tensions between the Obama administration and the scientific community over the gulf oil spill are escalating, with prominent oceanographers accusing the government of failing to conduct an adequate scientific analysis of the damage and of allowing BP to obscure the spill’s true scope….
The administration acknowledges that its scientific resources are stretched by the disaster, but contends that it is moving to get better information, including a more complete picture of the underwater plumes.

“We’re in the early stages of doing that, and we do not have a comprehensive understanding as of yet of where that oil is,” Jane Lubchenco, the NOAA administrator, told Congress on Wednesday. “But we are devoting all possible resources to understanding where the oil is and what its impact might be.”

And according to the Times, it’s not just independent scientists who are pressing for more information — it’s also other branches of the federal government:

Lisa P. Jackson, administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, told Congress on Wednesday that she was pressing for the release of additional test results, including some samples taken by boats under contract to BP.

The Phoenix Sun: Enough, Mr. President

 

20 May 10
Written by The Phoenix Sun

 

Word on the street is that the White House is preparing to get tough with oil giant BP. The Administration sent a letter Thursday to BP chief Tony Hayward strongly urging him to create a website on which to post data about the oil disaster and to keep the information current.

Not good enough. Not nearly.

And here’s why: BP no longer resembles a responsible corporation — or even an irresponsible one. With each new revelation, BP looks more and more like a criminal enterprise. I don’t care how strongly or harshly the request is delivered, one doesn’t ask criminals to provide information, they are compelled to do so using the full force of the law. BP is already held in contempt by the majority of the American people. Let’s just make it official.

Larry Schweiger, president of the NWF 

“The Gulf of Mexico is a crime scene,” observed Larry Schweiger, head of the National Wildlife Federation, yesterday.”And the perpetrator cannot be left in charge of assessing the damage.”

Well put.

The NWF joined ten other environmental organizations yesterday in urging President Obama to “exercise more direct oversight of public safety protection, environmental monitoring, and environmental testing in response to the disaster in the Gulf of Mexico.” (The groups include the Natural Resources Defense Council. I’m the environment and energy correspondent for the NRDC’s magazine, OnEarth)

According to Mark Spaulding, president of the Ocean Foundation, part of the president’s response may include an Executive Order, already in the works, to improve ocean governance in general. The Interagency Ocean Policy Task Force was appointed last June to make such recommendations. Spaulding, who is not a member of the Task Force, tells me he thinks the EO should be issued.

I’ve known Mark for many years and he has done outstanding research and writing about oceans in general and coral reefs in particular. If he says Obama should issue the EO, then I’m all for it.

But, it’s still not good enough. Not nearly.

Given the magnitude of this event — Tom Friedman rightly called it Obama’s “environmental 9/11” — I think it is not just appropriate but necessary for the federal government to take control of operations in the Gulf. The Feds are the nation’s Top Cops. That responsibility has not been evident in their actions so far.

BP oil rig on fire 

If it takes the declaration of a national emergency for the administration to do its job, fine. If the wholesale destruction of marine life, entire fisheries, wetlands, beaches and mangroves doesn’t qualify as a national emergency I shudder to think what would.

While pursuing a different part of this story, I happened upon one of those revelatory incidents that illuminate the scope of things far beyond themselves.

When BP announced that it had inserted a four-inch tube into the gushing pipeline I wondered, like many others, how much oil it would capture. When BP announced that it was bringing 1,000 barrels of oil to the surface each day to be safely stored on a vessel, it was deja vu all over again. The interminable numbers game that began with widely varying estimates of the oil’s outflow seemed to be ripe for repetition in the “inflow” tally. Who, I wondered, was checking their figures?

I called the Deepwater Horizon Response Unified Command, the conflation of industry sources and government spokespeople who are the backbone of official disaster information. I had called several times before and talked with petty officers in the Coast Guard. This time, the person on the other end of the line worked for BP. I asked him who, other than BP employees, actually saw the instruments monitoring the flow of oil up the “riser.”

“We share all that data with the Coast Guard,” said the man, who didn’t want to be identified by name, because he was a subcontractor hired for BP, but not an official spokesman.

Oil Slick Oil slick, May 15, 2010 

I pressed him, does the Coast Guard or any other federal representative actually see the data as it comes in? He had to check with a real BP spokesman for that. After a minute or two of silence, he was back on the phone.

“To my knowledge,” he said, “it’s not being observed or confirmed involving any other agency. It’s just like all sorts of other information we’re putting out.”

That last part did nothing to inspire confidence.

I spent most of yesterday and today trying to determine if what I had been told was accurate. A public information specialist with the Coast Guard didn’t know. He took down my number and promised to get back to me.

I’m still waiting.

Ditto for his counterpart at the National Atmospheric and Oceanic Administration.

Still waiting.

This morning, Bloomberg BusinessWeek was reporting that the capture rate stood at 5,000 barrels a day.

“That’s 5,000 barrels a day of oil that is not going onto the seabed,” BP spokesman Mark Salt told the publication.

I called Salt and put the question to him. Does the Coast Guard really not have access to information on the amount of oil recovery other than what BP gives them?

Salt was quite certain. “BP is working very closely with the Coast Guard,” he said.

Yes, but…I repeated the question.

Salt said he didn’t know whether or not the Coast Guard — or any other federal agency — was monitoring the measurements. But, he said, if the Coast Guard had asked to monitor the flow, he was pretty certain BP would have said yes.

Had they asked?

Salt couldn’t say if such a request had been made. But, if it had, the answer would have surely been “yes.”

He promised to look into the matter and get back to me.

And I’m still waiting.

I don’t know for sure whether the United States government simply accepts the information BP decides to share without verifying it, as the man representing BP at the Command Center said. But, after a month enduring BP’s spinning, obfuscating and lying, I don’t think we should have to wait any longer to find out.

Enough, Mr. President.

You are the Commander in Chief. Take command of the Gulf war BP has unleashed.

Special thanks to Osha Davidson 

Florida DEP: Tar Balls Collected from Fort Zachary Taylor State Park in Key West Not Related to Deepwater Horizon Incident

 Memorandum
DATE:      May 19, 2010
TO:           Interested Media
FROM:     ESF14 Public Information: (850) 921- 0217
RE:           Tar Balls Collected from Fort Zachary Taylor State Park Not Related to Deepwater Horizon Incident.
 
On Monday, May 17 the US Coast Guard obtained the tar balls found in the Keys and sent the tar balls for analysis to determine if they are related to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.  On Wednesday, May 19, the Coast Guard received a report that stated the tar balls collected from Fort Zachary Taylor State Park are not related to the Deepwater Horizon incident. To view the United States Coast Guard’s press release, visit www.deepwaterhorizonresponse.com/go/doc/586/554303/
 
In 2008 and 2009 there were 667 and 681 reports respectively of oil and petroleum incidents along Florida’s waterways and beaches so these types of occurrences are not as unusual as one might think. Specifically in the Florida Keys (Monroe County) there were 53 incidents in 2008 and 72 incidents in 2009 of oil and petroleum products being reported in their coastal waters.
 
For more information regarding Florida’s response to the Deepwater Horizon incident, please visit www.deepwaterhorizonflorida.com
 
###
 
 
The Department of Environmental Protection values your feedback as a customer. DEP Secretary Michael W. Sole is committed to continuously assessing and improving the level and quality of services provided to you. Please take a few minutes to comment on the quality of service you received. Simply click on this link to the DEP Customer Survey. Thank you in advance for completing the survey.

Keysnet.com: Crist Declares State of Emergency for Keys

http://www.keysnet.com/2010/05/20/221372/crist-declares-state-of-emergency.html

by Keysnet staff.  May 20, 2010

Gov. Charlie Crist on Thursday added Monroe and Miami-Dade counties to the list of Florida counties where a state of emergency exists due to the Deepwater Horizon oil-rig explosion and subsequent Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

He initially declared a state of emergency for Escambia, Santa Rosa, Okaloosa, Walton, Bay and Gulf counties on April 30, eight days after the explosion.

He extended that to 13 other counties on May 3 and, on Thursday, added Monroe, Miami-Dade and five other counties. There are 67 counties in Florida.

The oil has made it to the Loop Current, which circulates down the west coast of the state, around the Keys and up the East Coast. Officials say that current could bring tar balls from the oil spill down to the Keys within days.

Many officals and business owners are fearful of lost business down here due to the misperception that oil had made it to Keys shores or the reef. An official state of emergency means there might be government financial help not only for businesses, but for the local government in case any cleanup efforts are expended.

The Key West City Commission will convene an informational workshop at 10 a.m. Saturday at Old City Hall at 510 Greene St. to address issues related to the spill. Representatives of federal agencies involved in the response, as well as representatives of BP, which owns the Deepwater Horizon, have been invited.

NY Times: Obama and the Oil Spill

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/19/opinion/19friedman.html?emc=tnt&tntemail0=y

NEW YORK TIMES

May 18, 2010

By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

President Obama’s handling of the gulf oil spill has been disappointing.

I say that not because I endorse the dishonest conservative critique that the gulf oil spill is somehow Obama’s Katrina and that he is displaying the same kind of incompetence that George W. Bush did after that hurricane. To the contrary, Obama’s team has done a good job coordinating the cleanup so far. The president has been on top of it from the start.

No, the gulf oil spill is not Obama’s Katrina. It’s his 9/11 – and it is disappointing to see him making the same mistake George W. Bush made with his 9/11. Sept. 11, 2001, was one of those rare seismic events that create the possibility to energize the country to do something really important and lasting that is too hard to do in normal times.

President Bush’s greatest failure was not Iraq, Afghanistan or Katrina. It was his failure of imagination after 9/11 to mobilize the country to get behind a really big initiative for nation-building in America. I suggested a $1-a-gallon “Patriot Tax” on gasoline that could have simultaneously reduced our deficit, funded basic science research, diminished our dependence on oil imported from the very countries whose citizens carried out 9/11, strengthened the dollar, stimulated energy efficiency and renewable power and slowed climate change. It was the Texas oilman’s Nixon-to-China moment – and Bush blew it.

Had we done that on the morning of 9/12 – when gasoline averaged $1.66 a gallon – the majority of Americans would have signed on. They wanted to do something to strengthen the country they love. Instead, Bush told a few of us to go to war and the rest of us to go shopping. So today, gasoline costs twice as much at the pump, with most of that increase going to countries hostile to our values, while China is rapidly becoming the world’s leader in wind, solar, electric cars and high-speed rail. Heck of a job.

Sadly, President Obama seems intent on squandering his environmental 9/11 with a Bush-level failure of imagination. So far, the Obama policy is: “Think small and carry a big stick.” He is rightly hammering the oil company executives. But he is offering no big strategy to end our oil addiction. Senators John Kerry and Joe Lieberman have unveiled their new energy bill, which the president has endorsed but only in a very tepid way. Why tepid? Because Kerry-Lieberman embraces vitally important fees on carbon emissions that the White House is afraid will be exploited by Republicans in the midterm elections. The G.O.P., they fear, will scream carbon “tax” at every Democrat who would support this bill, and Obama, having already asked Democrats to make a hard vote on health care, feels he can’t ask them for another.

I don’t buy it. In the wake of this historic oil spill, the right policy – a bill to help end our addiction to oil – is also the right politics. The people are ahead of their politicians. So is the U.S. military. There are many conservatives who would embrace a carbon tax or gasoline tax if it was offset by a cut in payroll taxes or corporate taxes, so we could foster new jobs and clean air at the same time. If Republicans label Democrats “gas taxers” then Democrats should label them “Conservatives for OPEC” or “Friends of BP.” Shill, baby, shill.

Why is Obama playing defense? Just how much oil has to spill into the gulf, how much wildlife has to die, how many radical mosques need to be built with our gasoline purchases to produce more Times Square bombers, before it becomes politically “safe” for the president to say he is going to end our oil addiction? Indeed, where is “The Obama End to Oil Addiction Act”? Why does everything have to emerge from the House and Senate? What does he want? What is his vision? What are his redlines? I don’t know. But I do know that without a fixed, long-term price on carbon, none of the president’s important investments in clean power research and development will ever scale.

Obama has assembled a great team that could help him make his case – John Holdren, science adviser; Carol Browner, energy adviser; Energy Secretary Steven Chu, a Nobel Prize winner; and Lisa Jackson, chief of the Environmental Protection Agency. But they have been badly underutilized by the White House. I know endangered species that are seen by the public more often than them.

Obama is not just our super-disaster-coordinator. “He is our leader,” noted Tim Shriver, the chairman of Special Olympics. “And being a leader means telling the rest of us what’s our job, what do we need to do to make this a transformative moment.”

Please don’t tell us that our role is just to hate BP or shop in Mississippi or wait for a commission to investigate. We know the problem, and Americans are ready to be enlisted for a solution. Of course we can’t eliminate oil exploration or dependence overnight, but can we finally start? Mr. President, your advisers are wrong: Americans are craving your leadership on this issue. Are you going to channel their good will into something that strengthens our country – “The Obama End to Oil Addiction Act” – or are you going squander your 9/11, too?

Special thanks to Richard Charter