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Wall Street Journal: Obama and Romney on energy, environmental issues

http://online.wsj.com/article/AP92ef5107548c46d886c4ec0384522c82.html

Updated April 17, 2012, 3:00 p.m. ET

Associated Press
WASHINGTON – A look at where President Barack Obama and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney stand on energy and environmental issues:

OBAMA: Ordered temporary moratorium on deep-water drilling after the massive BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico but has pushed for more oil and gas drilling overall. Approved drilling plan in Arctic Ocean opposed by environmentalists. Now proposes that Congress give oil market regulators more power to control price manipulation by speculators and stiffer fines for doing so.

Achieved historic increases in fuel economy standards for automobiles that will save money at the pump while raising the cost of new vehicles. Achieved first-ever regulations on heat-trapping gases blamed for global warming and on toxic mercury pollution from power plants. Spent heavily on green energy and has embraced nuclear power as a clean source.

Failed to persuade a Democratic Congress to pass limits he promised on carbon emissions. Shelved plan to toughen health standards on lung-damaging smog. Rejected Keystone XL oil pipeline from Canada because of environmental concerns but supports fast-track approval of a segment of it. Proposes ending subsidies to oil industry but has failed to persuade Congress to do so.

ROMNEY: Supports opening the Atlantic and Pacific outer continental shelves to drilling, as well as Western lands, the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and offshore Alaska; and supports exploitation of shale oil deposits. Wants to reduce obstacles to coal, natural gas and nuclear energy development, and accelerate drilling permits in areas where exploration has already been approved for developers with good safety records.

Says green power has yet to become viable and the causes of climate change are unknown. Proposes to remove carbon dioxide from list of pollutants controlled by Clean Air Act and amend clean water and air laws to ensure the cost of complying with regulations is balanced against environmental benefit. Says cap and trade would “rocket energy prices.”

Blames high gas prices on Obama’s decisions to limit oil drilling in environmentally sensitive areas and on overzealous regulation.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

Al Jazeera: Gulf seafood deformities alarm scientists

http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2012/04/201241682318260912.html

Eyeless shrimp and fish with lesions are becoming common, with BP oil pollution believed to be the likely cause.

Dahr Jamail Last Modified: 18 Apr 2012 03:16

New Orleans, LA – “The fishermen have never seen anything like this,” Dr Jim Cowan told Al Jazeera. “And in my 20 years working on red snapper, looking at somewhere between 20 and 30,000 fish, I’ve never seen anything like this either.”

Dr Cowan, with Louisiana State University’s Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences started hearing about fish with sores and lesions from fishermen in November 2010.
Cowan’s findings replicate those of others living along vast areas of the Gulf Coast that have been impacted by BP’s oil and dispersants.

Gulf of Mexico fishermen, scientists and seafood processors have told Al Jazeera they are finding disturbing numbers of mutated shrimp, crab and fish that they believe are deformed by chemicals released during BP’s 2010 oil disaster.

Along with collapsing fisheries, signs of malignant impact on the regional ecosystem are ominous: horribly mutated shrimp, fish with oozing sores, underdeveloped blue crabs lacking claws, eyeless crabs and shrimp – and interviewees’ fingers point towards BP’s oil pollution disaster as being the cause.

Eyeless shrimp

Tracy Kuhns and her husband Mike Roberts, commercial fishers from Barataria, Louisiana, are finding eyeless shrimp.

“At the height of the last white shrimp season, in September, one of our friends caught 400 pounds of these,” Kuhns told Al Jazeera while showing a sample of the eyeless shrimp.

According to Kuhns, at least 50 per cent of the shrimp caught in that period in Barataria Bay, a popular shrimping area that was heavily impacted by BP’s oil and dispersants, were eyeless. Kuhns added: “Disturbingly, not only do the shrimp lack eyes, they even lack eye sockets.”

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Eyeless shrimp, from a catch of 400 pounds of eyeless shrimp, said to be caught September 22, 2011, in Barataria Bay, Louisiana [Erika Blumenfeld/Al Jazeera]

“Some shrimpers are catching these out in the open Gulf [of Mexico],” she added, “They are also catching them in Alabama and Mississippi. We are also finding eyeless crabs, crabs with their shells soft instead of hard, full grown crabs that are one-fifth their normal size, clawless crabs, and crabs with shells that don’t have their usual spikes Š they look like they’ve been burned off by chemicals.”

On April 20, 2010, BP’s Deepwater Horizon oilrig exploded, and began the release of at least 4.9 million barrels of oil. BP then used at least 1.9 million gallons of toxic Corexit dispersants to sink the oil.

Keath Ladner, a third generation seafood processor in Hancock County, Mississippi, is also disturbed by what he is seeing.

“I’ve seen the brown shrimp catch drop by two-thirds, and so far the white shrimp have been wiped out,” Ladner told Al Jazeera. “The shrimp are immune compromised. We are finding shrimp with tumors on their heads, and are seeing this everyday.”

While on a shrimp boat in Mobile Bay with Sidney Schwartz, the fourth-generation fisherman said that he had seen shrimp with defects on their gills, and “their shells missing around their gills and head”.

“We’ve fished here all our lives and have never seen anything like this,” he added.

Ladner has also seen crates of blue crabs, all of which were lacking at least one of their claws.

Darla Rooks, a lifelong fisherperson from Port Sulfur, Louisiana, told Al Jazeera she is finding crabs “with holes in their shells, shells with all the points burned off so all the spikes on their shells and claws are gone, misshapen shells, and crabs that are dying from within Š they are still alive, but you open them up and they smell like they’ve been dead for a week”.

Rooks is also finding eyeless shrimp, shrimp with abnormal growths, female shrimp with their babies still attached to them, and shrimp with oiled gills.

“We also seeing eyeless fish, and fish lacking even eye-sockets, and fish with lesions, fish without covers over their gills, and others with large pink masses hanging off their eyes and gills.”

Rooks, who grew up fishing with her parents, said she had never seen such things in these waters, and her seafood catch last year was “ten per cent what it normally is”.

“I’ve never seen this,” he said, a statement Al Jazeera heard from every scientist, fisherman, and seafood processor we spoke with about the seafood deformities.

Given that the Gulf of Mexico provides more than 40 per cent of all the seafood caught in the continental US, this phenomenon does not bode well for the region, or the country.

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BP’s chemicals?

“The dispersants used in BP’s draconian experiment contain solvents, such as petroleum distillates and 2-butoxyethanol. Solvents dissolve oil, grease, and rubber,” Dr Riki Ott, a toxicologist, marine biologist and Exxon Valdez survivor told Al Jazeera. “It should be no surprise that solvents are also notoriously toxic to people, something the medical community has long known”.

The dispersants are known to be mutagenic, a disturbing fact that could be evidenced in the seafood deformities. Shrimp, for example, have a life-cycle short enough that two to three generations have existed since BP’s disaster began, giving the chemicals time to enter the genome.

Pathways of exposure to the dispersants are inhalation, ingestion, skin, and eye contact. Health impacts can include headaches, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pains, chest pains, respiratory system damage, skin sensitisation, hypertension, central nervous system depression, neurotoxic effects, cardiac arrhythmia and cardiovascular damage. They are also teratogenic – able to disturb the growth and development of an embryo or fetus – and carcinogenic.

Cowan believes chemicals named polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), released from BP’s submerged oil, are likely to blame for what he is finding, due to the fact that the fish with lesions he is finding are from “a wide spatial distribution that is spatially coordinated with oil from the Deepwater Horizon, both surface oil and subsurface oil. A lot of the oil that impacted Louisiana was also in subsurface plumes, and we think there is a lot of it remaining on the seafloor”.

Marine scientist Samantha Joye of the University of Georgia published results of her submarine dives around the source area of BP’s oil disaster in the Nature Geoscience journal.

Her evidence showed massive swathes of oil covering the seafloor, including photos of oil-covered bottom dwelling sea creatures.

While showing slides at an American Association for the Advancement of Science annual conference in Washington, Joye said: “This is Macondo oil on the bottom. These are dead organisms because of oil being deposited on their heads.”

Dr Wilma Subra, a chemist and Macarthur Fellow, has conducted tests on seafood and sediment samples along the Gulf for chemicals present in BP’s crude oil and toxic dispersants.

“Tests have shown significant levels of oil pollution in oysters and crabs along the Louisiana coastline,” Subra told Al Jazeera. “We have also found high levels of hydrocarbons in the soil and vegetation.”

According to the US Environmental Protection Agency, PAHs “are a group of semi-volatile organic compounds that are present in crude oil that has spent time in the ocean and eventually reaches shore, and can be formed when oil is burned”.

“The fish are being exposed to PAHs, and I was able to find several references that list the same symptoms in fish after the Exxon Valdez spill, as well as other lab experiments,” explained Cowan. “There was also a paper published by some LSU scientists that PAH exposure has effects on the genome.”

The University of South Florida released the results of a survey whose findings corresponded with Cowan’s: a two to five per cent infection rate in the same oil impact areas, and not just with red snapper, but with more than 20 species of fish with lesions. In many locations, 20 per cent of the fish had lesions, and later sampling expeditions found areas where, alarmingly, 50 per cent of the fish had them.

“I asked a NOAA [National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration] sampler what percentage of fish they find with sores prior to 2010, and it’s one tenth of one percent,” Cowan said. “Which is what we found prior to 2010 as well. But nothing like we’ve seen with these secondary infections and at this high of rate since the spill.”

“What we think is that it’s attributable to chronic exposure to PAHs released in the process of weathering of oil on the seafloor,” Cowan said. “There’s no other thing we can use to explain this phenomenon. We’ve never seen anything like this before.”

Official response

Questions raised by Al Jazeera’s investigation remain largely unanswered.

Al Jazeera contacted the office of Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal, who provided a statement that said the state continues to test its waters for oil and dispersants, and that it is testing for PAHs.
“Gulf seafood has consistently tested lower than the safety thresholds established by the FDA for the levels of oil and dispersant contamination that would pose a risk to human health,” the statement reads. “Louisiana seafood continues to go through extensive testing to ensure that seafood is safe for human consumption. More than 3,000 composite samples of seafood, sediment and water have been tested in Louisiana since the start of the spill.”

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Signs of the impact on the regional ecosystem are ominous: mutated shrimp, fish with oozing sores, underdeveloped blue crabs lacking claws, eyeless crabs and shrimp – and scientists and fishermen point fingers towards BP’s oil as being the cause [Keath Ladner]

At the federal government level, the Food and Drug Administration and Environmental Protection Agency – both federal agencies which have powers in the this area – insisted Al Jazeera talk with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

NOAA won’t comment to the media because its involvement in collecting information for an ongoing lawsuit against BP.

BP refused Al Jazeera’s request to comment on this issue for a television interview, but provided a statement that read:

“Seafood from the Gulf of Mexico is among the most tested in the world, and, according to the FDA and NOAA, it is as safe now as it was before the accident.”

BP claims that fish lesions are common, and that prior to the Deepwater Horizon accident there was documented evidence of lesions in the Gulf of Mexico caused by parasites and other agents.
The oil giant added:

“As part of the Natural Resource Damage Assessment, which is led by state and federal trustees, we are investigating the extent of injury to natural resources due to the accident.

“BP is funding multiple lines of scientific investigation to evaluate potential damage to fish, and these include: extensive seafood testing programs by the Gulf states; fish population monitoring conducted by the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, Auburn University and others; habitat and water quality monitoring by NOAA; and toxicity tests on regional species. The state and federal Trustees will complete an injury assessment and the need for environmental restoration will be determined.”

Before and after

But evidence of ongoing contamination continues to mount.

Crustacean biologist Darryl Felder, in the Department of Biology with the University of Louisiana at Lafayette is in a unique position.

Felder has been monitoring the vicinity of BP’s blowout Macondo well both before and after the oil disaster began, because, as he told Al Jazeera, “the National Science Foundation was interested in these areas that are vulnerable due to all the drilling”.

“So we have before and after samples to compare to,” he added. “We have found seafood with lesions, missing appendages, and other abnormalities.”

Felder also has samples of inshore crabs with lesions. “Right here in Grand Isle we see lesions that are eroding down through their shell. We just got these samples last Thursday and are studying them now, because we have no idea what else to link this to as far as a natural event.”

According to Felder, there is an even higher incidence of shell disease with crabs in deeper waters.
“My fear is that these prior incidents of lesions might be traceable to microbes, and my questions are, did we alter microbial populations in the vicinity of the well by introducing this massive amount of petroleum and in so doing cause microbes to attack things other than oil?”

One hypothesis he has is that the waxy coatings around crab shells are being impaired by anthropogenic chemicals or microbes resulting from such chemicals.

“You create a site where a lesion can occur, and microbes attack. We see them with big black lesions, around where their appendages fall off, and all that is left is a big black ring.”

Felder added that his team is continuing to document the incidents: “And from what we can tell, there is a far higher incidence we’re finding after the spill.”

“We are also seeing much lower diversity of crustaceans,” he said. “We don’t have the same number of species as we did before [the spill].”

[Continues below the slideshow]

Felder has tested his samples for oil, but not found many cases where hydrocarbon traces tested positive. Instead, he believes what he is seeing in the deepwater around BP’s well is caused from the “huge amount” of drilling mud used during the effort to stop the gushing well.

“I was collecting deepwater shrimp with lesions on the side of their carapace. Under the lesions, the gills were black. The organ that propels the water through the gills, it too was jet-black. That impairs respiratory ability, and has a negative effect on them. It wasn’t hydrocarbons, but is largely manganese precipitates, which is really odd. There was a tremendous amount of drilling mud pumped out with Macondo, so this could be a link.”

Some drilling mud and oil well cement slurries used on oil extraction rigs contains up to 90 per cent by weight of manganomanganic (manganese) oxide particles.

Felder is also finding “odd staining” of animals that burrow into the mud that cause stain rings, and said: “It is consistently mineral deposits, possibly from microbial populations in [overly] high concentrations.”

A direct link

Dr Andrew Whitehead, an associate professor of biology at Louisiana State University, co-authored the report Genomic and physiological footprint of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill on resident marsh fishes that was published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in October 2011.

Whitehead’s work is of critical importance, as it shows a direct link between BP’s oil and the negative impacts on the Gulf’s food web evidenced by studies on killifish before, during and after the oil disaster.

“What we found is a very clear, genome-wide signal, a very clear signal of exposure to the toxic components of oil that coincided with the timing and the locations of the oil,” Whitehead told Al Jazeera during an interview in his lab.

According to Whitehead, the killifish is an important indicator species because they are the most abundant fish in the marshes, and are known to be the most important forage animal in their communities.

“That means that most of the large fish that we like to eat and that these are important fisheries for, actually feed on the killifish,” he explained. “So if there were to be a big impact on those animals, then there would probably be a cascading effect throughout the food web. I can’t think of a worse animal to knock out of the food chain than the killifish.”

But we may well be witnessing the beginnings of this worst-case scenario.

Whitehead is predicting that there could be reproductive impacts on the fish, and since the killifish is a “keystone” species in the food web of the marsh, “Impacts on those species are more than likely going to propagate out and effect other species. What this shows is a very direct link from exposure to DWH oil and a clear biological effect. And a clear biological effect that could translate to population level long-term consequences.”

Back on shore, troubled by what he had been seeing, Keath Ladner met with officials from the US Food and Drug Administration and asked them to promise that the government would protect him from litigation if someone was made sick from eating his seafood.

“They wouldn’t do it,” he said.

“I’m worried about the entire seafood industry of the Gulf being on the way out,” he added grimly.

‘Tar balls in their crab traps’

Ed Cake, a biological oceanographer, as well as a marine and oyster biologist, has “great concern” about the hundreds of dolphin deaths he has seen in the region since BP’s disaster began, which he feels are likely directly related to the BP oil disaster.

“Adult dolphins’ systems are picking up whatever is in the system out there, and we know the oil is out there and working its way up the food chain through the food web – and dolphins are at the top of that food chain.”

Cake explained: “The chemicals then move into their lipids, fat, and then when they are pregnant, their young rely on this fat, and so it’s no wonder dolphins are having developmental issues and still births.”

Cake, who lives in Mississippi, added: “It has been more than 33 years since the 1979 Ixtoc-1 oil disaster in Mexico’s Bay of Campeche, and the oysters, clams, and mangrove forests have still not recovered in their oiled habitats in seaside estuaries of the Yucatan Peninsula. It has been 23 years since the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil disaster in Alaska, and the herring fishery that failed in the wake of that disaster has still not returned.”

Cake believes we are still in the short-term impact stage of BP’s oil disaster.

“I will not be alive to see the Gulf of Mexico recover,” said Cake, who is 72 years old. “Without funding and serious commitment, these things will not come back to pre-April 2010 levels for decades.”

The physical signs of the disaster continue.

“We’re continuing to pull up oil in our nets,” Rooks said. “Think about losing everything that makes you happy, because that is exactly what happens when someone spills oil and sprays dispersants on it. People who live here know better than to swim in or eat what comes out of our waters.”

Khuns and her husband told Al Jazeera that fishermen continue to regularly find tar balls in their crab traps, and hundreds of pounds of tar balls continue to be found on beaches across the region on a daily basis.

Meanwhile Cowan continues his work, and remains concerned about what he is finding.

“We’ve also seen a decrease in biodiversity in fisheries in certain areas. We believe we are now seeing another outbreak of incidence increasing, and this makes sense, since waters are starting to warm again, so bacterial infections are really starting to take off again. We think this is a problem that will persist for as long as the oil is stored on the seafloor.”

Felder wants to continue his studies, but now is up against insufficient funding.

Regarding his funding, Cowan told Al Jazeera: “We are up against social and economic challenges that hamper our ability to get our information out, so the politics have been as daunting as the problem [we are studying] itself. But my funding is not coming from a source that requires me to be quiet.”

Follow Dahr Jamail on Twitter: @DahrJamail

Read more about the scientists in this article, and their findings:
Dr Darryl Felder, Department of Biology, University of Louisiana, Lafayette. Runs a research lab that studies the biology of marine crustaceans. Dr Felder has been monitoring the seafloor in the vicinity of BP’s blow-out Macondo oil-well both before and after the oil disaster began. He was studying samples from the seafloor in the Macondo area pre-spill via funding from the National Science Foundation, which provided him a grant to log the effects of all the drilling in the area. His funding now comes from the Gulf Research Initiative (GRI), which is funded by BP. Read his full biography here.

Dr Jim Cowan with Louisiana State University’s Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences has been studying Gulf seafood, specifically red snapper, for more than 20 years. Funding is primarily via LSU, although LSU has also received funding via GRI. Read his full biography here.

Dr Andrew Whitehead, LSU, his lab conducts experiments and studies on Evolutionary and Ecological Genomics. He recently published “Genomic and physiological footprint of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill on resident marsh fishes” in the National Academy of Sciences. Much of his funding also comes from the Gulf Research Initiative. Read his full biography here.

Brief summary of scientists’ findings/studies:
Felder: Studies carried out from January 2010 to present in BP’s Macondo well area. Found abnormalities in shrimp post-spill, whereas pre-spill found none.

Cowan: Studies carried out from Nov 2010-present, from west Louisiana to west Florida, from coast to 250km out. Found lesions/sores/infections in 20 species of fish, as many as 50 per cent fish in some samples impacted. Pre spill levels were 1/10 of one per cent of fish.

Whitehead: Species such as the Gulf Killifish, in and around the Gulf of Mexico, will continue to be subject to negative effects of the BP oil spill disaster of 2010. The Killifish, which researchers consider a good indicator of water quality in the Gulf of Mexico, is showing signs that the oil spill is having a negative impact on its health. Tracked killifish for the first four months after spill across oil-impacted areas of Louisiana and Mississippi.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

E Magazine: BP Spill Two Years After

http://www.emagazine.com/daily-news/bp-spill-two-years-after/

April 15, 2012 | Sharon Kelly |

A wide range of species, from dolphins to coral, are still dealing with the long-term results of the spill, which unleashed nearly 5 million barrels of oil into the Gulf.
© U.S. Fish & Wldlife Service

This week will mark the second anniversary of the explosion at BP’s Deepwater Horizon drilling platform, which led to the largest oil spill in US history. In the immediate aftermath of the spill, researchers marvelled at the ability of bacteria to consume the oil and natural gas that stretched across the gulf in a 22 mile-long plume. But a string of new studies show that the spill’s effects are far more persistent in the ecosystem than was initially hoped. In fact, a wide range of species, from dolphins to coral, are still dealing with the long-term results of the spill, which unleashed nearly 5 million barrels of oil and a still-unknown amount of natural gas into the Gulf. Results from many government and BP-funded studies are not yet public, as both sides are preparing for litigation over BP’s liabilities under the Clean Water Act and other environmental laws.

But a range of independent studies, along with those commissioned by the Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative, funded by BP after the spill and run by independent scientists, are beginning to emerge from peer review. While, on the surface, many areas of the Gulf seem relatively normal, researchers have found a wide range of impacts on animals and ecosystems that they say will continue for years or decades.

The oil and gas themselves have disappeared at an impressive speed, scientists say, especially compared to the Alaskan Exxon Valdez spill. Because the Gulf of Mexico is home to the highest number of natural underwater oil seeps in North America, large populations of bacteria that feed on hydrocarbons live in the region’s warm waters, and their population exploded in the aftermath of the spill.

But the story doesn’t end there, new research shows. These bacteria have caused many problems of their own.

These microbes are part of the food chain. When larger creatures consume the bacteria, some of the constituents of the oil and gas are passed along. Plankton, tiny organisms that form the base of the ocean’s food chain, have also been found to carry toxic polyaromatic hydrocarbons linked to BP oil, according to a February study published in Geophysical Research Letters, which found the problem extended all the way to the mouth of the Mississippi River.
Other bacteria, including some that are dangerous to people, have thrived in the tar balls formed by the spill. Tar balls on beaches in Mississippi and Alabama were laced with the potentially lethal Vibrio vulnificus bacteria, which can cause vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain and dermatitis, at levels 100 times greater than in seawater, according to a study published in the journal EcoHealth.

The upsurge in oil-devouring bacteria populations also caused problems. A thick mix of oil droplets and the remains from microorganisms that ate the oil, then died, rained down on the seafloor around the well, scientists say. Much of the coral in a seven mile range around the Macondo site is sick or already dead. Reefs further away from the well appeared relatively unharmed, researchers from Penn State University found. The scum found on some of them can be tied to the Macondo oil, according to a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in March.

Closer to the surface, even animals at the top of the food chain have been affected. Since the spill, more than 520 dolphins have been discovered stranded in oil spill areas – but only roughly 25 were found alive and those animals had a poor prognosis, according to a newly released study from the National Wildlife Federation . Other researchers are studying whether the dolphin problems began after the dolphins swam through oil or breathed in fumes, which made them sick.

The Gulf of Mexico is also home to five species of sea turtles, four of which are endangered. Roughly half of the 1,149 sea turtles found stranded in the year after the spill were dead or dying. The vast majority, 481 of the 609 dead turtles were Kemp’s ridley sea turtles, the world’s most endangered sea turtle, according to the National Wildlife report.

“It will be critical to monitor these key species in the months and years ahead, especially given the unknown impacts of weathered and ‘dispersed’ oil remaining in the Gulf,” said Dr. George Crozier, retired director of Dauphin Island Sea Lab in a statement. “This disaster hit an ecosystem already weakened by years of wetlands degradation, including coastal areas around the Mississippi River Delta losing a football field worth of land every hour.”

For locals, the impact has been obvious. Louisiana fishermen describe dead zones that have failed to bounce back, in areas that were home to large populations of birds, fish, turtles and shellfish before the spill.

None of this has slowed the pace of drilling in the Gulf. The Obama administration has accelerated permitting for drilling in the region. Republican presidential candidates continue to pound the drum for even more drilling in the region.

Drilling industry officials say they are expecting at least 8 more rigs are headed to the Gulf for major projects there. That means the Gulf’s count of active drilling sites will soon be around 29, which is around the level that was occurring when the spill happened. It remains to be seen whether any of this new drilling will be safer than what was happening when the DeepWater Horizon blew up.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

Wall Street Journal: Experts Weigh Spill’s Lasting Effects

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303624004577339943866694420.html

April 12, 2012, 7:47 p.m. ET

Marine Studies Raise Fresh Concern After Early Fears of Environmental Catastrophe From BP Disaster Failed to Materialize

By TOM FOWLER

Rush Jagoe for The Wall Street Journal
David Farizo fishes in Lafitte, a community in Louisiana’s wetlands. New research points out possible ill effects on dolphins, plankton and coral after 2010’s oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

HOUSTON-Scientists studying the environmental impact of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico are raising fresh concerns about the effect of the leaked crude on a range of sea life, from tiny animal plankton to dolphins.

So far, studies have not uncovered the ecological apocalypse that some feared after the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded two years ago this month, unleashing the biggest offshore oil spill in U.S. history. But hopes that the Gulf would be relatively unaffected are dimming.

“The death and destruction that many predicted hasn’t come through for a lot of reasons,” said Robert Haddad, head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s assessment and restoration effort. “But everywhere we look throughout the Gulf things are just a little bit out of kilter.”

Zooplankton-microscopic organisms that are a source of food for many fish-were found to have ingested hazardous components of the specific oil from the spill, according to a study released last month by researchers at East Carolina University and other colleges and funded by the National Science Foundation. The study didn’t speculate on whether the oil may have harmed the zooplankton nor did it say what the effect could be on larger organisms.

A large coral formation on the sea floor several miles from the well site appears to be dying because of a coating of oil from the spill, according to a study by Pennsylvania State University, Haverford College and other institutions, also funded by a National Science Foundation grant.

And a study of dozens of dolphins in Barataria Bay, La., where some of the heaviest oil slicks came ashore, concluded many of them are showing serious illnesses similar to animals that have been in contact with oil. The dolphins were underweight, anemic and suffering from low blood sugar as well as liver and lung ailments.

Dolphin deaths and strandings in the northern Gulf of Mexico have been much higher than historic averages since the spill, but a surge in unexplained deaths also predated the accident.

The dolphin study, released by NOAA, was careful not to say the illnesses are directly linked to the spill. The official assessment of the spill’s environmental impact, which the agency is overseeing for the government and well owner BP BP.LN -0.81% PLC, is in its early stages of reviewing data from some 160 studies.

But the preliminary findings were serious enough, NOAA said, that groups that take part in rescues of stranded dolphins and other ocean mammals needed the information.

The Gulf, which has long been the site of oil and gas production, has suffered through many minor spills and accidents. On Thursday, government officials were monitoring a 10-square-mile oil slick, known as a sheen, about 130 miles southeast of New Orleans and searching for the source.

But the Deepwater Horizon incident dwarfed previous spills. For 87 days, oil flowed from the BP well that lay 5,000 feet below the ocean surface about 40 miles off the Louisiana coast. Slicks fanned out across 68,000 miles of open water and fouled more than 1,000 miles of coastline.

The impact could have been worse, experts say. A mitigating factor was the spill was located far offshore and nearly a mile underwater. The flow of the Mississippi River, meantime, kept much of the oil out at sea, and chemical dispersants broke up crude both below the surface and on it, as did naturally occurring oil-eating microbes.

BP agreed to pay the upfront cleanup costs and the costs of restoring oil-damaged habitats, which so far have topped about $14 billion. The British company pledged up to $1 billion for further restoration projects and $500 million for research.

The ultimate environmental price tag for BP, however, will come through the NOAA-led process known as a Natural Resource Damage Assessment, which includes a range of scientific studies. If the studies, some of which could come out later this year, find links between the spill and the damage, BP would be expected to pay compensation or fund the cost of restoration.

Outside studies such as the one on zooplankton could be incorporated into the NRDA through the peer-review process, but BP or NOAA could contest their inclusion if they don’t believe they are relevant or meet rigorous scientific standards. Disagreements could end up being adjudicated by federal judges who are overseeing the massive collection of civil complaints that BP faces in U.S. District Court in New Orleans.

BP expects to finalize a civil settlement worth an estimated $7.8 billion with thousands of Gulf businesses and individuals in the next few days. Civil and criminal settlements with the government, which could reach the tens of billions of dollars by some estimates, are pending.

The company is committed to working with NOAA and the Gulf Coast states to assess the damages from the spill, spokesman Tom Mueller said.

It is likely any final assessment or settlement of damages with the government will include a “re-opener” clause, which would give plaintiffs the right to ask the courts to revisit the terms if the damages turn out to be greater than originally believed, said David Uhlmann, a University of Michigan law professor and former head of the Justice Department’s Environmental Crimes Section.

Doug Inkley, a senior scientist with the National Wildlife Federation, said even though the environmental damage scientists are finding is subtle, it is serious.
“The oil spill is to the Gulf what smoking is to a human,” he said. “You’re still able to function overall, but not nearly as well.”

Write to Tom Fowler at tom.fowler@wsj.com
A version of this article appeared April 13, 2012, on page A3 in some U.S. editions of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Experts Weigh Spill’s Lasting Effects.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

FuelFix: Industry asks for more time to comply with drilling pollution mandates

http://fuelfix.com/blog/2012/04/12/industry-asks-for-more-time-to-comply-with-drilling-pollution-mandates/

Posted on April 12, 2012 at 2:21 pm by Jennifer A. Dlouhy

API President Jack Gerard speaks at an October 2011 news conference in Washington, D.C. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Two of the oil industry’s leading trade groups today implored federal regulators for more time to comply with a looming rule for cutting air pollution from hydraulic fracturing and natural gas wells.

There isn’t enough emission-cutting equipment to go around and satisfy the mandates slated to be imposed next week, said American Petroleum Institute president Jack Gerard in a letter to Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson.

About 25,000 new wells are completed each year, but just 300 sets of emissions-reducing equipment are available for “green completion” that cuts pollution from natural gas drilling in accordance with the proposed rule, Gerard said.

“The equipment required to reduce these emissions is not produced on an assembly line where someone can instantly ramp up production. It must be carefully built one-by-one in machine shops, and this takes time,” said Howard Feldman, API’s director of regulatory and scientific affairs, in a conference call with reporters. “EPA needs to adjust the time frame for implementation because enough equipment will simply not be available in time to comply with the proposed rule schedule.”

Separately, Independent Petroleum Association of America Vice President Lee Fuller sent a letter to House senior adviser Valerie Jarrett asking the administration to delay the rulemaking until better data is collected about the amount of gas that can be recovered from green completions. Fuller said the EPA’s initial estimates were based on “flawed data” that “has led to grossly overestimated emissions and has ultimately resulted in a distortion of the agency’s required cost-benefit analysis.:

At issue is the Environmental Protection Agency’s proposed rule for reining in smog-forming emissions from a range of natural gas operations – including the initial drilling of wells, production at the sites and the eventual transportation of the fossil fuel. The mandates would be the first federal air standards for wells that are stimulated through hydraulic fracturing, a technique that involves blasting mixtures of water, sand and chemicals deep underground.

The rule would require the use of green completion equipment at new and updated gas wells that are hydraulically fractured. That equipment is designed to trap and separate natural gas from other fluids and solids that flow back from a well after it is fractured.
While the measure focuses on cutting emissions of ozone-forming volatile organic compounds, complying with the mandates also is projected to pare methane emissions by about 26 percent and toxic air emissions by 30 percent, according to the EPA.

The EPA is facing a court-ordered April 17 deadline to formalize the rule. The underlying emissions rules for gas drilling operations were last modified in 1985.

Environmental groups say the measure is necessary to protect the public from high ozone levels amid a surge in hydraulic fracturing that is being blamed for causing so much smog in some parts of the West that it rivals Los Angeles and Houston.

But industry officials insist that the rule could discourage natural gas production throughout the U.S., by raising costs and making some operations off limits until enough emission-cutting equipment can be produced and installed.

Environmental advocates who support the rule say the industry’s argument doesn’t wash.
“This isn’t super complicated equipment,” said Meleah Geertsma, with the Natural Resources Defense Council. “This is an industry that has shown over the past 10 years it is very good” at getting infrastructure out to wells.

In addition to requiring emission-cutting equipment at the wellhead, the proposed rule would require changes throughout the natural gas production process.

“The fact is, every step in the gas production process, there’s air pollution associated with that,” said Joe Osborne, with the Pennsylvania-based Group Against Smog and Pollution. If wells and compressor stations are considered in isolation, the pollution from them can seem insignificant, Osborne said, but with all of the drilling and activity surrounding the natural gas boom, it adds up fast.

Although ozone levels have been going down nationwide, shale development “has the potential to halt that progress or even reverse it,” Osborne added.

Most of the covered emissions come from completions of hydraulically fractured wells. But the rule also would require changes to pneumatic devices throughout the system. When that equipment is added or updated, companies would be required to use low- and no-bleed options. To curb the leakage of VOCs, companies also would be required to use a different sealing mechanism in centrifugal compressors and periodically replace packing material surrounding the moving parts in reciprocating compressors.

The API and other industry trade groups have been asking regulators to exempt facilities in which 10 percent or less of their total emissions are from VOCs. It isn’t cost effective to require emission-cutting technology when there are few of these compounds to control, Feldman said.

But rule supporters say that 10 percent threshold is too high. The pollution from most wells falls below that level, environmentalists argue, but in large operations, even 10 percent can mean tremendous escaping emissions.

The carve-out “would exempt a huge portion of the sources we’re talking about today,” Geertsma said. Thousands of wells producing even 5 percent VOCs would create significant pollution, she said.

Industry leaders have previously signaled they could challenge the rule in court and have refused to say litigation is off the table. They could challenge the rule as unworkable, based on the apparent lack of green completion equipment that would be required to comply with the mandate. Gerard hinted at this possible strategy in his letter to Jackson:

“If EPA requires immediate compliance with the REC requirement, the rule will cause substantial delays in most oil and gas development projects. Not only is this bad energy and economic policy, such an outcome is not supported by the law (e.g., a standard that cannot be met by most affected sources plainly cannot be shown to be achievable).”

Another avenue for a challenge is based in the data EPA used to analyze its propose rule. Fuller said the EPA used limited emission estimates provided by some producers working “a very limited number of wells.” That may have thrown off the agency’s required cost-benefit analysis. Fuller adds:

“Reports have shown that, in some cases, the EPA overstated emissions estimates by over 1,400 percent. When these numbers are corrected, EPA’s proposed requirements grossly fail its own cost-effectiveness standards.”

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Special thanks to Richard Charter