Palm Beach Post: Oil could hit Florida Panhandle by Wednesday

http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/state/oil-could-hit-florida-panhandle-by-wednesday-720986.html

I  think it is absurd to wait until the oil destroys the beaches; the Valdez shorelines still have submerged oil in them. Get out the absorbant booms, prevent the oil contamination from reaching the shore so it can’t destroy life in the intertidal zone.    DV

By MELISSA NELSON
The Associated Press
Updated: 7:02 a.m. Wednesday, June 2, 2010
Posted: 5:50 p.m. Tuesday, June 1, 2010
PENSACOLA BEACH, FLA. – A Florida beach might get hit with oil from the Deepwater Horizon accident for the first time Wednesday as sheen likely caused by the accident was reported less than 10 miles off Pensacola Beach.

A charter boat captain reported the oil Tuesday afternoon and state and local environmental officials confirmed that it was about 9.5 miles offshore. Winds are forecast to blow from the south and west, pushing the outer edges of massive slick from the spill closer to western Panhandle beaches.

Emergency crews began Tuesday scouring the beaches for oil and shoring up miles of boom. Escambia County will use it to block oil from reaching inland waterways, but plans to leave beaches unprotected because they are too difficult to protect and easier to clean up.

The spill’s arrival coincides with the beginning of the Panhandle’s summer tourism season, which normally brings millions of dollars to the region.

“It’s inevitable that we will see it on the beaches,” said Keith Wilkins, Escambia’s deputy chief of neighborhood and community services.

The oil has been creeping toward Florida since the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded on April 20, killing 11 workers and eventually collapsing into the Gulf of Mexico. An estimated 20 million to 40 million gallons of oil has spewed into the Gulf, eclipsing the 11 million that leaked from the Exxon Valdez disaster. The rig was being operated for petroleum giant BP, which has tried unsuccessfully for six week to stanch the oil.

The Florida report followed an orange and oily mess washing up on Alabama’s beaches earlier Tuesday. Crews cleaned up the oil that they described as having the consistency of a “tarry mousse,” but health officials closed the beaches to swimming.

Pensacola Beach officials said their request for about $150,000 from BP to buy sifting machines and a tractor to help remove oil from the beach’s famous white sands has lingered unanswered for more than three weeks. BP has promised it will pay any expenses, but Panhandle officials say the bureaucracy has been slow. Some think the Federal Emergency Management Agency should be running the cleanup operation, not BP.

“We need the sifters and we haven’t gotten them approved yet,” said W.A. “Buck” Lee, Santa Rosa Island Authority’s executive director. “It’s been three weeks and the oil is coming. In my opinion, this entire thing should have been a FEMA project all along. If a hurricane blows the roof off your jail, you shouldn’t have to wait and send a letter to BP to replace the roof on your jail.”

Lee said BP has spent money on public relations, but not on preparations for beach cleanup. The company has provided the sate with $25 million to promote tourism. Escambia approved $700,000 in emergency funding for tourism promotion Tuesday, with another $700,000 to be allocated in 45 days.

Lee said the bureaucratic process set up at the federal staging centers in Alabama and Louisiana have also made it difficult to get information about his pending request.
Coast Guard Chief Peter Capelotti, spokesman for the Mobile, Ala.-based command center, did not have an immediate answer late Tuesday about the delay in approving Escambia county’s request for the tractor and other equipment.

Capelotti said command center officials expect more oil to make landfall in Alabama and the Florida Panhandle through Friday.

On Pensacola Beach, emergency crews are prepared for a long summer of oil clean up. They plan to remove oil in cycles after it is pushed onshore and the winds shift. Removing oil while it’s moving onshore doesn’t make sense, Wilkins said.

“It would be like trying to go out and clean up in the middle of a hurricane,” he said. “We will wait until after the bands make their way onshore and the weather shifts and then we will clean up before the next band hits.”

Special thanks to Richard Charter

BP Oil Spill: NOAA Expands Fishing Closure to Dry Tortugas

FOR INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sustainable Fisheries Division
727-824-5305, FAX 727-824-5308

June 2, 2010
FB10-050
BP Oil Spill: NOAA Modifies Commercial and Recreational Fishing Closure in the
Oil-Affected Portions of the Gulf of Mexico
Current revisions to the closure, described below, will be effective on June 2, 2010 at 6 p.m. eastern time (5 p.m. central time). All commercial and recreational fishing including catch and release is prohibited in the closed area; however, transit through the area is allowed.

See Map–click on  Link:
http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov/sf/deepwater_horizon/BP_OilSpill_FisheryClosureMap_060210.pdf

The closure measures 88,522 sq mi (229,270 sq km), which is about 37% of the Gulf of Mexico exclusive economic zone. The majority of federal waters in the Gulf of Mexico are open to commercial and recreational fishing.

Modeling and mapping the actual and projected spill area is not an exact science. NOAA Fisheries Service strongly advises fishermen not to fish in areas where oil or oil sheens (very thin layers of floating oil) are present, even if those areas are not currently closed to fishing.

Permit holders are reminded to maintain their federal vessel permits by submitting timely reporting requirements and renewal applications, even if the vessel is not currently engaged in fishing activities.

This revised closed area is bounded by rhumb lines connecting, in order, the following coordinates:

Ways To Receive Closure Information:

Southeast Fishery Bulletins, to sign up send an email to: SERO.Communications.Comments@noaa.gov
Call 1-800-627-NOAA (1-800-627-6622) to hear a recording of the current coordinates
Listen to NOAA Weather Radio for updates
Text messages on your cell phone, to sign up text fishing@gulf to 84469
(for more information visit http://www.deepwaterhorizonresponse.com/go/doc/2931/558107)
Follow us on Twitter: usnoaagov to get a tweet when the closed area changes

Links for more information:

Southeast Regional Office’s Web page:
http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov/deepwater_horizon_oil_spill.htm
NOAA’s National Ocean Service
http://response.restoration.noaa.gov
Deepwater Horizon Response http://www.deepwaterhorizonresponse.com
Fishermen who wish to contact BP about a claim should call 1-800-440-0858.

Special thanks to Joe Murphy

Wall Street Journal: Scientists to Back Dispersant Use, Despite Concerns

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703406604575278662019860160.html?mod=WSJ_hpp_MIDDLETopStories

This is such bad news; they believe dispersants should be used to sink the toxic oil and the strategy is that it is easier to allow oil ashore onto Florida’s beaches and then clean it up than prevent it from reaching the shore.  What about using microbes along with tankers and skimmers to remove the oil altogether?????DV

JUNE 1, 2010
Scientists to Back Dispersant Use, Despite Concerns

By JEFFREY BALL
A federally convened group of scientists is set to recommend that BP PLC and the government continue spraying chemicals into the Gulf of Mexico to help prevent leaking oil from washing ashore, even though the scientists have serious concerns about the potential long-term damage to sea life.

The group’s report, due this week, comes after BP’s latest efforts to plug the leaking Deepwater Horizon oil well failed. If further interim measures to cap the well don’t work, large additional amounts of the chemicals, known as “dispersants,” could be sprayed into the Gulf until relief wells can be completed and the gusher capped, which could take until late late summer.

Research ships sponsored by the Obama administration and universities have recently found what scientists believe is evidence that clouds of tiny oil droplets are collecting deep underwater.

Tests are under way to determine whether the droplets are oil-and, if so, whether they were caused by the dispersants. Scientists suspect those droplets could harm fish, birds and sea mammals in coming months and years.

But scientists say they can’t make firm predictions about the effects of chronic exposure, in part because dispersants have rarely been used for long periods of time. In addition, funding for research on dispersants has lagged in recent years as concern about oil spills slipped off the political agenda.
“The bottom line is that there hasn’t been political will to fund this, because we haven’t had a spill,” said Nancy Kinner, co-director of an oil-spill-response institute at the University of New Hampshire.

When the Gulf spill began in April, her institute-the Coastal Response Research Center, created in 2003 with funding from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration-hadn’t received any new federal funding for oil-spill research since 2007.

Last week, with only a few days’ notice, the government paid Ms. Kinner’s institute to hold a large meeting on dispersant use in Louisiana. The report from the closed-door meeting will recommend that dispersants continue to be sprayed on the gulf as a “tradeoff” to prevent massive amounts of oil from washing into coastal marshes, she said. The report also will call on the federal government to continue to do environmental testing to monitor whether that tradeoff remains worthwhile.

“We are assuming that keeping it out in the water column is better than letting it into the coastal areas,” Ms. Kinner said of the leaking oil. Louisiana’s marshes are crucial to many species-including to shrimp, a major industry in the state.

Ms. Kinner, other scientists and top administration officials say the tradeoff makes them increasingly uneasy.

Last month, the Environmental Protection Agency ordered BP to find a less-toxic alternative to the dispersant it has been using most, Corexit 9500, or explain why it couldn’t find one.

But Nalco Co., Corexit’s maker, says the dispersant is safe. And when BP told the EPA that it could find no less-toxic dispersant in the quantities necessary to fight this spill, the EPA relented. The agency asked BP to reduce the amount of Corexit 9500 the company is using.

EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson said in testimony to a House subcommittee Thursday that the administration has requested an additional $2 million for research into the environmental and health effects of the spill, including the use of dispersants. The government’s “modest investment” in dispersant research thus far, she said, “must increase to address the uncertainties that have arisen” from the spill.

The ongoing leak from the well on the ocean floor raises two main concerns in the Gulf: the effect of dispersed oil particles and the effect of the chemical dispersants themselves. Particularly unclear is how sea life will fare when exposed to dispersed oil over long periods of time. Past studies have looked at how short-term exposure could kill fish and sea mammals.

The long-term question didn’t get much consideration before April 20, when the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded and unleashed the torrent of oil that has been spewing into the Gulf ever since. Based on government estimates released last week, the well is pouring out 12,000 to 19,000 barrels of oil every day. That would make the Gulf spill bigger than the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster.

The EPA doesn’t regulate dispersants’ toxicity. It requires dispersant manufacturers to test the amount of dispersant necessary to kill a given quantity of one type of fish and one type of shrimp in lab tests. But it doesn’t impose any maximum toxicity level that dispersants must stay below.

The EPA does require dispersant manufacturers to show that their chemicals break apart and sink a given amount of oil in a given time in a lab test. The dispersants that have that documentation are placed on a list maintained by the EPA, along with the dispersants’ toxicity levels.

Because only small amounts of dispersant were used in the past, “the toxicity of a dispersant has not historically been a driving consideration,” said Chris Piehler, director of the clean-waters project for the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality and one of the Louisiana officials involved in the current oil-spill response.

BP and the federal government said they have applied more than 900,000 gallons of dispersant onto the oil so far, an unprecedented amount.
The EPA’s Ms. Jackson said she hoped the quantities of dispersant could be reduced as much as 75% from initial levels, and federal officials say the amount of dispersant being applied to the spill is down. But even at those reduced quantities, there will still be a lot of dispersant in the Gulf.

 Write to Jeffrey Ball at jeffrey.ball@wsj.com

Special thanks to Richard Charter

Center for Biologic Diversity: Interior Formalizes Oil Drilling Moratorium, Center Applauds Deepwater Action, Decries Lifting of Shallow Moratorium and Continuation of Environmental Waivers

Center for Biological Diversity

http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/

The Center for Biologic Diversity doesn’t fool around; read the list of demands….they rock!!! And they sue.  They’re the ones that got elkhorn and staghorn on the Endangered Species List.  DV

For Immediate Release, May 31, 2010
Contact: Kierán Suckling (520) 275-5960

Interior Formalizes Oil-drilling Moratorium
Center Applauds Deepwater Action, Decries Lifting of Shallow Moratorium and
Continuation of Environmental Waivers
TUCSON, Ariz.- Interior Secretary Ken Salazar yesterday released the Department of the Interior’s written description of the six-month drilling moratorium announced by President Barack Obama last week. Salazar has been heavily criticized for breaches of his previous moratorium – which allowed at least 17 drilling permits to be issued – and for defining the moratorium differently with each new revelation of an approved drilling permit. It was later determined that Salazar’s previous moratorium had only been issued verbally.
The current moratorium lifts limits placed on drilling in waters less than 500 feet deep, which were put in place on May 6, 2010. Such drilling can now continue unabated, while under the May 6 moratorium new wells were not allowed to be initiated in waters less than 500 feet deep. The oil industry and Republican congresspersons have been heavily pressuring Salazar to exempt drilling in shallower waters from his moratorium.

The current moratorium expands limitations on drilling in waters greater than 500 feet deep for the next six months. Oil companies are allowed to continue retrieving oil from already completed wells, but they are not allowed to do any kind of drilling to initiate or complete new wells. This broader scope responds to criticism that Interior’s previous moratorium continued to allow the very same kind of drilling that was occurring on BP’s Deepwater Horizon when it exploded. The new moratorium does not allow such drilling types.

The current moratorium also allows the continued granting of highly controversial environmental waivers to drilling plans. The Deepwater Horizon drilling plan was approved with such a waiver, and at least 19 additional plans have been granted waivers since the Deepwater’s explosion on April 20, 2010. The waivers are being granted under the clearly false declaration that oil drilling poses no threat to the environment.
“We’re glad to see the moratorium has been expanded to cover all deepwater drilling,” said Kierán Suckling, executive director of the Center for Biological Diversity, “but we’re very upset that restrictions on shallower-water drilling have been lifted. All offshore oil drilling, whether deep or shallow, is dangerous and should be suspended.

“It is unbelievable that the Interior Department is continuing to exempt all drilling plans, deep or shallow, from environmental review. There is absolutely no question that offshore oil drilling is a danger to the environment and the fishing economy. Just look at the oil gushing into the Gulf of Mexico. It is not only illegal, it is deeply unethical for Salazar to allow these waivers to continue in the midst of the greatest environmental catastrophe in American history.”

The Center for Biological Diversity called upon Secretary Salazar to take the following actions immediately:

1. Remove former BP executive Sylvia Baca from her job as deputy assistant secretary for land and minerals management. Secretary Salazar expressed outrage at the Inspector General’s finding earlier this week that the revolving door between the oil industry and the Minerals Management Service has undermined the agency’s effectiveness and credibility. He did not mention, however, that in June 2009 he himself appointed a BP executive to oversee the Minerals Management Service.
“Sylvia Baca is a classic example of the revolving door between oil companies and the MMS,” said Suckling. “It was a terrible judgment call to appoint her; it is politically catastrophic to keep her. If Salazar is serious about reform, he needs to start with his own interest-conflicted appointments.”

2. Ban the use of environmental waivers for offshore exploration and production plans. Such waivers are designed for very small-impact projects such as constructing hiking trails and outhouses. There is no possible scenario in which an offshore drilling project – whether deepwater, ultradeepwater, or shallow water – can be considered a non-threat to the environment, economy, and endangered species.

3. Rescind all drilling approvals issued with environmental waivers. Hundreds of dangerous offshore oil platforms are operating today in the Gulf of Mexico without having undergone any environmental review. These dangerous drilling projects are operating illegally and threaten the Gulf with additional oil spills.

4. Rescind the Interior Department’s plan to open up new areas on the Atlantic Coast, eastern Gulf of Mexico, and Alaska to offshore oil drilling. The president’s announcement, made on March 31, 2010, three weeks before the BP explosion, was made on the false premise that offshore oil drilling is safe.
5. Permanently ban all new offshore oil drilling, beginning in Alaska. As a nation, we need to transition to clean energy sources such as sun and wind as fast as possible. Pushing forward with new, dangerous, and dirty offshore oil drilling sends the wrong signal to energy companies and technology developers. Continued subsidizing of Big Oil is a major hindrance to our nation’s development of clean energy.

The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 260,000 members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.

AP: Effort to contain Gulf oil stalls with stuck saw; Slick nearing Florida Panhandle beaches

http://www.dailyfinance.com/article/oil-nears-florida-as-bp-tries-risky-cap/1039683/
Associated Press
Effort to contain Gulf oil stalls with stuck saw
By KEVIN MCGILL
AP
posted: 10:00 AM 06/02/10

SCHRIEVER, La. -Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen is saying that a saw has become stuck as it was cutting through a pipe on a busted well, stalling the latest attempt to contain the Gulf oil gusher.

Allen said Wednesday the goal is to free the saw and finish the cut later in the day. This is the second major cut in the effort to contain – not plug – the nation’s worst spill.
Allen says the first cut with giant shears was successful overnight.

The best chance at plugging the leak involves a relief well that is at least two months from completion.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

PORT FOURCHON, La. (AP) – The BP oil slick drifted close to the Florida Panhandle’s white sand beaches for the first time as submersible robots a mile below the Gulf of Mexico made the latest risky attempt to control the seafloor gusher.

Even if it works, the current mission to cut a major pipe and cap it would only reduce the flow, not stop it. If it fails, it could make the largest oil spill in U.S. history even worse. The best hope for sealing the leak, until a permanent fix is possible in August, failed Saturday, when engineers were unable to plug it with heavy mud in a maneuver called a top kill.

Investors ran from BP’s stock for a second day Wednesday, reacting to the top kill failure and the Justice Department’s announcement that it was looking at criminal and civil probes into the spill, although the department did not name specific targets for prosecution.

Shares in British-based BP PLC were down 3 percent Wednesday morning in London trading after a 13 percent fall the day before. BP has lost $75 billion in market value since the spill started with an April 20 oil rig explosion and analysts expect damage claims to total billions more.

In Florida, officials confirmed an oil sheen Tuesday about nine miles from Pensacola beach, where the summer tourism season was just getting started.

Winds were forecast to blow from the south and west, pushing the slick closer to western Panhandle beaches.

Emergency crews began scouring the beaches for oil and shoring up miles of boom. County officials will use it to block oil from reaching inland waterways but plan to leave beaches unprotected because they are too difficult to protect and easier to clean up.
“It’s inevitable that we will see it on the beaches,” said Keith Wilkins, deputy chief of neighborhood and community services for Escambia County.

The oil has been spreading in the Gulf since the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded six weeks ago, killing 11 workers and eventually sinking. The rig was being operated for BP, the largest oil and gas producer in the Gulf.

Crude has already been reported along barrier islands in Alabama and Mississippi, and it has polluted some 125 miles of Louisiana coastline.

More federal fishing waters were closed, too, another setback for one of the region’s most important industries. More than one-third of federal waters were off-limits for fishing, along with hundreds of square miles of state waters.

Fisherman Hong Le, who came to the U.S. from Vietnam, had rebuilt his home and business after Hurricane Katrina wiped him out. Now he’s facing a similar situation.

“I’m going to be bankrupt very soon,” Le, 53, said as he attended a meeting for fishermen hoping for help. “Everything is financed, how can I pay? No fishing, no welding. I weld on commercial fishing boats and they aren’t going out now, so nothing breaks.”

Le, like other of the fishermen, received $5,000 from BP PLC, but it was quickly gone.
“I call that ‘Shut your mouth money,'” said Murray Volk, 46, of Empire, who’s been fishing for nearly 30 years. “That won’t pay the insurance on my boat and house. They say there’ll be more later, but do you think the electric company will wait for that?”

BP may have bigger problems, though.

Attorney General Eric Holder, who visited the Gulf on Tuesday, would not say who might be targeted in the probes into the largest oil spill in U.S. history.

“We will closely examine the actions of those involved in the spill. If we find evidence of illegal behavior, we will be extremely forceful in our response,” Holder said in New Orleans.

The federal government also ramped up its response to the spill with President Barack Obama ordering the co-chairmen of an independent commission investigating the spill to thoroughly examine the disaster, “to follow the facts wherever they lead, without fear or favor.”

The president said that if laws are insufficient, they’ll be changed. He said that if government oversight wasn’t tough enough, that will change, too.

BP has tried and failed repeatedly to halt the flow of the oil, and the latest attempt like others has never been tried before a mile beneath the ocean. Experts warned it could be even riskier than the others because slicing open the 20-inch riser could unleash more oil if there was a kink in the pipe that restricted some of the flow.

“It is an engineer’s nightmare,” said Ed Overton, a Louisiana State University professor of environmental sciences. “They’re trying to fit a 21-inch cap over a 20-inch pipe a mile away. That’s just horrendously hard to do. It’s not like you and I standing on the ground pushing – they’re using little robots to do this.”

Engineers have put underwater robots and equipment in place this week after a bold attempt to plug the well by force-feeding it heavy mud and cement – called a “top kill” – was aborted over the weekend. Crews pumped thousands of gallons of the mud into the well but were unable to overcome the pressure of the oil.

The company said if the small dome is successful it could capture and siphon a majority of the gushing oil to the surface. But the cut and cap will not halt the oil flow, just capture some of it and funnel it to vessels waiting at the surface.

BP’s best chance to permanently plug the leak rests with a pair of relief wells but those won’t likely be completed until August.

Bluestein reported from Covington, La. Associated Press writers Darlene Superville and Pete Yost from Washington, Curt Anderson from Miami, Brian Skoloff from Port Fourchon, Mary Foster in Boothville, and Michael Kunzelman also contributed to this report.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
2010-06-02 10:00:37

Special thanks to Richard Charter

"Be the change you want to see in the world." Mahatma Gandhi