Holmes County Times Advertiser: Professor believes most spilled oil settled on ocean bottom & Press Enterprise Editorial: Gulf-spill lessons

http://www.chipleypaper.com/news/settled-7766-most-spilled.html

I agree with Professor Chanton that it will be impossible for BP to restore the damage it has done to the benthic communities of the Gulf. DV

Holmes County Times Advertiser: Professor believes most spilled oil settled on ocean floor
November 26, 2010 8:42 AM
SARAH OWEN, Florida Freedom Newswire

PANAMA CITY – The oil is still there, sitting at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico and causing damage to the environment, a Florida State University professor who studies greenhouse gases, oceans and energy said Tuesday.

Professor Jeff Chanton compared natural oil seepage in the Gulf of Mexico to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. About 1,000 natural ocean-floor leaks combine to trickle about 400,000 barrels of oil into the Gulf each year, Chanton said, but scientists estimate as many as 60,000 barrels of oil poured into the Gulf each day of the spill.

“While natural seepage is a normal process, what happened this summer was totally overwhelming,” Chanton said.

The professor said he thinks most of that Deepwater Horizon oil – as much as 70 percent to 79 percent of it -sank to the ocean floor, where it remains, sucking up oxygen and inhibiting life.

He and his colleagues are working to determine how that layer of sludge might affect the Gulf and how long it might take for the ecosystem to recover.

“But this is going to be a really hard thing to measure,” he said. “It’s likely that there will be this small, incremental degradation, but it occurs on such a slow scale, and human lives are so short, that people won’t notice it. It’s going to be anecdotal – people will say, ‘Oh, the fishing’s not as good as it used to be.’ ”

Scientists will need money to conduct that research, he added. He’s hoping some money BP is expected to pay in fines will be tucked away in a trust fund for long-term studies.

“The law says BP has to restore things to the way they were, but we don’t even really know how things were,” Chanton added. “It’ll probably be 10 years before we really know the effects.”

Dave Lobell, a self-employed engineer, said he sat in on the lecture to pick up professional development hours and also because he was interested in the topic.

“It was very informative,” Lobell said, although he added that he thought Chanton’s political views were evident in the lecture and that he didn’t necessarily agree with the professor. Besides talking about the oil spill, Chanton also discussed global warming and his opposition to offshore drilling.

_______________________

http://www.pe.com/localnews/opinion/editorials/stories/PE_OpEd_Opinion_D_op_26_ed_bpspill.369705c.html

Press Enterprise
Southern California
Opinion/Editorial

Gulf-spill lessons

10:00 PM PST on Thursday, November 25, 2010
The Press-Enterprise

Oil companies and the federal government need a better approach to oil-drilling disasters than improvising after the fact. The Gulf of Mexico oil leak shows that both the industry and government need to do a better job of planning, and put more money and effort into devising better ways to clean up oil spills.

The lack of readiness is evident in the findings of two reports, released this week, from the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling. President Barack Obama established the panel in May to examine the Deepwater Horizon incident. That offshore well exploded in April, killing 11 people, and spewed oil into the Gulf of Mexico for five months. One report addressed the efforts to stop the leak, while the other assessed cleanup methods.

The reports portray a response to the disaster hindered by an absence of planning for such an event, and cleanup technology that had made only marginal advances since the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill off Alaska. The Deepwater Horizon leak spurred some quick advances in cleanup methods — but only because a catastrophe had already happened.

One of the reports notes that oil companies spend almost no money on researching and developing new ways to scour the ocean after a spill, despite earning billions in profits each year. Over the past two decades, the companies did put some funding behind nonprofit oil spill removal organizations, but those groups focus on cleanup, not research into new technology.

The federal government, likewise, devoted little money to oil spill research over the past two decades. A 1990 law, enacted after the Alaska spill, authorizes up to $28 million a year in such funding, but federal agencies, including the Coast Guard and the Minerals Management Service, have never spent even half that amount in any one year. Nor do federal deficits explain the reluctance to spend: The money comes from a tax on oil production earmarked specifically for cleanup activities.

Oil companies argue that funding research into better ways of preventing leaks is more cost-effective. But while prevention is a crucial safeguard, accidents do happen, as the Deepwater Horizon incident demonstrated. And the aftermath of a spill is the wrong time to start considering more efficient methods to recover leaking oil.

The reports suggest that the federal government should encourage more spending on cleanup research. Steps such as increasing the cap on oil companies’ liability for cleanup costs or offering tax credits for research, for example, could spur development of new technology. The report recommends that the government beef up its research efforts into new cleanup methods, as well.

Federal agencies should also require oil drillers to produce a detailed plan for responding to well blowouts, to show the companies are prepared to deal with such disasters. That step should have been standard long before now, but federal regulators have a history of deferring to the oil industry on safety matters.

The Deepwater Horizon blowout caught the industry and the government off balance and unready. Both failed to learn from the Exxon Valdez disaster two decades earlier — and neither should repeat that mistake this time.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

Athens Banner-Herald Editorial: Government’s oil spill response a problem

ATHENS BANNER-HERALD (Georgia) –

http://www.onlineathens.com/stories/112410/opi_740633452.shtml

Published Wednesday, November 24, 2010

University of Georgia marine scientist Charles Hopkinson, director of the Georgia Sea Grant program, ate shrimp and oysters for six days in a row during a recent visit to New Orleans for a meeting, according to an Associated Press report from late last week.

He’s “still here,” he told attendees at an international conference in Charleston, S.C., that considered whether seafood from the Gulf of Mexico, where the Deepwater Horizon oil rig disaster spewed millions of gallons of oil, is safe to eat. But, he told the conference, he didn’t base his dining decisions on assurances from the federal government that Gulf seafood doesn’t pose a health hazard.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported recently that less than 1 percent of the 1,700-plus seafood tissue samples tested by the government held any trace of chemicals from the dispersant used in the Gulf of Mexico to break up the oil in the wake of the April explosion.

The FDA and NOAA tests, however, have been criticized in some quarters for not comprising a large enough sample, and not testing for all of the possible toxic components of the dispersant, or for possible toxic components resulting from the dispersant mixing with seawater and oil.

Outside of those criticisms, though, is the simple fact that the government’s record in reporting on the oil spill has done little to inspire public confidence in federal competence or desire to investigate the spill and its aftermath fairly and accurately.

A recently released draft report from the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling, a group of seven people with expertise in the legal, environmental and engineering arenas, and in the oil and gas industry, noted that the administration of President Barack Obama – who, in fairness, established the commission – made erroneous early estimates of the spill’s size and mischaracterized a government analysis by saying it showed most of the oil was gone. More recently, NOAA was reporting that it had not found evidence of oil on the sea floor.

In the wake of those announcements, other scientists, including Hopkinson and fellow UGA marine scientist Samantha Joye, debunked government claims. Regarding the supposed disappearance of the oil, UGA marine scientists noted that the analysis actually indicated only that the oil was dispersed, which meant that most of it still was in the water. Regarding the NOAA report on a lack of oil on the sea floor, a research team led by Joye reported finding thickly embedded oil.

Unfortunately, with that kind of track record preceding its claim that Gulf seafood is safe to eat, it’s little wonder that Hopkinson, calling the government’s errant analyses of the disaster “really disheartening” at the Charleston conference, would further ask, “So why should I believe their claim that the seafood is safe?”

Why, indeed? And there’s a larger issue here, too.

The government’s previously erroneous statements on the extent of the spill can be seen as a political exercise in trying to put the best face on the federal response, at the expense of keeping the public fully and honestly informed. It may be, in fact, that Gulf seafood is safe. But a government assertion of that point necessarily will be met with skepticism. Only now, that skepticism will do more than prompt the public to shake its head at the latest example of government incompetence.

At a time when this country needs to have more people working, a lack of trust in the federal government could adversely affect the working lives of any number of Gulf Coast fishermen and the working lives of people in related businesses.

Originally published in the Athens Banner-Herald on Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Special thanks to Richard Charter

Platts.com: BP Atlantis suit may set tone for US Macondo litigation

http://www.platts.com/RSSFeedDetailedNews/RSSFeed/Oil/8222228

BP Atlantis suit may set tone for US Macondo litigation
New York (Platts)–24Nov2010/1226 pm EST/1726 GMT

Hundreds of lawsuits were filed in reaction to the Macondo well blowout and subsequent oil spill in the US Gulf of Mexico earlier this year, but legal experts say one of the most important legal actions that will affect those suits was filed almost exactly a year before the disaster.

In that case, Kenneth Abbott, a whistle-blower, filed suit against BP on behalf of the federal government alleging fraud in the company’s certificate of safe operation and sound equipment for its Atlantis development, also in the Gulf of Mexico. The case is being heard in US District Court for the Southern District of Texas in Houston before Judge Kenneth Hoyt.

At the close of business November 23, both sides were anticipating the US attorney’s office to file an amicus brief, but the office could not confirm if that had taken place.

“If BP is found to have committed fraud, that would establish a pattern of behavior predating Macondo,” said one attorney familiar with the case. “That could influence all the other litigation arising out of the [Deepwater Horizon] explosion and spill.”

On November 9, BP moved to have the case dismissed; Abbott replied the next day, and the US brief is in support of Abbott. Sources with knowledge of the proceedings say both Abbott and BP will have a week to reply to the US amicus filing, then the judge will consider the motion to dismiss.

If that is denied, a jury trial will proceed, with the discovery process running from April through September 2011 and arguments to begin in November.

Some sense of how major other Macondo-related litigation will play out is also coming into focus. The third pre-trial procedural hearing in the consolidated damage and injury cases took place November 19 in US District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana before Judge Carl Barbier in New Orleans.

Counsel for the Department of Justice reported that the forensic testing on the failed blowout preventer had begun. The testing was scheduled to be completed in January, with a report due in March. Attorneys for some plaintiffs argued that certain information disclosed to the Gulf Coast Claims Facility was protected from discovery in the litigation. The judge instructed the two sides to meet separately and try to come to an agreement. The next pre-trial hearing is scheduled for December 17.

The other big group of consolidated cases, those involving shareholder actions, has yet to get under way. Sources familiar with the action before Judge Keith Ellison in US District Court for the Southern District of Texas in Houston say that remanded cases continue to trickle in, but that the judge is hopeful of setting a schedule before the end of the year.

Another pair of important cases is being heard before two separate judges in Houston, both involving Anadarko Petroleum seeking to invoke force majeure to cancel contracts for offshore drilling rigs, one with Diamond Offshore and one with Noble Energy.

A scheduling hearing took place before Judge Gabrielle McDonald November 19 in the Noble case. Expert reports are due by June 2011 with discovery to be completed in August and arguments to begin in September.

The two sides reported that they are both agreeable to mediation, and are in discussions, but nothing about the trial schedule has been changed so far. Attorneys indicate the Diamond Offshore case is not quite as amicable, with Diamond moving for dismissal and Anadarko countering. On November 9, Judge Gray Miller converted the motion to dismiss to a motion for summary judgment, and will make a ruling on that January 10. –Gregory DL Morris, newsdesk@platts.com

Similar stories appear in Oilgram News. See more information at http://www.platts.com/Products/oilgramnews

Special thanks to Dave Curtis

The Huffington Post: Oil Spill Found On Shrimp Seafood In Newly Opened Gulf Waters (VIDEO)

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/23/shrimp-boat-hauls-in-tar-_n_787411.html

This is just the beginning of a long term problem. DV

The Huffington Post | Joanna Zelman First Posted: 11-23-10 12:23 PM | Updated: 11-23-10 12:23 PM

375 Tar Balls. Not quite as appetizing a shrimp side dish as cocktail sauce. But according to FOX 10 News, that’s just what the shrimp boat Our Mother caught in its net this past week – enough tar balls to ruin thousands of dollars worth of shrimp.

The boat was trawling in newly re-opened waters north of the Deepwater Horizon well site when it hauled tar balls in with its shrimp. Due to this boat’s disturbing catch, NOAA (The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) will perform trawls in the same area, and probably sample the shrimp for seafood safety. Based on their findings, the NOAA may consider re-closing the area. In the meantime, piles of shrimp sit spoiled on a nearby dock.

Special thanks to Diana Dodson

Raw Story blog: Exclusive: Professor who downplayed oil spill has federal government contracts

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2010/11/professor-downplayed-oil-spill-federal-government-contracts/

NOAA funds a lot of research, but I didn’t know they used private funds. The disturbing part is BP’s role in defining the actual research and NOAA’s compliance with such influence. DV

RAW STORY – Blog
Investigation also finds BP telling university what to research

By Brad Jacobson
Thursday, November 18th, 2010 — 8:50 am

Quoted in scores of news outlets, appearing on dozens of network news programs and even landing a guest spot on The Late Show with David Letterman, oil spill expert Ed Overton has been a ubiquitous presence in the media throughout the Gulf oil spill disaster.

Professor Emeritus of Environmental Science at Louisiana State University, Overton, who has been criticized for downplaying the effects of the worst offshore oil spill in history, has also headed the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s chemical hazard assessment team for over 25 years.

Yet in nearly every media appearance, and even during congressional testimony, Overton, an environmental chemist, has omitted this long-term, high-level contracting position for the federal government through LSU, a Raw Story investigation has found.

Overton’s prominent NOAA role and questionable objectivity

Many marine scientists have received NOAA grants and funding off and on over the years and many have also omitted such ties during media appearances and congressional testimony.

Florida State University oceanography professor Ian MacDonald, for example, who has actually been a vocal critic of statements made by BP and NOAA — including their estimates of both the amount of oil flowing into the Gulf while the well was still gushing and how much remained once the well had been capped — confirmed to Raw Story via email that he and several other scientists testifying before Congress and speaking to the media haven’t necessarily divulged past or present funding from NOAA.

But Overton’s prominent position as the chief chemist and principal architect of NOAA’s Hazardous Materials Response Division dating back to the early eighties, along with his tendency to provide rosier-than-average assessments of the effects of the Gulf oil spill since the catastrophe began — opinions often in line with those of BP, NOAA and other federal officials — have raised questions about the omission of his contracting work and the scientific objectivity of his public statements.

Additionally, as professor emeritus, Overton confirmed to Raw Story that he officially retired from LSU and no longer receives a salary from the university; all his income tied to his university association since May 2009 has come through grants and contracts, and mostly through his work for NOAA. The latest NOAA funding for his work was a $1.3 million five-year grant.

Just days after the oil spill began in April, BP and the Coast Guard were telling Americans that no oil appeared to be leaking into the Gulf after the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon rig. In a Time magazine article at the time, Overton is the only scientist who jumped on this bandwagon, saying, “Right now it looks like we dodged a bullet.”

While Overton purports to only provide his personal science-based opinions, as he did in an interview last week with Raw Story, he praised BP back in May for “stepping up to the plate” to begin compensating “some of the locals.”

Though these types of public statements may be unrelated to subsequent grants by BP, they too raise questions.

In June, LSU was the first university to receive funding from BP’s $500 million Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative, which is supposed to support universities in the Gulf area in researching the effects of oil spills. LSU received $5 million from BP upfront as part of a $10 million grant over the next 10 years.

In speaking with LSU’s Office of Research and Economic Development, Raw Story also found that, while all studies performed by the university will be scientifically peer-reviewed, BP decides what areas LSU will research.

None of this funding, for instance, will go toward the study of the long-term health impacts on the “locals” — something that Overton has also tended to downplay, such as during his August testimony before a congressional body.

Speaking on the effects of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), highly toxic and carcinogenic chemicals found in crude oil, Overton, who is also an expert in environmental toxicology, merely echoed federal talking points, telling Congress that PAHs do not bioaccumulate, without disclosing other possible impacts.

Texas Tech University Professor Ronald Kendall, testifying on the same day, was then quick to point out that while the risk of bioaccumulation of PAHs appears low, chronic carcinogenic effects can still lethally damage the DNA of both marine and human life.

Overton: “You can Google and find out a lot about me”

At the beginning of an interview with Raw Story, Overton claimed that he “always” discloses his contracting work with NOAA. As the interview proceeded, though, he then said he tells “anybody and everybody that’s willing to listen,” before he finally admitted it was “perfectly legitimate” that he does not provide full disclosure.

“What gives me the credibility is that I’ve been doing this as part of the NOAA team for a long time,” Overton said.

“Now, you can infer some information from that,” he granted. “But I don’t have to run my opinions by NOAA, NOAA has not asked me to do that, and I wouldn’t do it if they did ask me. Because when the media asks me a question or anybody asks me a question, I’m giving my opinion as Ed Overton.”

But how can the public “infer some information” from Overton’s NOAA affiliation if this is almost never disclosed when he’s providing comments to the media?

“People can look me up,” he told Raw Story. “I’m part of the public record. You can Google and find out a lot about me.”

And what about omitting this disclosure while providing congressional testimony on the Gulf oil spill?

“They had some NOAA reps there,” said Overton. “And NOAA gave their talk and I gave my talk. But again, I was up there representing LSU, not necessarily other folks.”

Ironically, one of the rare instances when this disclosure has been made occurred during his visit to a late-night comedy talk show, The Late Show with David Letterman, during Letterman’s introduction of Overton.

Experts say disclosure critical, LSU professor calls Overton “industry shill”

In interviews with Raw Story, experts found Overton’s defense of non-disclosure wanting.

One of them, a fellow senior sciences professor at Overton’s own LSU, also noted that Overton “does not appear to be an unbiased source of information” and found it laughable that the head of NOAA’s chemical hazard assessment team is purporting to provide public comments as an “independent scientist.”

The LSU professor, who spoke with Raw Story on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation by the university, explained, “The issue is that everybody who is involved in investigating this event and its effects needs to be upfront and honest about the sources of funding that they receive.”

“It doesn’t necessarily negate their credibility,” he said. “But they should at least be honest and open about it. If anything, that makes them more credible.”

The professor clarified, “I don’t think, per se, getting money from NOAA or EPA or FDA or any of the regulatory agencies necessarily means that the science is bad.”

But he went on to say that his impression of Overton’s consistently rosy scientific assessments, coupled with Overton’s routine omission of full disclosure, is what’s most troubling to him.

“I think that Dr. Overton comes across as being an industry shill,” the professor offered bluntly. “He has never said anything that was not in favor of what the industry was saying and continued to minimize the effects from day one about how bad this spill and its effects would be.”

In Overton’s interview with Raw Story, he went on to say that his main reason for not disclosing his high-level contracting position with NOAA is because it would appear that he’s boasting about his accomplishments.

“It’s just that I’m not going to stand in a short interview and introduce a title and sound like I’m trying to be bigger than I am,” he explained, adding that would seem “like I’m trying to beat my chestŠlike I’m the Price of Wales.”

Chris Pincetich, a toxicologist and marine biologist at the Sea Turtle Restoration Project, told Raw Story, “If Dr. Overton wants to continue to mask his true associations and roles in the spill and claim he’s doing so because he’s trying to sound humble, that’s his prerogative. But I don’t feel it really does justice to the public and our need for accurate information.”

Roy Peter Clark, vice president and a senior scholar at the Poynter Institute, a journalism think tank in St. Petersburg, Fla., agreed.

“As someone who’s got several titles, I can understand how someone might be a little reluctant on some occasions to stack them up as evidence of his or her expertise,” Clark said. “That said, I think that’s a very poor reason for not being as forthcoming as possible as to his professional connections.”

“Universities for many, many years have been up to their necks in federal grants, in research money from businesses of all kinds,” he explained. “The question is, is it possible to be unconflicted? And I would say the answer is no.”

“Therefore, if that poison is always floating around,” Clark continued, “it’s absolutely clear that the best antidote to even the appearance of conflict of interest is full disclosure.”

Pincetich and other experts interviewed for this article noted that many individuals have been serving dual roles during the oil spill response.

Yet it’s for this reason precisely that he believes full disclosure is necessary for people to be able to accurately assess the sources of information they’re receiving.

“The critical information that the public needed to make scientific and value-based judgments was often clouded by a lot of these folks which are serving dual roles either through their appointments to Unified Command or, like Ed Overton, their dual funding,” Pincetich said.
Overton consulted on and defended pilloried federal oil spill report

Pincetich pointed out that the Obama administration’s oil spill report that estimated 75% of the oil from the Gulf was effectively “gone,” a report on which Overton consulted for NOAA, was a prime example of how federal information “can sometimes be a little too rosy” and of why those with dual roles such as Overton should provide full disclosure.

Most outside scientists assailed the veracity of the August federal report, and a subsequent analysis by University of Georgia scientists soon arrived at quite opposite findings.

But Overton noted at the time that while “everybody seems skeptical” about NOAA’s report, he didn’t “think it’s too far off,” telling the AP that it was mostly good work and positing to the New York Times that it might have even overestimated the amount of oil left in the Gulf.

He also pointed out at the time that “[t]he Gulf is incredible in its resiliency and ability to clean itself up,” adding, “I think we are going to be flabbergasted by the little amount of damage that has been caused by this spill.”

Only days before that August federal report was released, CNN had aired a segment on AC 360 called “Was the oil disaster overblown?”

The sole expert interviewed during the segment? Ed Overton.

CNN’s Anderson Cooper began the interview, saying, “Ed Overton is professor emeritus in the Department of Environmental Sciences at LSU. He joins me now. Professor was this overblown?”

“Well, I don’t know, I certainly didn’t overblow it,” Overton responded. “People that have been around an oil spill for a long time I don’t think overblowed it.”

Pincetich concluded his interview with Raw Story by underscoring his belief in the public’s right to know “the true background, the true funding and the true motivations” of experts speaking on the Gulf oil disaster.

“I think this investigation that you’re doing now is a perfect case where we’re hearing a lot of stuff from an individual that we don’t know everything about their motivations,” he said.

Pincetich added, “It’s disturbing when scientists lose their objectivity because of funding sources,” which is why we need to “diligently understand the ‘position statements’ such as those being produced by folks with dual affiliations.”

As Raw Story was wrapping up its interview with Overton, he said, “You’re trying to come up with a controversy where there is none.”

When told that some people disagree with his view, he replied, “You know, that’s the way life is. If we all agreed with everybody, we’d be married to the same woman.”

Brad Jacobson is a contributing investigative reporter for Raw Story. You can follow his Twitter feed at twitter.com/bradpjacobson.
Raw Story Media, Inc., Washington, D.C.

Special thanks to Richard Charter