Sun Sentinel: Politics: Does Cuban oil drilling put Florida at risk?

http://weblogs.sun-sentinel.com/news/politics/dcblog/2011/03/does_cuban_oil_drilling_put_fl_1.html

Bob Graham’s recommendation for a mutual US-Mexico-Cuba safety response plan makes good sense and should be pursued despite the Cuban embargo. DV

By William Gibson
March 17, 2011 11:13 AM

Cuba has contracted with Repsol, a Spanish company, to dig exploratory offshore oil wells along its north coast beginning this year, a prospect that alarms Florida environmentalists and some members of Congress.

Florida leaders for years have struggled to maintain a federal ban on drilling in U.S. waters near the state’s shores, though some Republicans more recently have proposed expanded offshore production to generate jobs, raise revenue and boost U.S. supplies of oil and natural gas.

The Cuban wells would explore the narrow Florida Straits only 50 miles from the fragile ecosystem of the Florida Keys. The rigs would be directly in the path of the Gulf Stream, a powerful current that carries water alongside the South Florida beaches and up the East Coast.

“We aim to drill in Cuba in the second half of this year,” company spokesman Kristian Rix said on Thursday.

“Regarding safety, we are confirdent that we have the right personnel and materials to drill safely and succesfully in the area,” he said.

Repsol, an energy giant, has long experience with offshore operations.

Nevertheless, environmentalists worry about the prospect of rigs so close to marine sanctuaries in the Keys. The Deepwater Horizon spill south of Louisiana last summer, which fouled the Gulf Coast and ruined its tourist season, demonstrated the risks of a big spill.

Former Florida Senator Bob Graham urged U.S. officials on Wednesday to form a pact with Cuba and Mexico to enforce safety standards and establish disaster-response plans in case of a spill.

“Potential sites are close enough to the United States that if an accident like the Deepwater Horizon spill occurs, fisheries, coastal tourism and other valuable U.S. natural resources could be put at great risk,” Graham and William Reilly, co-chairmen of a national commission on offshore drilling, told the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works.

Graham, a Democrat from Miami Lakes, said he and Reilly plan to meet with Mexican officials next month to press for a regional agreement on drilling practices to guard against another disaster. He said that Mexico, which has closer ties to Cuba, could act as an intermediary for establishing a regional agreement.

“We have no comment on the agreement on standards,” said Rix, “other than that we operate to the highest international standards and will continue to do so, always respecting the legal framework.”

Special thanks to Richard Charter

New Orleans Times Picayune–Nola.com: Evaporating oil from BP spill likely posed a health threat, study says

http://www.nola.com/news/gulf-oil-spill/index.ssf/2011/03/evaporating_oil_from_bp_spill.html#incart_mce

Published: Thursday, March 10, 2011, 5:58 PM
Updated: Thursday, March 10, 2011, 5:59 PM
By Mark Schleifstein, The Times-Picayune

A new study about the way oil from the BP Deepwater Horizon accident evaporated into the air confirms that cleanup workers were exposed to high levels of airborne pollution, and that the fumes also may have made their way onshore in Louisiana.

The study does not attempt to assess the resulting health and environmental effects.

The study’s authors also found that the way fumes from the oil combined with particles already in the air could provide a major clue to the way harmful air pollution forms from vehicle and other exhausts in urban areas.

Last June, scientists took air samples during flights over the vast area where oil was on the surface of the Gulf of Mexico.

The researchers found that 30 percent of the oil that made its way to the surface was made up of “light volatile organic carbon molecules” that evaporated within 10 hours. Another 10 to 20 percent of the surface oil was made up of heavier compounds that took several days to evaporate.

The lighter compounds combined with particles in the air and were found in a narrow plume stretching from the Macondo well northwest towards the mouth of the Mississippi River. A much wider plume of aerosols associated with the heavier compounds was found stretching across the northern edge of the oil, also moving northwest with prevailing winds towards the Louisiana coastline.

While the report does not directly address the environmental and human health effects of the aerosols, the results do indicate that offshore clean-up workers were exposed to both the vapors and the aerosol compounds, and that prevailing winds may have carried the aerosols onshore, said Joost de Gouw, lead author of the peer-reviewed report in the March 11 edition of Science magazine.

“These concentrations were high,” de Gouw said. “They are much higher than what you and I are exposed to in cities. We need to have a closer look at how these plumes of aerosol impacted people on shore.”

Some of those concerns will be addressed in future research papers by members of the same scientific team, which includes de Gouw, a research scientist with NOAA’s Earth System Research Laboratory and the Cooperative Institute for Research and Environmental Sciences in Boulder, Colo., other NOAA scientists and researchers with the University of Colorado, University of Miami, University of California-Irvine, Carnegie Mellon University and the National Center for Atmospheric Resarch.

While the study does not attempt to assess the pollutants’ health effects on workers or civilians, the differing evaporation rates support a theory that half of urban air pollution comes from organic aerosol particles from the slower-evaporating oil found in vehicle exhaust.

“Down the line, we may have to reduce emissions of these compounds to improve air quality,” said de Gouw.

In urban areas, scientists have been unable to distinguish between the aerosols formed by lighter and heavier organic compounds because they’re often also associated with heavier nitrogen oxide compounds, deGouw said.

The BP spill provided a laboratory-like setting that allowed separate reviews of the lighter compounds — which quickly attached themselves to particles in the air in the narrow plume — and the broader area of heavier compounds, which took much longer to attach to particles and form aerosols.

The federal Environmental Protection Agency in 2006 tightened its regulations of particulate matter to limit the amount of particles that are 2.5 micrometers in diameter or smaller to 35 micrograms per cubic meter of air. It would take several thousand particles of that size to fill the period at the end of this sentence.

Larger particles, sized 2.5 to 10 micrometers, are limited to 150 micrograms per cubic meter of air because they also cause fewer health problems.

When inhaled, both sizes of particles can reach deep inside of lungs, resulting in health problems, ranging from aggravated asthma to premature death in people with heart and lung disease. Particle pollution also is the main cause of visibility impairment in cities and national parks.

A podcast on this study featuring de Gouw is available on the web through CIRES at http://cires.colorado.edu/news/press/2011/gulf-air-quality.html.

An abstract of study is available on the web at www.sciencemag.org.

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Special thanks to Richard Charter

Fox, Orlando: Gas prices stir debate on oil drilling; Florida drilling ban proposed

http://www.myfoxorlando.com/dpp/money/031111-Gas-prices-stir-debate-on-oil-drilling

Fox, Orlando: Gas prices stir debate on oil drilling

Updated: Friday, 11 Mar 2011, 10:34 PM EST
Published : Friday, 11 Mar 2011, 10:34 PM EST

WINTER PARK, Fla. (WOFL FOX 35) – Sky high prices at the pump is fueling talk among Republican lawmakers for more offshore oil drilling. One of the areas targeted for drilling is just off the coast of the Florida.

During the Florida Legislature’s current 60-day session, a proposed drilling ban will go before both the House and the Senate. It would prevent oil production from the high water line basically to international waters.

“These issues always come up when all prices spike,” said Rep. Scott Randolph, D-Orlando, who is concerned that disasters like the BP oil spill could be repeated due to poor oversight and regulation. “It’s clearly been shown the federal agencies in charge of overseeing oil drilling in the Gulf have been completely inept at those regulations,” he added.

Rep. Scott Plakon, a Republican from Longwood, disagrees. “Now might be the safest time in decades to drill out in the Gulf because this tragedy’s bought a lot of attention to safety issues, ” said Plakon, who believes drilling offshore will help pump life into the economy. “There are thousands of jobs that have been lost there, so we need to get these people back to work.”

However, Rep. Randolph worries about Florida’s pristine coastline. “Florida has a huge tourism industry. As we saw with the one well 50 miles off the coast of Louisiana and the impact that it had here in Florida.” Randolph said he would support oil drilling if someone could prove it’s safe, but right now, he doesn’t see that happening and even if it does, he says it still won’t affect gas prices. “Anybody that thinks it’s going to significantly reduce oil prices, it’s just not. Not enough oil’s going to come out of the Gulf to change that price.”

Concern over rising prices has people at the pumps talking about the politics of energy, and the alternatives to oil.

After the Gulf oil spill, Governor Crist called a special session, asking the legislature to put a constitutional drilling ban to the voters — but they didn’t.

In the 1970s, the pain of Arab oil embargoes and the Iranian Revolution led the United States to flirt with energy independence. But in the years since, consumers seem only to be intermittently lulled and angered at the pump.

The big question is, what now? How much will we pay before we find a solution to the energy equation?

Special thanks to Richard Charter

The Hill: Interior backs another deepwater drilling permit but GOP attacks press on

http://thehill.com/blogs/e2-wire/677-e2-wire/149099-interior-backs-another-deepwater-permit-but-gop-attacks-press-on-

By Ben Geman – 03/12/11 12:59 PM ET

The Interior Department has approved the second deepwater drilling permit for the type of project halted after BP’s oil spill, but it’s unlikely to slow GOP allegations that the White House is blocking U.S. energy development.

Interior’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement late Friday approved a permit for BHP Billiton to resume drilling begun in early 2010 about 120 miles from the Louisiana coast.

It’s the second permit approved under enhanced safety requirements since the Obama administration lifted the federal moratorium on deepwater drilling in October. Interior imposed the freeze on deepwater Gulf of Mexico projects in late May in response to the April 20 blowout of BP’s Macondo well.

Houston-based Noble Energy won approval Feb. 28 for the first permit under the beefed-up safety rules Interior has imposed in recent months, which include requirements that companies demonstrate their capacity to quickly contain deepwater blowouts.

The new permit will allow BHP, which is Australia’s largest oil-and-gas producer, to resume the Gulf of Mexico drilling that it began February 16 in 4,234 feet of water, according to a spokeswoman for Interior’s ocean energy bureau.

Interior officials said when approving Noble’s permit that other approvals were expected in the weeks and months ahead.

But the plans for resumed permitting have not abated GOP criticism, especially as increased gasoline and oil prices have put energy at the top of the Republican political agenda.

House Republican leaders – blaming the White House for rising costs – on Thursday launched their “American Energy Initiative,” which includes planned bills to widen U.S. drilling and speed-up permitting for various kinds of energy projects.

And Republicans have scheduled multiple hearings next week to make their case.

Among them: The House Natural Resources Committee will hold a Wednesday hearing titled “The Obama Administration’s De Facto Moratorium in the Gulf of Mexico: Community and Economic Impacts,” and follow up with a Thursday session on “Harnessing American Resources to Create Jobs and Address Rising Gasoline Prices.”

In addition, 20 Republicans floated legislation Friday that would force the White House’s Council on Environmental Quality to report annually to Congress on the number of permit applications for various kinds of projects that remain under environmental review.

“We have got a permitting process that is failing America, and we have an opportunity today to show America just how bad that problem is,” said Rep. Bill Johnson (R-Ohio), the bill’s lead sponsor, on the House floor Friday.

“We are going to show the American people through a report . . . just how flawed that permitting process is, requiring them to show the permits that are in-cycle and what the economic implications are of not authorizing permits to go after American resources,” he said.

President Obama sought to seize control of the political narrative on energy prices Friday. He held a news conference in which he stressed the administration’s commitment to oil-and-gas production, while highlighting his push for a broader energy strategy that promotes green alternatives and conservation.

Obama also said he was prepared to tap the Strategic Petroleum Reserve if necessary. “If we see significant [supply] disruptions or shifts in the market that are so disconcerting to people that we think a Strategic Petroleum Reserve release might be appropriate, then we’ll take that step,” Obama said, while emphasizing that there isn’t currently a supply shortage.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

Huffington Post: NASA Data Strengthens Reports of Toxic Rain on the Gulf Coast From BP Spill

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jerry-cope/nasa-data-toxic-rain_b_830481.html

Jerry Cope, Designer, Filmmaker, Eco Activist
Posted: March 7, 2011 04:45 PM

Along the Gulf Coast, the marketing blitz for spring break is rolling out as the oil from the BP blowout 11 months ago continues to roll in along with increasing numbers of dead infant dolphins, in numbers completely without precedent. The beaches remain polluted with toxic oil and dispersant even as local politicians and government officials insist everything is fine and the oil miraculously gone. Thousands of pounds are collected each day from the few areas that remain under scrutiny, all of those being in highly visible resort areas. In one zone on Ft. Morgan beach in Alabama, a record 17,000 lbs was collected in one day after a winter storm rolled through. Along the beaches of Alabama in areas not frequented by media or guests, dead infant dolphins are left uncollected in the sand. Current plans by mayors of resort communities along the Gulf Coast will have thousands of vacationers, including at-risk populations, once again making sandcastles and sunbathing on toxic, polluted beaches.

BP continues to shut down the few cleanup efforts still underway with the approval of the federal government. At the Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Task Force meeting in New Orleans recently, scientists, NGO’s, and concerned citizens demanded to know how the ecosystem could be restored when the basic cleanup of the oil has been made impossible by any known technology after the dispersant sank it to the ocean floor. Health concerns remained at the forefront of dialogue as a new report by the Louisiana Bucket Brigade finds that nearly 50 percent of the population along the Gulf Coast is experiencing sickness indicative of chemical poisoning related to the BP oil spill. The CDC assertions in a brochure distributed at the meeting that the levels of chemical exposure related to the spill are not a cause for concern was ridiculed and an embarrassment to many of the officials present.

Government data collected during the oil spill last summer, which is now being released by one of the scientists on the NASA team, strengthens claims that oil and dispersant was brought onshore in rain during the spill. The Chief Mission Coordinating Scientist on the NASA remote sensing mission to the BP oil spill in the Gulf Of Mexico was Ira Leifer, Ph.D from University of California Santa Barbara. Dr. Leifer has been working with natural oil spills and natural methane bubble flows for the last decade. He is in the process of releasing some of the government data collected during the spill; the vast majority of this data has been suppressed and is not available to scientists, the media, or the general public. The data was collected on boats at the sea surface, in airplanes over the Gulf, and by satellite.

The data being released, which was collected by the NASA missions to the Gulf, shows that the toxic compounds released from the BP spill became airborne, and significant quantities were brought onshore by precipitation, thereby exposing coastal populations to chemical poisoning. This represents something new and unique not observed in previous oil spills. It helps explain why there were numerous reports by people living along the Gulf Coast that it was raining oil and dispersant during the summer months.

After spending some time together in New Orleans I spoke to Ira Leifer at length in Mexico City.

IL: I think it is important to establish for the record that the unique aspect of this [BP blowout] is that the volatiles were continuous, it was not a one-day exposure. The chronic nature of the spill and the therefore chronic nature of its health impact is a pretty unique aspect of this event. The reason I think it’s important to call it unique is that it gives a way to explain why various government agencies using protocols developed for a single coast spill didn’t get it right because it’s not the same. I think it’s important to give the people we really want to take responsibility a way of saying ah, yes, you’re right and jump on the bandwagon with us. We need NIH to fund a 50 to 60 million dollar study because this is something that had never happened before.

The data we collected in the atmosphere shows a very high hydrocarbon load and we were able to identify more than 100 compounds in it. Many of them have health implications. There were large amounts of them and they have similarities to gasoline. In that regard the modeling I did seems to suggest that there are reasons for concern. There are reasons to do additional research.

JC: How was the data you are referring to collected, and based on that data, what degree of concentration did you find of what you would consider toxic compounds?

IL: That is a top question because realistically they are probably all toxic to some extent. But for so many compounds I do not think the studies have been done to say what precisely the threats are — it’s a mixture. The way we did the measurements we had evacuated stainless steel 1 liter cylinders opened up to very gradually and gently allow air to enter into the container and then sealed. These were collected on a boat and also in NOAA airplanes and then analyze by a scientist Don Blake at his laboratory at UC Irvine. The concentrations of any one compound were very low in the parts per billion (PPB) or even less. But many of these concentrations were at sea and this is a good comparison, higher — much much higher than in Mexico City where I am now and is one of the standards for the worst air pollution in the world.

This is what is being experienced or observed and breathed by people on site. The response workers were not wearing a mask [respirator].

JC: What about the population along the coast in the areas where there have been so many reports of people complaining of health problems, specifically Southern Louisiana, Mississippi, the Orange Beach/Gulf Shores area of Alabama? Do you think the data you collected has a direct correlation to those populations and what they were inhaling?

IL: People in the Gulf of Mexico were not warned that the air was going to be bad and they had clean air in much of the area right before the spill. It is a very different kind of situation than people who chose to go and try to make money in Mexico City. A lot of people in the Gulf live there because they enjoy the Gulf and they didn’t want to move Los Angeles or New York City or the big American polluted environments — they chose to stay where the environment is pretty clean.

In terms of the health implications for coastal communities I think there are two things. I have classified there being three different approaches by which atmospheric phenomenon related to the oil spill can cause health effects. One is the volatiles just breathing the stuff a long way from the incident site. A second one is aerosol, so when oil comes up on the beaches as the wave breaks there is aerosol generated in the air, and that can be breathed by people. The last one which we discovered is the rain. I will add a fourth one which is dispersants. Clearly, spraying dispersants near populated areas is a bad idea. If dispersants are aerosolized that is a bad thing as well. I do not have data on the dispersants so I will speak to what I do know. With regards to the volatiles there are two things the main thing is that volatiles can go a long way on the wind. I did some simple calculations of quantities and exposures in coastal communities. What I saw according to OSHA rules absolutely no problem. If one assumes the volatiles can be health effect modeled as gasoline exposure there is a potential – the dosage rates were high enough for there to be problems. When I did it for healthy adults it seemed worth looking at, but who knows. The big worry is pregnant women and the elderly — at risk populations. In that regard, at-risk populations, the levels seem to suggest there could be really severe concern for the health-related impacts. What that implies is that it really needs to be studied and looked at. The [published] literature is for people exposed long term to gasoline.

The other way is the aerosols. The aerosolization are really tiny droplets smaller than a hair but still pretty large, and they can not stay airborne for very long before they will fall back down to the ground. Maybe a couple of miles inshore. So you would expect people right near the beach would be at risk from aerosol related problems. But once you got 5 to 10 miles onshore it would go back to people just breathing and smelling fumes rather than the aerosol component. Aerosols and their effects are a little uncertain, exactly what it is going to do. We know that aerosolization in past spills always cause a lot of people to get sick. In this spill, probably the same. They are droplets that are large enough that if they get into your lungs your body can potentially remove them, or maybe not because they are tar so it may get stuck in there. I do not know of literature in detail on this in the U.S., there may be overseas. If you breathe in aerosols of oil do you cough them out and get rid of them within a month or do they stay in your body for years? That is a very important distinction.

What you would expect to see is that people within close proximity to the beach — with a mile or two — would have symptoms different from people ten miles from the beach. And when I say beach it is also shoreline.

The last one is the rain. That is a completely new phenomenon that has not been reported. People at California Oil Spill who have done testing on burning have never seen anything like that. But you don’t have 102% humidity in California. There is no precedent in past oil spills to consider to know that this is a problem and what its effects are.

JC: Part of the data set you collected definitely showed that it (VOCs) was present in precipitation?

IL: Not in precipitation. I know there were clouds filled with hydrocarbons. This is from the remote sensing data showing that a cloud — maybe it is 1/2 mile thick — had about .1 or .2mm of oil equivalent in it spread out through the whole thing. When it rains, whatever is in it is going to come down, that is just how clouds work. I don’t have documentation on the rain. On the other hand there are quite a few anecdotal reports of people saying it’s raining oil. What was missing was any explanation of how that could be happening, a scientific mechanism. What my data does is that it elucidates the mechanism scientifically so we can explain exactly how this could happen. It goes from speculation that just have been a water spout and it pushed the oil up into the atmosphere and then somehow it came down in Alabama to actually a very clear connection that can both be studied from the remote sensing data we have and also from people’s observations. This would be a cause for concern in the future and burning oil from spills as to whether or not it’s a good idea.

JC: Going forward, based on the path the data is leading you for further investigation what would you like to see happen now?

IL: For myself there are two. To improve the atmospheric model. But more to the point the most important link that needs to be made at this point is that chronic gasoline exposure is a good health model of exposure to the BP oil spill fumes. Secondly to try and get a better understanding — which seems to be impossible — what is known about the airborne impacts of the oil spills in the last 10 years around the world. We live in a global world and society, it is silly for us not to learn from the experiences of our friends in Europe who have also experienced oil spills in recent years and documented widespread health impacts. As Americans, if we can learn from them we can avoid the mysterious Gulf Coast Health Syndrome appearing five years from now that nobody figures out what it is until 10 years from now with a lot of people getting sick and very ill in the interim.

Follow Jerry Cope on Twitter: www.twitter.com/jercope

Special thanks to Richard Charter