Category Archives: Uncategorized

Daily Comet: Despite fears following spill, local jobless rate holds steady

http://www.dailycomet.com/article/20100925/ARTICLES/100929464/1212?Title=Despite-fears-following-spill-local-jobless-rate-holds-steady

By Kathrine Schmidt
Staff Writer
Published: Saturday, September 25, 2010 at 6:01 a.m.

HOUMA – Despite fears about the economic impact of the Gulf oil spill and deepwater-drilling ban, employment remained steady in the Houma-Thibodaux area in August, state figures show.

The metro-area unemployment rate of 5.9 percent is still the state’s lowest, the Louisiana Workforce Commission reported Friday. It’s up from 5.2 percent in July, but that’s a typical seasonal change as summer workers are released from jobs, state officials said. That compares to 5.5 percent in August 2009.

“The state and other areas are pretty much holding their own,” said Patty Granier, a statistician with the state agency. “We don’t see any big trend down. (Businesses) are trying to maintain and keep as many workers as they can.”

The local numbers are well below the state rate of 8.2 percent and the national rate of 9.5 percent.

Terrebonne posted 6 percent and Lafourche 5.7 percent. Those numbers aren’t adjusted for seasonal variations such as summer employees looking for new jobs and teachers returning to work.

Louisiana showed a gain of 13,700 jobs over the year.

“We continue to see over-the-year gains in the number of jobs and people in the labor force,” Workforce Commission Executive Director Curt Eysink said in a news release. “The fact that private sector jobs are fueling the yearly growth is a positive sign.”

The state numbers also show the Houma-Thibodaux area gaining an estimated 300 jobs since July, thanks to school teachers employed by local government getting back to the classroom.

But the metro area still has about 200 fewer jobs than it did a year ago. Oil-and-gas jobs and construction jobs maintained their employment levels, as did positions in leisure and hospitality.

In neighboring parishes, Assumption posted a 10.7 percent jobless rate in August, St. Mary 9.7 percent and St. James 12.4 percent.

While the official numbers haven’t budged much, the state’s count of workers does not track the cuts to hours and benefits that oilfield workers said they have been experiencing as a result of the deepwater-drilling ban.

Some of that pain has been reflected in an increased demand for assistance, including requests from many families who haven’t had to use them before.

Jennifer Gaudet, a case worker with Catholic Charities of Houma-Thibodaux, said that since mid-July the organization has seen a significant increase in cases for families asking about programs that provide help with food, utility bills and rent or mortgage payments.

Staff Writer Kathrine Schmidt can be reached at 857-2204 or Kathrine.schmidt@houmatoday.com.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

National Geographic: Whale Sharks Killed, Displaced by Gulf Oil?


A whale shark filters prey amid a school of cleaner fish (file photo).
Photograph by Colin Parker, My Shot

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/09/100924-whale-sharks-gulf-oil-spill-science-environment/

The Gulf oil spill occurred in crucial habitat for the world’s largest fish.
Main Content
Brian Handwerk for National Geographic News

Published September 24, 2010

SPECIAL SERIES | DEEP IMPACT
Deciphering the unseen, underwater effects of the Gulf oil spill.

The Gulf oil spill fouled a vital stretch of feeding habitat for whale sharks, possibly killing some of the world’s largest fish, new research suggests.

An estimated 4.9 million barrels of oil (one barrel equals 42 gallons, or 159 liters) flowed into an area south of the Mississippi River Delta, where of one-third of all northern Gulf of Mexico (map) whale shark sightings have occurred in recent years, scientists say.

The 45-foot-long (14-meter-long) fish, still largely a mystery to scientists, is considered a vulnerable species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

(See “World’s Largest Shark Species at Risk, Expert Says.”)

“This spill’s impact came at the worst possible time and in the worst possible location for whale sharks,” said biologist Eric Hoffmayer, who studies whale sharks at the University of Southern Mississippi’s Gulf Coast Research Laboratory.

Sightings confirmed that the animals were unable to avoid the slick at the surface, where the giant fish may feed for seven to eight hours a day. The oil may have clogged the fish’s gills, suffocating them, or it might have contaminated their prey-though no dead whale sharks have been found, Hoffmayer noted.

“We’ve seen aerial photos with animals within a few miles of the wellhead and swimming in thick oil,” said Hoffmayer, a National Geographic Society Waitt grantee. (National Geographic News is owned by the National Geographic Society.)

“At the end of the day, if these animals were feeding in an area where there was surface oil, and if they ingested oil, there is a good possibility that they died and sank to the bottom. At this point we have no idea how many animals have been impacted.”

Oil Toxic to Filter-Feeding Sharks?

Though much of the Gulf oil has disappeared from the surface, the spill isn’t going away-and scientists are still trying to uncover the extent of its invisible effects on Gulf wildlife.

(Read about the Gulf oil spill in the October issue of National Geographic magazine.)

For instance, certain toxic ingredients of oil-and even the chemical dispersants used during the cleanup-could potentially cause long-term problems for whale sharks and many other species. Those may include compromised endocrine or immune response systems, scientists note. (See related blog: “Gulf Seafood With a Side of Oil Dispersant?”)

Whale sharks filter a lot of water through their mouths and gills-almost 160,000 gallons (605,000 liters) of water an hour-as they feed on tiny plankton and fish.

These sharks swim with their wide mouths open to suck in plankton-rich waters, which they then force back out their gills, retaining only tiny morsels of food.

“They would no doubt absorb contaminants even in dispersed form. Does that build up in their tissues and affect their health?” said biologist Bob Hueter, director of the Center for Shark Research at Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota, Florida.

To answer that question, many scientists are now searching for the presence of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) and other oil contaminants in the blood and tissues of Gulf whale sharks.

“It will probably take years to see what the signature of this oil does to the health and physiology of these animals,” Hueter said.

Oil Driving Sharks to New Territories

Scientists hope that tagging animals can help them learn if the spill impacts whale shark behavior in the years ahead.

But some observations have already suggested the whale sharks have changed some of their habits.

Sightings of sharks near Florida’s Gulf coast have led to speculation that the sharks and other large marine species may have been displaced by the oil and moved on to a more pristine neighborhood.

During the summer months following the oil spill, Mote scientists began chronicling repeated near-shore observations of large marine animals, such as whale sharks, that are typically found in far deeper waters out near the eastern Gulf’s continental shelf.

(See pictures of ten animals at risk from the Gulf oil spill.)

“This summer unusually high numbers and species of sharks were here on the West Florida Shelf, and that includes whale sharks in much larger numbers than we are accustomed to seeing,” Hueter said.

Those animals may have headed east to escape the oil, though no one can say for sure.

The team tagged several fish to track their future movements in oiled waters and see whether the disaster causes lifestyle changes in the whales.

(Learn more about Mote’s shark tracking project.)

Oil Still Unknown Threat

One problem is that no one is exactly sure where the bulk of dispersed oil has gone, or in what form it exists. For example, preliminary results suggest it’s settled on the seafloor or is still suspended in remnant undersea plumes.

(Related: “Much Gulf Oil Remains, Deeply Hidden and Under Beaches.”)

What’s more, whale sharks can be found everywhere in the water column, from the surface to the depths, so pinpointing their possible exposure to oil can be difficult.

“In some form or fashion, 60 to a hundred million gallons of oil are still out there, and all we know is it’s not at the surface,” the University of Southern Mississippi’s Hoffmayer said. “With this idea of submerged oil out there, we don’t know what threats exist to the animals.”

For instance, no one knows if the sharks will start to avoid the rich feeding grounds to which the migratory animals have returned regularly so far.

“In coming years we’ll hopefully be able to say something about the sightings, either that whale sharks appear to be impacted heavily, or, we were lucky here and they haven’t missed a beat,” University of Southern Mississippi’s Hoffmayer said.

Whale Sharks Undertake Great Migrations

As scientists learn more about the elusive whale shark, they’ve already discovered that the impacts of the oil spill disaster could stretch farther than anyone would have suspected just a few years ago. (Read about whale shark migrations on National Geographic Channel’s website.)

That’s because seemingly disparate whale shark populations ranging from the Caribbean and Central America to the Gulf of Mexico are actually deeply connected, according to Rachel Graham, lead shark scientist with the Wildlife Conservation Society’s Ocean Giants Program.

Graham, who has been tracking whale sharks for 13 years, snapped a picture of a shark in Belize that later turned up near Tampa, Florida. Another animal acoustically tagged in Mexico was recorded by an underwater receiver on Bright Bank in the northern Gulf of Mexico.

Sixteen sharks that Graham recently fitted with satellite-location tags are dispersing into the Gulf from Mexico-and could move into the spill zone.

(Related picture: “Smallest Whale Shark Discovered-On a Leash.”)

“One of the concerns that I have is that anything that happens to animals in the northern Gulf, where the spill occurred, will have an impact on the larger population in the entire region,” she said.

“It’s one large population. And it’s at risk because we’re only talking about hundreds or perhaps a few thousands of animals in the region-not hundreds of thousands of animals. Due to their size, whale sharks require a lot of food to survive, and preferred food such as fish eggs is seasonal and concentrated in a small area-the seas certainly can’t sustain millions of these huge animals.”

Even so, there’s one bright spot: Multiple sightings of whale sharks suggest there are greater numbers of the animals than were once thought possible in the northern Gulf of Mexico, according to the University of Southern Mississippi’s Hoffmayer.

“Up to this point it’s been a real success,” Hoffmayer said. “But as for the impacts of this oil spill, we just don’t know yet.”

Special thanks to Richard Charter

3rd Oil Spill Commission Meeting Sept. 27-28; live streaming video here

http://www.oilspillcommission.gov/meeting-3/meeting-details

Purpose: Inform the Commission members about the relevant facts and circumstances concerning the root causes of the Deepwater Horizon oil disaster. The meeting will provide the Commission with the opportunity to hear presentations and statements from various experts and provide additional information for the Commission’s consideration.

When: Mon. & Tues., Sept. 27th & 28th, 2010
9am-4:30pm.

Where: Washington Marriott Wardman Park
2660 Woodley Park Rd. N.W., Washington D.C.

Topics: Response following the BP spill, impacts on the Gulf and approaches to long-term restoration.

MEETING AGENDA
http://www.oilspillcommission.gov/document/osc-meeting-3-agenda-september-27-28

This meeting will be streamed live on this page on the day of the meeting
http://www.oilspillcommission.gov/meeting-3/meeting-details

Special thanks to Richard Charter

Oil and Gas Journal: Landrieu blocks OMB nomination to protest drilling moratorium

http://www.ogj.com/index/article-display/3677133685/articles/oil-gas-journal/general-interest-2/government/2010/09/landrieu-blocks_omb/QP129867/cmpid=EnlDailySeptember242010.html

Shameful politics as usual at work. DV

Sep 24, 2010
Nick Snow
OGJ Washington Editor
WASHINGTON, DC, Sept. 24 — US Sen. Mary L. Landrieu (D-La.) said on Sept. 23 that she would block Jack Lew’s nomination as White House Office and Management and Budget Director until the Obama administration’s deepwater drilling moratorium is lifted or significantly modified.

“Although Mr. Lew clearly possesses the expertise necessary to serve as one of the president’s most important economic advisors, I found that he lacked sufficient concern for the host of economic challenges confronting the Gulf Coast,” Landrieu wrote in a letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.). “The fact that the most acute of these economic challenges, the moratorium, results from a direct (and reversible) federal action only serves to harden my stance on Mr. Lew’s nomination.”

She said some economists have estimated that more than 46,000 jobs could be lost as a result of a 6-month stoppage of offshore drilling. The Obama Administration itself has estimated that as many as 12,000 workers could be laid off as a result of a ban on oil and gas production in the Gulf of Mexico, she added.
“In repeated meetings and correspondence with Sec. of the Interior Ken Salazar and Bureau of Ocean Energy Management [Regulation, and Enforcement] Director Michael R. Bromwich, I have underscored how damaging this moratorium is to Louisiana, the Gulf Coast, and the nation. Unfortunately, I have seen no measurable progress,” she said.

“I cannot support further action on Mr. Lew’s nomination to be a key economic advisor to the president until I am convinced that the president and his administration understand the detrimental impacts that the actual and de facto moratoria continue to have on the Gulf Coast,” Landrieu told Reid.

Contact Nick Snow at nicks@pennwell.com.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

Associated Press: European nations reject ban on deep-sea drilling

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iOmWoJ1o6Ep458M02OSfRuzdOFAgD9IDN6C00

(AP) – 1 day ago

OSLO, Norway – Oil-producing countries on Thursday rejected a German proposal for a moratorium on deep-water drilling in the Northeast Atlantic that reflected environmental concerns after the BP Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

At a meeting of environment ministers and officials from 15 European countries and the European Union, Germany suggested that offshore nations consider a temporary halt to the “drilling of new complex deep-water oil exploration wells.”

Greenpeace activists said offshore oil nations including Norway, Denmark and Britain opposed the draft at the two-day meeting in Norway’s west coast city of Bergen. Stefan Krug, a spokesman for Greenpeace Germany, called it “a shame” that host Norway was “not able to agree to adequate and urgent measures.”

Norwegian Environment Ministry spokesman Gard Nybro-Nielsen confirmed the German proposal was off the table.

Oil and gas resources in the North Sea have made Norway one of the richest countries in the world, but those resources are running out. Feeling the pressure, Norway is also exploring in the Barents Sea in the Arctic.

Norwegian Environment Minister Erik Solheim told The Associated Press that Norway will not authorize new deep-water drilling until the Deepwater Horizon blowout in the Gulf has been evaluated, but doesn’t support an international moratorium.

President Barack Obama imposed a U.S. deepwater drilling moratorium in the Gulf of Mexico following the April 20 oil well blowout that killed 11 workers and spewed more than 200 million gallons of crude into the Gulf before it was capped in July.

The German proposal also called for making sure that offshore operations meet the highest safety standards and demanded an analysis of whether the circumstances that led to the Deepwater Horizon accident could also occur in the Northeast Atlantic.

“It was important to us that this issue was on the agenda,” said Thomas Hagbeck, a spokesman for Germany’s environmental agency.

EU Environment Commissioner Janez Potocnik attended the meeting along with envoys from Norway, Germany, Denmark, Britain, Belgium, Finland, France, Iceland, Ireland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.

Associated Press Writer Melissa Eddy in Berlin contributed to this report.

Special thanks to Richard Charter