Category Archives: Uncategorized

Florida Announces Improved Oiled Bird Recovery Plan

From: Depnews [mailto:Depnews@dep.state.fl.us]
Sent: Thursday, July 01, 2010 12:29 PM
Subject: FLORIDA ANNOUNCES IMPROVED OILED BIRD RECOVERY PLAN

For immediate release: JULY 1, 2010
Contact: PUBLIC INFORMATION ESF14 – 850-921-0217

FLORIDA ANNOUNCES IMPROVED OILED BIRD RECOVERY PLAN
~New response plan ensures quick recovery of oiled birds~

TALLAHASSEE – The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) together with federal partners today announced the creation of an oiled bird recovery plan for rapid response to distressed birds. The recovery plan was created and approved by the Incident Command Sector Mobile, with assistance from impacted states, to ensure oiled birds are recovered within 60 minutes of their initial report. Under the plan, a Florida Panhandle Group will be established in Panama City to coordinate the rapid recovery and rescue of injured wildlife on Florida’s shores.

“It is critical that trained personnel respond rapidly to reports of wildlife in distress due to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill,” said FWC Executive Director Nick Wiley. “We are hopeful that this new plan created in coordination with our federal partners will better protect Florida’s precious wildlife.”

The Florida Panhandle Group will consist of three task forces, covering two to three counties each throughout Northwest Florida. The Group is made up of 150 field personnel including biologists, wildlife rehabilitators and Vessels of Opportunity captains. When an oiled bird is reported to the Oiled Wildlife Hotline, the corresponding task force in that region will be notified and the nearest trained wildlife experts will quickly respond.

FWC, in coordination with the State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC), would also like to remind Floridians and visitors to report any sightings of wildlife oiled or injured as a result of Deepwater Horizon oil spill by calling the Oiled Wildlife Hotline number at 1-866-557-1401. The hotline operator will contact the nearest response team and dispatch it to attempt to rescue the animal.

People naturally want to help injured animals. However, untrained rescuers may cause more harm than good. The public should not touch, approach or try to rescue the animal. Handling oiled wildlife may pose a serious health and safety risk to both would-be rescuers and the animal they are trying to rescue. The chemicals in oil are toxic and only trained personnel with appropriate protective gear and equipment should handle and treat oiled animals.

Such rescues require hazardous-material training, permits and animal-handling skills to ensure human safety and the best interests of the animal. The Oiled Wildlife Hotline number is staffed 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. For more information, please visit http://myfwc.com/OilSpill/OilSpill_FAQs.htm or http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov/sf/deepwater_horizon/Public_Flyer_Marine_Wildlife_Response_Action_Plan.pdf

For the latest information regarding Florida’s response to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, visit www.deepwaterhorizonflorida.com or follow www.Twitter.com/FLDEPalert.

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Special thanks to Richard Charter

Dow Jones newswire: Lake Maracaibo Spills in the News

By Dan Molinski Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
CARACAS (Dow Jones)–Venezuela’s government is expanding its efforts to clean up large oil slicks in Lake Maracaibo following sharp criticism that it has ignored the month-old problem.
In a press conference earlier this week, Rafael Ramirez, the country’s energy minister and president of state oil firm Petroleos de Venezuela SA, or PDVSA, became the first top official to speak about the oil slicks–some up to 40 kilometers long–that began appearing on the lake’s surface more than a month ago.

Ramirez said more than 2,100 people are now working to clean up the spill, which he said was likely caused by leaks from the maze of old, decaying underwater pipelines that carpet the bottom of the lake. A couple weeks ago, PDVSA sent out a brief statement saying 50 workers and local fishermen were being assigned to scoop up oil at the lake.

The Lake Maracaibo basin in western Venezuela is one of the world’s largest centers for oil production, and major foreign-oil companies have been pumping crude from under and around the lake for nearly a century. Oil spills, shipping traffic and other industry-related wear-and-tear have left the lake heavily polluted.

Ramirez’s comments Wednesday came as local lawmakers in the state of Zulia have for weeks been urging the national government, led by President Hugo Chavez, to clean the spill.

Eliseo Fermin, the head of Zulia state’s Legislative Council and an opponent of the Chavez government, told Dow Jones Newswires Tuesday that an environmental emergency needs to declared for the lake.

Fermin agrees with Ramirez that decaying underwater pipelines are to blame, although he said the oil slicks probably aren’t from one or a couple leaks, but instead hundreds or even thousands of leaks in the “spaghetti-plate” of pipelines.

Fermin said the ecological damage of the lake could end up being “the biggest environmental crime in the history of South America.”

Despite such dire warnings, Ramirez downplayed the significance of the oil slicks by comparing them with the two-month-old oil spill in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico that began after an explosion at a British Petroleum PLC (BP, BP.LN) rig.

“You can’t draw parallels between the gusher in the Gulf of Mexico–where 35,000 barrels to 100,000 barrels of oil per day flow into the sea–and the leak detected in Lake Maracaibo,” Ramirez said.
Ramirez also said most of the old, underwater pipelines were already there when the government of President Hugo Chavez took control of PDVSA from anti-Chavez forces in 2003.

While most oil production in Venezuela still comes from the Lake Maracaibo region, most of the oil fields in the region have reached maturity and are now in decline. Environmentalists worry that the oil industry will eventually abandon the area altogether, leaving a huge mess behind.

-By Dan Molinski, Dow Jones Newswires; 58-414-120-5738

_________________

http://devilsexcrement.com/2010/07/01/the-lake-maracaibo-oil-spill-is-sixteen-tomes-denser-than-the-one-in-the-gulf-of-mexico/

The Devil’s Excrement: The Lake Maracaibo oil spill is sixteen times denser than the one in the Gulf of Mexico
July 1, 2010
Orders of magnitude continue to get this Government into trouble. I could not believe it when I heard Minister of Energy and Oil Rafael Ramirez say today that the oil spill in Lake Maracaibo is far from the environmental disaster of the one caused by BP in the Gulf of Mexico. I could not find the link, so I went into Bloomberg and copied it, just so you make sure I am not BSing you:

So, Ramirez says that the 8,000 barrels being leaked or spilled are not a disaster like the Gulf and , as usual, they are the fault of the private oil companies that came before his time. Something the Prosecutor fully agrees with. Amazing!

Go figure!

But let’s put this into perspective. The US Government estimates that from 35,000 to 60,000 barrels of oil are spilling from the Macondo well disaster into the Gulf of Mexico which looks like this in Google Earth:

but on the same scale, Lake Maracaibo looks like this:

Now, spilling 8,000 barrels a day of oil into the bottom picture of Lake Maracaibo would seem to be as much of a disaster as spilling 60,000 barrels a day into the top picture, no?

In fact, according to Wikianswers, the Gulf of Mexico has an area of 615,000 square miles, so that in the worst case scenario the BP spill corresponds to 0.097 barrels spilled per square mile every single day.

In contrast, Lake Maracaibo, according to the same Wikianswers is 5,130 square miles in size, which corresponds to the spill that ramirez thins is irrelevant to 1.56 barrels of oil per square mile being dumped, spilled or leaked per day. Even worse, Lake Maracaibo is an enclosure, while the Gulf is open to the seas, which should dilute the effects of the spill.

Thus, the statement about this spill not being a disaster is another irresponsible statement by Ramirez, who has oil spills, rotten food and suitcases bounce off his cynical and Teflonic face almost daily.

But orders of magnitude don’t lie, per unit of area, the spill into Lake Maracaibo is 16 (sixteen times) denser than the one in the Gulf of Mexico.

But hey, maybe they can take advantage of it and dump some rotten food into Lake Maracaibo and mix it with the oil. Who would notice?

Or who would report anyway?
Special thanks to Richard Charter

McClatchy Newspapers: Ex-EPA lawyer points to BP as “Serial Criminal”

June 28, 2010

http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/97247929.html

By LISA DEMER
McClatchy Newspapers
Published: Jun 27, 2010 – Page: 8A

ANCHORAGE, Alaska The federal government should consider barring oil giant BP from drilling on federal land or holding onto its existing leases, says a recently retired federal attorney who spent years dogging BP’s operations in Alaska.

“There comes a point in time where we say enough is enough,” said Jeanne Pascal, who worked for 18 years as a Seattle-based attorney for the Environmental Protection Agency. “Because BP has definitely turned into a major serial environmental criminal.”

Pascal said that BP has been convicted of environmental violations three times since 2000 twice in Alaska and that the April 20 Deepwater Horizon blowout in the Gulf of Mexico that sparked what President Barack Obama calls the biggest environmental disaster in the nation’s history fits a pattern of behavior. She said BP got off too easy when it was allowed to plead guilty in 2007 to a misdemeanor for a record North Slope spill in 2006. No individual was charged.

Scott West agrees. He was the EPA special agent in charge of the criminal investigation division in Seattle that investigated BP Alaska’s operations.

“The people who are making the decisions playing fast and loose on that (Gulf) rig ‘Hurry up, we are over time, we are over budget, let’s take the shortcut’ if they’d seen some of their peers go to jail for those kinds of decisions, maybe they would have said, ‘You know, my bonus this year just isn’t worth it,”‘ West said, referring to congressional allegations that BP cut corners to save money on the Deepwater Horizon project.

‘Look at their record’

Both West and Pascal have been speaking out publicly since their retirements.

“BP keeps saying that they follow safety protocols and safety is their goal and health is their goal and the environment is their goal,” Pascal said. “But look at their record.”

That record includes:

A felony conviction in 2000 for failing to report immediately illegal dumping of hazardous waste by a contractor at its Endicott oil field in Alaska’s Beaufort Sea. The punishment: Five years’ probation, $7 million in fines and civil penalties and another $15 million to create an environmental management system.
A misdemeanor conviction in 2007 stemming from the biggest oil spill ever on Alaska’s North Slope. In March 2006, a BP worker discovered crude leaking from a corroded Prudhoe Bay transit pipeline 200,000 gallons in all. BP, which admitted that its system for monitoring and preventing corrosion was inadequate, was put on three more years’ probation and ordered to pay $20 million in fines and penalties.
A felony conviction last year for a 2005 Texas City, Texas, refinery explosion that killed 15 people, injured another 170 and devastated a community. BP Products North America Inc. was fined $50 million and put on three years’ probation.
Pascal said there were other ruptures, explosions and near misses over the years, plus a propane price-fixing case in the Midwest that BP settled with a deferred prosecution.

‘Operate to failure’

West said he thinks that BP made a conscious decision not to invest in aging infrastructure for North Slope fields with declining oil production.

“We kept hearing a phrase called ‘operate to failure,”‘ a reference West said meant that critical systems and equipment were operated until they broke down instead of being maintained.

The federal investigators in the Texas City case were “finding the exact same patterns of neglecting worker safety and environmental concerns to save a few dollars,” West said. “That, of course, indicated to us that it was corporate-wide. It wasn’t just isolated to a particular operating unit.”

BP insists that it puts safety first and is following up on what it promised to do after the 2006 Alaska spill.

BP debarred

Before she retired in March, Pascal specialized in debarment, a process in which companies are prohibited from federal contracts because of environmental crimes or performance issues. It’s time-consuming, complex and even when successful, might not prevent a company from operating, Pascal said.

Under the federal Clean Water Act, BP was debarred in 2008 as a result of the 2007 Alaska conviction, but the action simply meant that it couldn’t get any new federal contracts at Prudhoe Bay. It didn’t lose its state-issued leases or its ability to operate the field. The only contracts that might be affected relate to its sales of fuel to the military, and a different BP company refines the oil and sells the fuel.

“So it did not have any (significant) impact on its business,” Pascal said of the 2008 EPA debarment action.

Because of the Gulf leak, the federal agencies involved with BP the EPA; the Interior Department, which oversees federal drilling leases; and the Defense Department, which buys the fuel need to evaluate whether a more sweeping debarment is in order, she said.

Aiming for leadership

Targeting the company’s executives is another possible way to make a tougher legal point, Pascal and West argue.

West said the investigation into BP’s 2006 spill at Prudhoe was at first aimed at bringing felony charges against corporate executives on the theory that they knew pipes were dangerously corroded and didn’t act.

That position seemed to be supported by Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrea Steward in a June 12, 2007, e-mail in which she said that pledges from BP officials that, “They had changed their attitude of aggressive cost cutting in 2005 and that they were changing how they did things” weren’t enough to avoid prosecution.

West is still angry that two months later prosecutors decided to allow BP to plead to a misdemeanor.

“Here we had a case where we had the potential to go way high. Even to the London headquarters of BP … and we’re settling for a corporate misdemeanor?” said West, who said his team had only begun to examine 62 million pages of documents that BP provided.

U.S. Attorney for Alaska Karen Loeffler, who headed the office’s criminal division at the time, defended the decision.

“We knew everything that we were going to be able to prove,” she said. The $20 million fine, she said, “sent a very strong message.”

Pascal and West said that for a company the size of BP, whose quarterly profits are measured in the billions of dollars, the fine was minuscule.

“To me the message has been given to BP loud and clear,” West said. “You are protected. You are beyond prosecution.”
Special thanks to Richard Chartera

Washington Post: Oil industry cleanup organization swamped by BP spill

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/29/AR2010062905384.html

By Joe Stephens and Mary Pat Flaherty
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, June 29, 2010; 9:57 PM

For the past two decades, companies that produce and transport oil have channeled tens of millions of dollars a year into an organization they set up to provide cleanup equipment and personnel if a catastrophic offshore spill were ever to hit the United States.

But when that spill occurred two months ago, it soon swamped the Marine Spill Response Corp.

MSRC “has never had to deal with anything even remotely this large and chaotic,” said Kieran Suckling, executive director of the Center for Biological Diversity, which is suing BP for damages under the Clean Water Act.

MSRC officials say they expect to be in the spotlight as Congress investigates whether the industry and the nation should have been better prepared for a disaster on the scale of the one playing out in the Gulf of Mexico. Congress also is likely to look into whether the tax-exempt company’s equipment — much of it two decades old — is up to the current challenge, as wells move farther out to sea and deeper below the ocean.

“Should the industry’s capacity have been greater than it is? That’s a fair question,” said Steve Benz, MSRC president and a former BP executive. He stressed that the U.S. Coast Guard set benchmarks for how much equipment and manpower large oil-recovery companies should have. Also, he said, any standing operation would have difficulty immediately capturing the volume of oil gushing from the Gulf well.

“If this happened again, should we already have in place 20,000 people and 1,000 boats?” Benz asked. “You can’t build a firehouse that big and have it make any reasonable economic sense. You need to prevent the fire in the first place.”

Congress has been here before. Twenty years ago, after the Exxon Valdez dumped millions of gallons of oil into Prince William Sound, lawmakers angrily reacted — much as they have today — by vowing to ensure that such devastation would never happen again. Congress passed the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, requiring companies transporting oil over water to have ready access to clean-up equipment adequate for the worst possible spill. Big oil companies banded together to form MSRC.

Far from the coast, the nonprofit is run out of nondescript offices in Herndon, Va., sharing a building with a credit union and a title company. The company, which calls itself the nation’s largest oil spill recovery organization, remained low-profile while growing to more than $100 million in assets. Its resources include 400 employees and 15 large oil-recovery ships dubbed “Big Blues” and positioned in the lower 48 states and Hawaii. It and its contractors have responded to 700 spills, none approaching the magnitude of the Deepwater Horizon blowout.

State and regional officials familiar with MSRC’s past work say it does a good job handling more contained environmental challenges. But now MSRC finds itself leading the charge in a much different battle.

“There is no asset MSRC has that is designed to collect oil 5,000 feet under the seas,” said Brett G. Drewry, chief executive of the industry-backed organization that funds MSRC.
That fact did not stop BP and other companies from citing MSRC, alone or alongside for-profit cleanup companies, as their first responder for massive spills. Oil companies, Congress and regulators point to MSRC as evidence of lessons learned from Valdez. Suckling said safeguarding the coasts should not be left to private industry.

“It seems to me there is a real significant conflict of interest here,” he said. “When you are dealing with an issue that has such enormous stakes for public health and safety, it should be in the government’s hands.”

In most spills, recovery efforts capture only between 10 and 15 percent of the leaked oil, according to several state and industry experts.

Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D- Calif.), wants to increase funding for federal research into spills. “The fact that we didn’t have the technologies in place to prevent and respond to these kinds of disasters before we allowed drilling 5,000 feet underwater is totally unacceptable,” Woolsey said.

MSRC sprang from a cost calculation by big oil. The companies decided that, rather than each buying its own armada of skimmers, it would be cheaper and more efficient to work together.

In 1990, they formed the non-profit Marine Preservation Association and based it in Scottsdale, Ariz. MPA, in turn, funded the creation and operations of MSRC.
The structure was designed to shield oil companies from liability, in case MSRC was later found responsible for damages related to a skimming operation, according to officials at both organizations.

By joining MPA, oil companies gain the right to enter service agreements with MSRC, said Judith Roos, an MSRC spokeswoman. If a spill occurs, companies then pay MSRC for individual cleanup services.

At its inception, MSRC commissioned 15 specialty ships, each 210 feet long with temporary storage for 4,000 barrels of recovered oil. Today, the corporation’s annual operating budget is about $80 million.

For most spills it has handled, MSRC has been the primary or only responder, cleaning up the mess on its own or through its contractors. But the BP blowout has required much greater resources
.
Within hours of the explosion, MSRC dispatched four skimmers; they arrived while the fire was still burning. MSRC is providing the largest number of skimming vessels in the off-shore fleet, Benz said. Specific figures are unclear, but Benz said that “well over half” of the oily water recovered offshore has been collected by MSRC and its contractors.

Onsite today in the gulf are 10 Big Blues. Two more, now in California, should arrive soon. (MSRC’s remaining three vessels will remain elsewhere in case of unrelated spills.)
The Big Blues skim oil from the surface through an umbilical hose that vacuums oily water and empties it into the ship’s storage tanks or a barge alongside.

The company has three ocean-going barges onsite, each capable of holding about 40,000 barrels, and 25 shallow-water barges. It also has deployed an assortment of smaller, fast-response boats and has its C-130 cargo plane in Louisiana to spread dispersant. At the disaster’s peak, MSRC said it had 7,000 people working in the gulf. The number dropped as volunteers and other organizations arrived.

When MSRC was formed, the oil companies envisioned it as uniquely poised to clean up catastrophic spills. But over time, a competing approach arose.

Seacor Holdings, based in Fort Lauderdale, saw a business opportunity in the post-Valdez cleanup standards. It formed the for-profit National Response Corp., and set out to provide many of the same services as MSRC at lower prices. While MSRC had a dedicated fleet, NRC retrofitted a handful of ships and contracted with commercial shippers for access to their fleets in an emergency.

Before long, some MSRC customers were moving to NRC. MSRC cut costs, including research into better ways to recover spilled oil.

“That was much to the detriment of the organization,” said David McLain, a former MSRC consultant.

Today, NRC has eight ships it owns recovering oil for BP, and has secured more than 100 other vessels for the operation. It remains to be seen, however, whether the for-profit company is better prepared to deal with a deepwater spill.

“All of us who do oil spills will be looking for the lessons learned here,” said Stephen Edinger, who works on oil recovery issues for the state of California. That reexamination likely will include MSRC itself, according to oil industry consultant Robert Peterson.

“The industry will rethink the MSRC’s ability to respond,” he said, “and I expect increased investment and increased response capability.”
Special thanks to Richard Charter

Alternet: Is Gov. Bobby Jindal Sabotaging Gulf Efforts for Political Gain?

http://www.alternet.org/environment/147364
June 28, 2010

This story was written by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Zaid Jilani, Alex Seitz-Wald, and Tanya Somanader.

He has delayed the deployment of National Guard troops, led a crusade to build sand berms that experts say won’t work, and confused the planning of the spill response.|
Last year, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) — a rising star in the GOP and potential nominee for the presidency in 2012 — gave a widely mocked rebuttal to President Obama’s State of the Union address, prompting many pundits to conclude that his national political career was over before it began. But, taking a cue from Rudy Giuliani’s exploitation of the 9/11 attacks while mayor of New York City, Jindal saw a chance rebuild his political capital by using the Gulf oil spill. He sprang into action with press conferences and helicopter rides to show he’s a take-charge leader. The governor quickly became Obama and the federal government’s chief critic, relentlessly attacking their allegedly slow response to the spill and lambasting the “red tape and bureaucracy” preventing him from getting the job done. Jindal’s theatrical deployment of these trappings of leadership has been largely rewarded by favorable press coverage, reigniting speculation of a 2012 run. But new revelations and a close inspection of the facts suggest that Jindal’s sound and fury is little more than political grandstanding for the Fox News set, and it serves to obscure Jindal’s own serious failings in the spill response effort. While Jindal has been relentless in attacking the federal government for dragging its feet, he has delayed the deployment of National Guard troops, led a crusade to build artificial sand berms that most experts say won’t work, and confused the planning of the spill response. Moreover, experts said his “antagonism could actually slow down that response.” “When that stuff happens, you actually take away the ability of the unified command to get their job done,” said former Coast Guard official Doug Lentsch, who was involved in the Exxon Valdez disaster and helped develop the Oil Pollution Act of 1990. But the true impact of Jindal’s blustery leadership may never be known, as Jindal vetoed a bill Friday that would have required him to make public all of his office’s documents relating to the spill. “His excuse is he is afraid that BP would find out something Louisiana did, and I always thought justice was about the truth and facts,” said Republican state Sen. Robert Adley.

NATIONAL GUARD:

Nowhere has Jindal’s hypocritical grandstanding been more apparent than on the issue of National Guard troops. Jindal demanded 6,000 Guard troops in the early days of the spill — a request the Department of Defense quickly approved. “We are absolutely in a war to protect our way of life,” Jindal has said. Despite his constant attacks on the federal government for supposedly under-resourcing his efforts, almost two months after the troop request was approved, “only a fraction — 1,053 — have actually been deployed by Jindal to fight the spill,” a CBS News investigation found. This prompted Obama, in his Oval Office address, to specifically and publicly urge Jindal and other Gulf state governors “to activate these troops as soon as possible.” In response to the CBS investigation, Jindal predictably blamed the federal government for the delay, saying, “the Coast Guard and BP had to authorize individual tasks.” But Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, the national incident commander, flatly denied this claim. “There is nothing standing in the governor’s way from utilizing more National Guard troops,” Allen said. “In fact, the Coast Guard says every request to use the National Guard has been approved, usually within a day,” CBS noted.

Finally, Jindal’s office admitted that the governor “has not specifically asked for more Guard troops to be deployed,” but failed to explain why Jindal had not used the troops. As Washington Monthly’s Steve Benen noted, “Jindal is either deeply confused about something he should understand, or he was lying.” Jindal’s failure here underscores the need to bring in the military to take charge of the disaster response, as the Center for American Progress has urged.

Lousiana Governor Bobby Jindal gives a press conference in Venice, Louisiana, on May 23 after a trip at sea to see the effects of the Gulf Coast oil spill and a meeting with parish leaders from across the coast. The White House came under mounting political heat Monday, as the Gulf of Mexico oil slick began to devour Louisiana wetlands after BP’s failed efforts to plug a gushing undersea well.
Photo Credit: AFP/File – Stephane Jourdain