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Commondreams.org: Center for Biologic Diversity–One Year After Gulf Oil Disaster, Significant Dangers Remain Unaddressed

http://www.commondreams.org/newswire/2011/04/14-6

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 14, 2011
12:15 PM

CONTACT: Center for Biological Diversity

Miyoko Sakashita, (415) 632-5308

New Report Outlines 10 Much-needed Reforms to Protect People, Environment From Offshore Drilling

SAN FRANCISCO – April 14 – A new report by the Center for Biological Diversity finds that one year after the oil-spill disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, dangers of offshore drilling remain unaddressed yet new projects get the stamp of approval from Interior Secretary Ken Salazar. The report, “Lingering Threats,” outlines 10 key policy, regulatory and oversight areas identified in the wake of the spill that have yet to be addressed by regulators and elected officials.

“The Deepwater Horizon disaster was a wake-up call about the dangers of offshore drilling, but politicians and regulators haven’t heard it,” said Miyoko Sakashita, oceans director at the Center. “Many of the same lax regulations that were in place before the Gulf disaster are still on the books.”

The report calls on the Obama administration to take several crucial steps, including:
•Close the loophole that has allowed hundreds of offshore drilling projects to evade in-depth reviews of their effects on the environment
•Stop using woefully out-of-date information to determine and address the dangers of offshore drilling, especially in light of the massive BP oil spill
•Comply with longstanding laws like the Endangered Species Act and the Marine Mammal Protection Act designed to protect vulnerable species from industrial-scale drilling operations
•Lift the liability cap for companies responsible for oil spills and require companies to be fully accountable for damage
•Impose a moratorium on offshore drilling in the Arctic, where an oil spill would devastate fragile ecosystems and be nearly impossible to clean up

“The Gulf oil spill was the worst environmental disaster in U.S. history, but we’re poised to repeat it if we don’t address fundamental problems with offshore drilling,” Sakashita said. “Unfortunately, rather than fixing problems, Congress easily forgets hard-learned lessons from the Gulf spill and instead seems intent on getting offshore drilling back to business as usual.”
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At the Center for Biological Diversity, we believe that the welfare of human beings is deeply linked to nature – to the existence in our world of a vast diversity of wild animals and plants. Because diversity has intrinsic value, and because its loss impoverishes society, we work to secure a future for all species, great and small, hovering on the brink of extinction. We do so through science, law, and creative media, with a focus on protecting the lands, waters, and climate that species need to survive.

Digitaljournal.com: BP’s first annual meeting since Gulf oil spill sparks protests

http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/305632

Yes!!!! At least someone remembers this tragedy. DV

Thursday April 14

London – BP are facing the wrath of several angry protesters at its first annual general meeting since the Deepwater Horizon oil spill disaster in the Gulf of Mexico almost ayear ago.

It’s only a week until the first anniversary of the environmental catastrophe that saw 11 workers killed when a drilling rig provided by BP exploded, with millions of barrels of oil leaking out into the Gulfof Mexico sea. The hundreds of protesters included trade unionists anda representation of fishermen from the US, directly affected by the oil spill.

Around 200 people have gathered outside the AGM in London and the scenes are one of intense noise, anger and emotion. Banners are being waved, which include “BP, Your Party Is Over!” and”Global Climate Crime” and whistles are being blown. Each group of demonstrators are vying with each other to shout the loudest.There is even a brass band and a strong police presence.

Shareholders in BP are here too and they are angry at boardroom bonuses and the Rosneft contract deal and BP’s increasingly bitter wrangle with its Russian partners in TNK-BP , reports BBCBusiness.

High profile anti-BP protester, Diane Wilson, attempted to gain access to the meeting but with her hands and face covered in black oil, security refused her entry to the meeting, which includes BP shareholders and investors. A melee ensued when Ms Wilson was turned away. She tried to grab security officers with her oil-blackened hands while several members of the GMB union and communities hit by the oil disaster, poured into the centre.

There will also be protests by other environmentalists, with more planned over the coming week across London.

Readmore:http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/305632#ixzz1JVc5lCbg

Special thanks to Richard Charter

CommonDreams.org. The Guardian/UK: Has BP Really Cleaned Up the Gulf Oil Spill?

http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2011/04/13

Thank goodness there are honest scientists like Samantha Joye out there paying attention. No–the Gulf is not OK now. DV

Published on Wednesday, April 13, 2011 by The Guardian/UK

Has BP really cleaned up the Gulf oil spill? Officially, marine life is returning to normal in the Gulf of Mexico, but dead animals are still washing up on beaches – and one scientist believes the damage runs much deeper

by Suzanne Goldenberg

There are few people who can claim direct knowledge of the ocean floor, at least before the invention of the spill-cam, last year’s strangely compulsive live feed of the oil billowing out of BP’s blown-out well in the Gulf of Mexico. But for Samantha Joye it was familiar terrain. The intersection of oil, gas and marine life in the Mississippi Canyon has preoccupied the University of Georgia scientist for years. So one year after an explosion on the Deepwater Horizon offshore drilling rig, about 40 miles off the coast of Louisiana, killed 11 men and disgorged more than 4m barrels of crude, Joye could be forgiven for denying the official version of the BP oil disaster that life is returning to normal in the Gulf.

A brown pelican coated in heavy oil wallows in the Louisiana surf, June 2010. More concerning for Samantha Joye, however, is the destruction that occurred — and is occurring — deep below the surface. (Photograph: Win Mcnamee) The view from her submarine is different, and her attachment is almost personal. On her descent to a location 10 miles from BP’s well in December, Joye landed on an ocean floor coated with dark brown muck about 4cm deep. Thick ropes of slime draped across coral like cobwebs in a haunted house. The few creatures that remained alive, such as the crabs, were too listless to flee. “Most of the time when you go at them with a submarine, they just run,” she says. “They weren’t running, they were just sitting there, dazed and stupefied. They certainly weren’t behaving as normal.” Her conclusion? “I think it is not beyond the imagination that 50% of the oil is still floating around out there.”

At a time when the White House, Congress, government officials and oil companies are trying to put the oil disaster behind them, that is not the message from the deep that people are waiting to hear. Joye’s data – and an outspoken manner for a scientist – have pitted her against the Obama adminstration’s scientists as well as other independent scientists who have come to different conclusions about the state of the Gulf. She is consumed by the idea that she – and other colleagues – are not really being heard.”It’s insanely frustrating,” Joye says.

She never expected to be a science dissident, she says, or gain such a large public profile. She sees herself as a science nerd and a brainiac who never knew how to play, even as a child. To round off the picture of a ferocious intellect, Joye says she had a photographic memory when she was younger. Her perfect recall has faded, now that she is in her 40s, but that intensity of focus is still there.

In the past year, Joye – as well as other independent scientists – has repeatedly challenged the official version of the oil disaster put forward by the White House and other administration officials. Last May, her research team was the first to detect the presence of a vast plume of oil droplets swirling at high speed through the deep waters of the Gulf. The discovery – initially disputed by government scientists – suggested that far more oil and gas had entered the sea than they had originally estimated.

In December, Joye’s team knocked down another White House claim – that the vast majority of the oil was gone – when she discovered a thick coating of oil, dead starfish and other organisms on the bottom of the ocean, over an area of 2,900 square miles.

It remains to be seen whether Joye can prove the deniers wrong. She has a new scientific paper coming out, and a return research voyage to the Gulf this week, with several more follow-up voyages scheduled this summer to areas within range of the BP well. Can she convince her fellow scientists that the majority of BP’s oil is still stuck on the bottom of the ocean? How long will it remain there, and what effect will it have in the future?

It’s undeniable that time has moved on since the initial disaster. After 87 days, BP engineers managed to cap the well last July. Last year’s images of pelicans entombed in thick layers of crude now belong to history.

So too, very nearly, do the various investigations into the disaster. Most are complete, with blame spread between BP and other companies. Transocean owned the Deepwater Horizon oil rig. Halliburton was responsible for the cementing job on the well, which has been much criticised by investigators. However, BP executives could still face criminal charges.

The oil business in general is looking up. The Obama administration last month started issuing new permits for deepwater wells in the Gulf – the first since the BP blowout. Meanwhile, Congress has yet to act on any of the issues arising from the oil spill – from raising the liability on oil companies to strengthening environmental regulations. Senators even blocked a bill that would have given the 11 workers killed in the blowout the right to sue for damages comparable to those on land.

BP, which seemed in danger of collapse a year ago, is on the financial rebound. Ken Feinberg, the independent administrator of BP’s $20bn compensation fund, says he is close to finishing compensating individuals and businesses who were hurt by the disaster – without even coming close to exhausting the $20bn. He paid out only $3.6bn last year.

The cleanup operations are also winding down, at a cost to BP of about $13bn (it has also pledged $500m to scientific research in the Gulf). The company took out an ad campaign this week to express regrets for the spill, showing a picture of shimmering Gulf waters. It could still be liable for up to $18bn in penalties and fines, however, under a US law that imposes a levy of $4,300 for each barrel of oil. But Feinberg was so upbeat he told reporters the Gulf could see a complete recovery by 2012.

Government scientists have not gone so far. A spokesman for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency (NOAA) said there was “no basis to conclude that the Gulf recovery will be complete by 2012”, and warned that some of the consequences of the spill may not be known for decades. The spokesman went on to note that about 60 miles of the coastline remain oiled. Tar mats continue to wash up on beaches in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and the Florida Panhandle. And although Gulf waters have reopened to fishing, many oyster beds were wiped out when state authorities flushed fresh water into the Gulf in the hopes of rolling back the oil. At a public meeting last month in Biloxi, Mississippi, fishermen said they were hauling up nets full of oil with their shrimp.

So how could the disaster possibly be over, asks Joye. “You talk to people who live around the Gulf of Mexico, who live on the coast, who have family members who work on oil rigs. It’s not OK down there. The system is not fine. Things are not normal. There are a lot of very strange things going on – the turtles washing up on beaches, dolphins washing up on beaches, the crabs. It is just bizarre. How can that just be random consequence?”

More than 150 dolphins, half of them infants, have washed up since the start of 2011. At least eight were smeared with crude oil that has been traced to BP’s well, NOAA said, and 87 sea turtles – all endangered – have been found dead since mid-March.

“To me it makes no sense to think that it is random consequence, but it is kind of maddening because there has been a lot of energy and effort put towards beating the drum of everything is wonderful, everything is going to be fine by 2012,” says Joye.

Other studies have disputed Joye’s findings. Terry Hazen, a scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Labs, failed to detect any traces of underwater oil in the six weeks after the well was capped. But he did find evidence of naturally occurring bacteria that ate the oil. John Kessler, a scientist at Texas A&M, found that the huge quantities of methane gas, which were released along with the oil, had also rapidly degraded.

But Joye was unfazed. In her lab, technicians have been running experiments for months to learn more about how the oil could be broken down once it sank into the ocean floor. “The micro-organisms are not happy. They are not metabolising this stuff,” she says. “They should be having a picnic and feasting, and they are not. Why is that? I have no idea, but we are trying a lot of different combinations to try to find out what is regulating their activity.”

When the first reports came in of a blowout on the Deepwater Horizon last year, Joye was laid up at home with a bad back. But part of her team was only a few miles away from the well – the only research vessel in the area – and posted pictures on the web of the flames shooting into the sky. In those early days, Joye says she had just one thought – to more research vessels getting out there to see what was happening to the oil.

Those first weeks of the oil disaster were a time of immense frustration for scientists. BP and government officials were extremely reluctant to produce any estimate of the magnitude of the spill. An investigation commission appointed by Obama would later deliver harsh criticism to officials for gross underestimates of the spill.

Independent scientists were clamouring for access to data. Joye, by a stroke of good luck, already had a research trip scheduled; the scientists simply re-purposed the cruise to check for traces of oil from BP’s well. They found the cloud of droplets suspended in the water and immediately posted an update to the research mission’s website, complete with measurements. The response came as a shock.

Tony Hayward, then chief executive of BP, simply denied there could be any oil at depth. “The oil is on the surface,” he told reporters during a quick trip to the cleanup command centre in Louisiana. “There aren’t any plumes.”

The government reaction was arguably even more discouraging. Jane Lubchenco, the head of NOAA and herself an ocean scientist, said publicly it wasn’t at all clear there was any oil in the depths. “We need to make sure that we are not jumping to conclusions,” she told PBS television.

Off-camera, Joye and other scientists were bombarded with phone calls from furious officials, from NOAA and other government agencies. “I felt like I was in third grade and my teacher came up to me with a ruler and smacked my hand and said: ‘You’ve just spoken out of turn.’ They were very upset,” Joye says.

Other scientists have suggested that the clash between Joye and government scientists was due to the enormity of the Gulf disaster. Scientists have no prior experience of a release of oil of this size, and over such a long period of time. There are huge areas of uncertainty, they say. It is conceivable that both parties could be proved right. But Joye will take some convincing. “I am somebody who if I believe in something, I give it 180%,” she says. “I believe in the Gulf of Mexico and I love the ecosystem, that is why I have not stopped doing what I have been doing, and saying what I have been saying. When I see evidence that convinces me otherwise I will change my opinion.”

But, she adds: “I have not seen anything that changes my opinion to this point.”

Nola.com: Interior Secretary Ken Salazar worried about bills to speed permits for wells

http://www.nola.com/news/gulf-oil-spill/index.ssf/2011/04/interior_secretary_ken_salazar_5.html

While I don’t doubt that adequate time is needed to issue the permits, I think it is interesting that the oilies are trying to speed up government permitting, when enviros have waited and waited and waited for good environmental projects to be permitted by the federal permitting agencies. In Florida, where there is a time limit, if state permitting agencies don’t get your permit within the time allotted, you are “requested” to submit a letter each month requesting additional time to complete your part, even if you not the cause of the delay. DV

Times-Picayune

Published:Wednesday, April 13, 2011, 7:30 AM

By Jonathan Tilove, The Times-Picayune

Recalling the “nightmare and a nationalcrisis ” that began nearly a year ago with the blowout of theMacondo well, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar warned Tuesday that another oil spill of that magnitude “would probably mean death tooil-and-gas development in America’s oceans.”

Salazar offered the caution even as the House Natural Resources Committee will mark-up Republican legislation today intended to open new areas to drilling and speed the pace of permitting, legislation that Salazar said reveals a “sense of amnesia” about what happened last year.

“When you have gone through a horrific national crisis, which the Deepwater Horizon was, it’s important that you learn the lessons andthat we don’t repeat the mistakes of the past, and much of the legislation that I have seen bandied around — especially with the House Republicans — is almost as if the Deepwater Horizon-Macondowell incident never happened,” Salazar said. “We cannot afford to take that approach to the future of the nation’s energy security.”

Salazar, joined by Michael Bromwich, head of Interior’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, met with reporters in a conference room at Interior Department headquarters Tuesday in advance of the April 20 anniversary of the spill, which took 87 days to contain.

The two men defended what Salazar characterized as the administration’s “sprint to reform” the regulatory regime in the wake of the accident, a process that Bromwich said “has been moving very smartly, particularly in recent months, which is why I think you’ve seen us in a position to approve a number of deep water drilling permits in the last few weeks.”

“There’s no doubt that the time we went through in 2010 was a nightmare and a national crisis for our country but I’m confident that now, a year after he event, that we are at place where we are standing up offshore drilling in a way that can be done in a safe and responsible way, in a way that protects people and protects the environment and at the same time that we have continued to move forward with the broader energy agenda for the United States,” he said.

Salazar and Bromwich said they would like to see Congress act on the recommendation Interior made last year to change the current 30-daydeadline for the regulatory agency to review and decide on applications for approval of exploratory plans, and extend it to 90 days.

BOEMRE announced last month that the bureau had approved the first deepwater exploration plan since the disaster, acting on an application from Shell.

“We got that first exploration plan done within the 30 days, but that was in part because Shell voluntarily resubmitted” its application, which restarted the 30-day clock, Bromwichsaid.

There are now three exploration plans pending, and Bromwich said that “as exploration plans continue to flow in we are going to have a hard time meeting the 30-day deadline.”

“The instructions I have been giving to my people is that I don’t want them sending applications back to the operators just to restart the clock — that is inappropriate — and if it is, in fact, taking us longer than 30 days to do the reviews, to do the site-specific environmental assessment, then it takes us longer than 30 days,” Bromwich said.

“We’re not telling our people to go slow; quite the contrary, we’re telling them to go as quickly as they reasonably can,” said Bromwich, indicating that the likely inability to complete the processin a month’s time ought to “demonstrate to the Congress that, in fact, we need the additional time.”

Bromwich also said he felt that his agency’s effectiveness was limited because, as of now, it can only directly regulate the operators who seek permits for drilling operations, and not, for example, contractors such as Transocean, which leased the drilling rig Deepwater Horizon to BP.

“That dramatically limits the scope of our oversight in ways that make me question whether there’s a different and better way to do business,” Bromwich said.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

Reuters: Scientists link oil on dolphins to BP spill

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/04/07/us-oilspill-dolphins-idUSTRE7367OP20110407?feedType=RSS&feedName=domesticNews

By Leigh Coleman
BILOXI, Mississippi | Thu Apr 7, 2011 5:40pm EDT

(Reuters) – Scientists confirmed on Thursday that they have discovered oil on dead dolphins found along the U.S. Gulf Coast, raising fresh concerns about the effects of last year’s BP oil spill on sea life.

Fifteen of the 406 dolphins that have washed ashore in the last 14 months had oil on their bodies, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration scientists said during a conference call with reporters.

The oil found on eight of those dolphins has been linked to the April 2010 BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, scientists said.

“It is significant that even a year after the oil spill we are finding oil on the dolphins, the latest just two weeks ago,” said Blair Mase, southeast marine mammal stranding coordinator for NOAA Fisheries.

Since mid-March, 87 dead sea turtles have also been found, although no visible traces of oil have been discovered on the carcasses, said Barbara Schroeder, NOAA Fisheries national sea turtle coordinator.

“But we do not have very much information about how oil products find their way into turtles,” she added.

The Gulf is home to five species of sea turtles, all of which are considered at risk of extinction.

In February, NOAA declared “an unusual mortality event” after a spike in the number of dead dolphins washing up in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida.
There have been 153 deaths this year, 65 of them newly born or stillborn calves, NOAA officials said on Thursday.

Some experts had speculated that oil ingested or inhaled by dolphins at the time of the spill had taken a belated toll on the marine mammals, possibly leading to dolphin miscarriages.

Eleven workers were killed when the BP Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded, and an estimated 5 million barrels (206 million gallons) of crude oil spewed into the Gulf over more than three months.

NOAA officials and other experts say they are bracing for the wave of dolphin deaths to grow as the bottlenose calving season — when some 2,000 to 5,000 dolphins in the region typically bear their young — reaches full swing in coming weeks.

Samples have been sent for testing to determine whether the oil spill contributed to the dolphins’ deaths so far.

The U.S. government is keeping a tight lid on the lab findings due to the ongoing civil and criminal investigation involving BP.

“Because of the seriousness of the legal case, no data or findings may be released, presented or discussed outside the (unusual mortality event) investigative team without prior approval,” NOAA stated in a February letter that was obtained by Reuters.

(Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Tim Gaynor) Special thanks to Richard Charter