BP deliberately sinks oil with Corexit as cover up

But don't blame BP, that means you are attacking Britlandia, don't ya know?

Maybe you might want to think about the effect this will have on deep sea exploration? The most likely outcome is that oil companies will move their rigs away from the Gulf to places like Angola, Brazil, China and Vietnam instead. There is a worldwide shortage of deep sea drilling platforms, so who can blame them. How do you think that will decrease dependence on foreign oil imports?
 
Maybe you might want to think about the effect this will have on deep sea exploration? The most likely outcome is that oil companies will move their rigs away from the Gulf to places like Angola, Brazil, China and Vietnam instead. There is a worldwide shortage of deep sea drilling platforms, so who can blame them. How do you think that will decrease dependence on foreign oil imports?
I don't think it will decrease the dependence on foreign oil imports.

How do you think ignoring BP deliberately sinking the oil to avoid fees will? How do you think that ignoring egregious offenses by BP will make it all better?

The reality is we need oil, that's fine. We need to drill for it. That's fine too. But we don't need to do it stupidly, without the simplest of requirements urged on them by law even in Brazil.
 
I don't think it will decrease the dependence on foreign oil imports.

How do you think ignoring BP deliberately sinking the oil to avoid fees will? How do you think that ignoring egregious offenses by BP will make it all better?

The reality is we need oil, that's fine. We need to drill for it. That's fine too. But we don't need to do it stupidly, without the simplest of requirements urged on them by law even in Brazil.

What you really mean is that you hope it won't have an effect on foreign oil imports, maybe you are right but I personally think it will. Time will tell who is right.

What Can Be Done About The BP Oil Spill? (Source)


By Russell Chianelli

When the BP oil well, located 50 miles off the coast of the U.S. in the Gulf of Mexico and one mile below the ocean surface, blew out, I couldn’t help but think back to the March 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill.


At the time, I was working as an Exxon’s Corporate Research Laboratory and was designated as the lead scientist for the bioremediation project to clean the beaches in Alaska.


People remember the Exxon Valdez spill, but they don’t realize that it wasn’t the biggest tanker spill; this was the Amoco Cadiz accident in 1978 off the coast of France in Brittany . The Amoco Cadiz was about five times larger (approximately 220,000 tons vs. approximately 40,000 tons). However the largest oil spill in the world before the Gulf War was the 1979 Ixtoc Blow-Out in the Bahia de Campeche, Mexico. When PEMEX drilled a deep exploratory well, similar to the BP blowout, the sea bottom gave way and in nine months approximately 400,000 tons of oil was released. That’s more than 10 times the amount released by the Exxon Valdez. The Ixtoc Blow-Out lasted for 9 months until a relief well was drilled. Estimates ranged from 4000 barrels to 30,000 barrels per day being released, illustrating the difficulty in knowing exactly the amount being released from drilling blow-outs.
The Ixtoc Blow-Out was very similar to what we’re experiencing with the BP spill. Yet, in the Ixtoc Blow-Out very little of this huge amount of oil ever reached the shores of Padre Island, Texas, approximately 600 miles away. Why? Because of hydrocarbon-eating microbes called hydrocarbon degraders.


Hydrocarbon degraders are microorganisms that can consume oil, creating CO2, H2O and more of themselves. Approximately 50 percent of the petroleum goes to make more hydrocarbon degraders. The hydrocarbon degraders are then consumed by higher organisms (plankton) which provides food for marine life such as fish.
Every year 2 million to 12 million tons of oil naturally seep from the ocean floor and into the sea. In fact, many of the deposits in the Gulf of Mexico were discovered by observing these oil seeps, which is why the hydrocarbon degraders are everywhere, waiting for their “dinner” or fuel. They in turn provide “dinner” for plankton and then fish. Fishermen should be prepared for the extra catches that are coming because after every major oil spill there’s an explosion of local fish.


But before a fish explosion can happen, the microorganisms need to be able to get to the oil and digest it. Since oil and water don’t mix, adding a dispersant will accelerate the breakdown of the oil by making it more available to the microorganisms.


The best option for oil in open water is to use an EPA approved dispersant, such as COREXIT. BP has begun using dispersants. It is important to remember that the dispersants remove a surface oil slick by dispersing it in the water and this accelerates the ability of the hydrocarbon degraders to consume the oil. Removal of the surface slick also protects the beaches. In the case of the Exxon Valdez a storm came before dispersant were used and the storm covered the beaches with oil. A look at the beaches in Prince William Sound after the storm (www.materials forenergy.org) show a thick coating of fresh oil everywhere. This is not the case in the current spill because of the use of dispersants.


What would make this clean-up even more effective would be to use nutrient enhanced bioremediation. The hydrocarbon degraders like any living organism need nitrogen and phosphorous (nutrients) to make more of themselves. In the open sea the rate at which they consume the oil is limited by the availability of the nutrients. Nutrient enhanced bioremediation, the project I worked on in Valdez is the addition of nutrients to accelerate the natural rate of biodegradation. It is just like adding fertilizer to your garden plants.


The science of hydrocarbon degraders on oil spills was originally investigated by Dr. Ronald Atlas, now of the University of Louisville, who studied the Amoco Cadiz oil spill, which occurred on March 16, 1978 . The Amoco Cadiz was the largest tanker spill ever, 220,000 tons of crude oil on the beaches of Brittany, France. Nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorous) from farms above the beach enhanced the growth of the hydrocarbon degraders giving rise to the concept of nutrient enhanced bioremediation for dealing with oiled beaches.


It was this idea that Ron Atlas and myself developed for the beaches in Alaska after the Exxon Valdez oil spill. This was the largest successful bioremediation project ever attempted. The materials used were INIPOL EAP-22, an oleophilic (sticking to oil) nutrient and CUSTOMBLEND, a typical agricultural fertilizer. These nutrients were successfully used on the beaches in Alaska and not on oil in the open water. The oil on the beaches was consumed in approximately two weeks. This was in the cold waters of Prince William Sound. In the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico this process should be even faster.
 
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What you really mean is that you hope it won't have an effect on foreign oil imports, maybe you are right but I personally think it will. Time will tell who is right.
No, I'm pretty sure this current Administration will use this "crisis" to pass stupid legislation that will make it worse for us than before. It seems to be the only thing we've gotten any excitement from the administration about this "crisis"...
 
No, I'm pretty sure this current Administration will use this "crisis" to pass stupid legislation that will make it worse for us than before. It seems to be the only thing we've gotten any excitement from the administration about this "crisis"...

You can't really have it both ways. If you want to reduce oil imports, then in the short to medium term, there is no choice other than drilling in deep waters with all the incumbent risks of another massive oil spill. Maybe this will force the US to finally learn to be more fuel efficient?
 
You can't really have it both ways. If you want to reduce oil imports, then in the short to medium term, there is no choice other than drilling in deep waters with all the incumbent risks of another massive oil spill. Maybe this will force the US to finally learn to be more fuel efficient?
I think you have confused what I want with what I predict will happen. I believe that this administration will make foolish choices and make things worse, and they'll use this crisis as the reason for their foolish choices.

What I want to see is people allowed to drill, but to use our brains and force them to use safety measures.
 
Meanwhile, BP's paid shills continue to chant 'drill baby drill' regardless of the spill:

"an investigation into what went wrong with the current spill has yet to conclude -- meaning that the same technical problems could still pop up at other sites. Moreover, Jindal has been quite public and aggressive with his insistence that BP has been less than capable in managing the fallout of the spill it has caused. He made explicit calls for the "federal government to force BP to act responsible" and for the oil company to "either begin the work or get out of the way,"

But the oil company that Jindal (and others) are now demonizing would be overseeing a good chunk of the deepwater drilling that he wants put back online. Of the 33 permitted deepwater drilling rigs that Jindal wants to continue operating, two are under BP leases and two are operating under leases controlled jointly by BP and Devon, according to a federal official.

Toby Odone, a spokesperson for BP, confirmed to the Huffington Post that the company current operates in the following "fields" in the Gulf of Mexico: "Atlantis, Thunder Horse, Mad Dog, Pompano, Marlin, Horn Mountain and Na Kika."

"We also have non-operating interests in fields such as Mars, Ursa, Diana, Hoover and Ram Powell," said Odone."




Jindal should be impeached.



Copyright Cop notice: I am not the author of the text quoted above, you weak little tool. This means you will have to form coherent thoughts and fabricate something approaching an argument to support your position.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/06/03/bobby-jindal-obama-letter_n_599226.html
 
Interesting his sentiments are in none of our founding documents.

You have beed deluded into beleiving that fascism = freedom. It doesn't.
 
While you try to score points on each other, the British Polluters are deceiving you again....



"A freelance photojournalist working in Louisiana to document the BP oil leak is reporting that he might have found a literal "cover-up."

C.S. Muncy's photos and video show a thick layer of sand that he says was dumped by BP on top of the oily beach. Instead of cleaning up the mess, the accusation is that BP is covering it up."




























Note to the self-appointed Copyright Cop: I am not the author of the text in quotes cited above. So instead of deflecting desperately from the inherent truth, you must now either refute the facts contained therein or pretend you didn't see them, you weak weasly little tool.

http://www.groundreport.com/US/BP-ac...-beach/2925445
 
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