OIL SPILL NEWS: BP Uses Toxic Dispersant (and Gag Orders) to Keep Oil Out of Sight
source: http://ht.ly/1Hkla
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- captainplanet71
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BP working hard to keep the damage hidden
The weather along the Gulf of Mexico finally cleared today, but with the wind backing around to the north and east, the spill remains out to sea.
Retired University of Alaska marine conservation expert Rick Steiner joined us today. He's worked on oil spills around the world, most significantly on the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill in Prince William Sound Alaska.
Rick says that the fact that this spill emanates from the bottom of the gulf (5,000 feet down), where the water temperature is approximately 1 degree Centigrade (and the oil is hot) means that by the time the oil reaches the surface, it has thoroughly mixed with water and therefore does not appear to be the kind of gruesome slick that is so famous from previous disasters.
It's a PR boon to BP that this is so, because it means that the oil spill remains hidden from public view. It does not, however, mean there is not a tremendous environmental tragedy unfolding. As we speak about this, we need to make that point clear. It's not just about what we can see from shore and that BP has been proactively taking steps to keep the damage hidden.
The dispersant being used at the wellhead – tradename “Corexit,” is nicknamed by Rick “Hidez-it” because the real reason it is used is to keep the damage out of sight. He points out that oil is toxic to wildlife, dispersant is toxic to wildlife, but the toxicity of the two combined is greater than the sum of the parts.
A fisherman we spoke with also noted that if dispersants are used, it saves BP money because they can hire fewer fishing boats – at $1,500 per day each – to skim oil.
As we noted last night, when dispersants are not used, the oil comes ashore and kills birds, when it is not used, it stays in the water column and kills fish, but it's worth noting that killing fish means killing birds eventually because of, y’know, that whole food web thing.
On another BP front, we hear that BP is demanding that fishermen who they hire in the cleanup sign gag orders, agreeing not to talk to the media. Rick says it’s one of the many similarities to the Valdez spill. BP’s reading from the playbook Exxon wrote.
The rules are:
1 – Understate the amount of oil spilled and environmental damage done.
2 – Overstate the effectiveness of the oil company’s response (or more accurately, the oil company’s “response theater”).
3 – Try to buy off the locals for a pittance in exchange for waivers that they will not sue.
4 – Get as many people under a gag order as possible.
We are warning the locals that it took 20 years of court battles to get Exxon to pay damages to the people of Prince William Sound and that the final settlement was only one-tenth of the original award.
Rick said, “Right after Valdez, someone told me, ‘Lawyers still unborn will be litigating this spill’ and I laughed at him. Well, it’s been 21 years and the litigation is still not finished, so he may be right.”
See also this video from the Guardian's coverage:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/apr/30/bp-cost-deepwater-horizon-spil...
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- Green, Earth and Science, Water Is Life, Oceans, 1 more
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- BP, oil spill, Gulf of Mexico, Disaster, 3 more
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captainplanet71
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EPA gives BP 24 hours to stop dumping toxic chemical on oil spill
http://current.com/news/92444279_epa-gives-bp-24-hours-to-stop-dumping-toxic-che...
- 1 year ago
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captainplanet71
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MoonLoon
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I am just now reviewing the comments from Sapience, who I suspect to be a shill for "Big Oil". 29 years in the oilfield selling environmental services to a bunch of idiots should qualify me to discuss their transgressions to the environment and the innocent victims of their arrogance.
- 1 year ago
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MoonLoon
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MoonLoon
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At last a topic close to my heart and area of expertise! Dispersants are meant to emulsify oil and water, not separate them! The strategy employed by BP/Nalco/EPA is totally flawed and was influenced by a massive amount of " entertainment", employed by Nalco upper management 20 years ago. Their product and strategy flies in the face of basic oil/water separation principles. The MMS has banned the use of dispersants injected into produced water discharges to hide oil sheens in the Gulf of Mexico, yet BP/Nalco will now pump thousands of gallons of toxic "detergent", into the environment to hide the oil sheen! Wash your oily clothes, using detergent, and then dump this water into your aquarium. You will then clearly see the affect of oily, chemically emulsified water on aquatic life. Of course, since the NALCO reps are paid on commission we should not expect them to be honest.
- 1 year ago
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MoonLoon
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jonber
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Drill Baby drill! Short video clip I made.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qOEZ0qR15ME
Big oil Stooges, aka Republican party, Palin, Steele and Giuliani, incite crowds on behalf of their corporate masters:
- 1 year ago
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jonber
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Sapience [removed]
- This comment was removed as a violation of community guidelines.
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39
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Sapience:
Lots of things kill birds like house cats. I believe the figure is 2 million a year.
- 1 year ago
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treewolf39
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39: This comment was removed as a violation of community guidelines.
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39
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Sapience:
They will only be able to clean less than 50% of the spill. the rest will go on polluting for generations to come. http://current.com/news/92416996_environmental-wounds-from-valdez-still-fresh.ht...
- 1 year ago
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treewolf39
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39: This comment was removed as a violation of community guidelines.
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39
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Sapience:
This is not a seep. Peace to you I have to go to work.
- 1 year ago
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treewolf39
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EdJoyProductions
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Please be sure to express your displeasure with BP by boycotting. BP's handling of this is beyond unforgivable.
- 1 year ago
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EdJoyProductions
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artemis6
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Of course . They are scared of the aftermath . They should be . They will try to hide it and BLAME something else . Just wait ...
- 1 year ago
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artemis6
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KSirys
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I wonder how congress is going to cover up this up now? are they going to back up one of their top fund raisers??
- 1 year ago
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KSirys
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glueandglitter
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I was so impressed with BP's initial reaction - taking full responsibility for the spill and saying they'd cover all the damages. It's really disappointing (though I guess not that surprising?) to hear that they're being sketchy now that reality has sunk in. :(
- 1 year ago
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glueandglitter
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treewolf39
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glueandglitter:
It was all a big PR lie. They knew they were only liable for 70 million. In fact the response could have been quicker if BP had not tried, at first, to handle it in-house.
- 1 year ago
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treewolf39
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39: This comment was removed as a violation of community guidelines.
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39
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Sapience:
So sorry I am sure that the oil companies have humans and the environments best interests at heart. They would never lie to increase profits or try to cover-up environmental catastrophes to shuck responsibility. They never hire mercenaries to control the public outcry when they pollute third world fishing grounds.
WTF THIS company made billions of dollars of profit in the first quarter of this year. The redundant piece of equipment, that would have prevented THIS catastrophe, only cost five hundred thousand. Where is all the good stuff that oil gives us? I see it slowly chocking the life out of the inhabitants of the planet......All this in a little over a hundred years. At this rate, do YOU think we have another hundred years of profit driven madness?
- 1 year ago
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treewolf39
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glueandglitter
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treewolf39:
I was reading this last night, which is pretty shocking: http://www.gregpalast.com/slick-operator-the-bp-ive-known-too-well/ I had no idea BP was involved in the Valdez! Among other things!
- 1 year ago
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glueandglitter
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glueandglitter
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glueandglitter:
Yikes! I didn't realize it would put that giant picture there. Sorry about that!
- 1 year ago
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glueandglitter
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39: This comment was removed as a violation of community guidelines.
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39
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Sapience:
I am sure that you are right but This planet is the only home I know so liking or not liking oil spills is not the point. Acting in a responsible way and taking ALL precautions to protect our eco-system is not to much to ask. Fuck big oil.
- 1 year ago
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treewolf39
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treewolf39
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glueandglitter:
Great picture!
- 1 year ago
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treewolf39
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39: This comment was removed as a violation of community guidelines.
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39
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Sapience:
I work hands on to repair environmental damage. I do not have an office, But I do have a chair. I do limit buying plastic and I have not flown in eight years. As for driving I do my best to stay home and garden.
If we had stayed on president Carters' energy independence plan, I would be driving a completely different type of car now. I am only one and I DO try to limit my footprint.
- 1 year ago
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treewolf39
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39: This comment was removed as a violation of community guidelines.
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39
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Sapience:
http://www.democracynow.org/2010/5/6/history_of_bp_includes_role_in
A little BP history. - 1 year ago
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treewolf39
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39: This comment was removed as a violation of community guidelines.
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Sapience [removed]
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artemis6
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Sapience:
We should switch to TRAINS . much safer . More economical . Best idea wins .
- 1 year ago
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artemis6
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Sapience [removed]
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artemis6: This comment was removed as a violation of community guidelines.
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Sapience [removed]
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artemis6
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Sapience:
Then , Sapience , you may have see how fast the mag lev trains go . They can so replace planes , for most things , and trucks for long haul as well . This future is yours , if you want it . You and your young friends will have to fight the oil companies for it though . It was they who stole this rightful place from electric trolley cars and trains long ago . It was NOT from fair competition . Not at all .
- 1 year ago
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artemis6
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Sapience [removed]
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artemis6: This comment was removed as a violation of community guidelines.
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Sapience [removed]
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artemis6
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Sapience:
I was disappointed about that too . The reality is , Obama does not have the power to oppose the oil corporations alone . It was a start . This is probably the best he can do , without signing his own death warrant . Like with health care he will need overwhelming public support , to get anywhere . He is no fool about his real masters . If trains become profitable , they will have more power too . Use as little oil products as you can . I believe the boycott of FOX advertisers has had an effect on FOX . Do not yield to them and they will slowly choke . FOX and anyone associated with them , is non essential . Clean air and water are . It seems the American public can only focus intently on a few issues at a time . We knew what we had to do back in the 70's . Frustration that it is taking so,long .
- 1 year ago
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artemis6
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treewolf39
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Sapience:
You could say that big oil was responsible for all car deaths except for those caused by quite new electric ones.
- 1 year ago
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treewolf39
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39: This comment was removed as a violation of community guidelines.
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Sapience [removed]
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treewolf39
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Sapience:
Good luck to ya. Thanks for the chat.
- 1 year ago
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treewolf39
