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BP Spill: Still Hyping After All These Years

All these years? Poetic license. It’s been two years since the disastrous explosion on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig. Eleven rig workers were killed in a valiant but failed attempt to control BP’s Macondo well located 50 miles off the mouth of the Mississippi River in Gulf waters 5,000 feet deep. The ensuing blowout seemed to last an eternity. The finger pointing and legal action continues unabated.

Two Years Later, the Effects Surface

BARATARIA BAY — Open sores. Parasitic infections. Chewed-up-looking fins. Gashes. Mysterious black streaks. Two years after the drilling-rig explosion that touched off the biggest offshore oil spill in U.S. history, scientists are beginning to suspect that fish in the Gulf of Mexico are suffering the effects of the petroleum.

But the article goes on to say…

The evidence is nowhere near conclusive. …

And the damage may extend well beyond fish. …

Reports of strange things with fish began emerging when fishermen returned to the Gulf weeks after BP’s gushing oil well was capped during the summer of 2010. …

There’s no saying for sure what’s causing the diseases in what is still a relatively small percentage of the fish. …

Still, it’s clear to fishermen and researchers alike that something’s amiss.

You’d think that with the scale of this calamity and the amount of money that’s gone into ferreting out the damage, that the damage would be fairly obvious and the science would be quite, {ahem}, settled.

One researcher in the article has this to say:

“There is lots of circumstantial evidence that something is still awry,” said Christopher D’Elia, dean of Louisiana State University’s School of the Coast and Environment. “On the whole, it is not as much environmental damage as originally projected. [Told ya so. - Ed.] Doesn’t mean there is none.”

True, that. Doesn’t mean there is none. But environmentalists and fishermen have a vested interest in hyping the damage, and those are the only opinions the press cares to report.

Lest we forget, oil is part of the natural environment. Organisms have natural ways of dealing with it. Out of thousands of fish and shellfish tested for contamination, not a single tainted sample has been found. The article tells of fish found with traces of naphthalene in their bile — but you don’t eat bile.

The Gulf’s seafood remains fresh and delicious as it ever was.

Journalists, who are not schooled in the Second Law of Thermodynamics, always expect “the gooey stuff” to “lurk in the briny deep” until someday it exacts its revenge upon the defilers of Mother Gaia. Nice story, but the real world doesn’t work like that. This stuff is part of the natural environment. It will degrade and dissipate, and to a large extent it already has.

The oil and gas industry can and does make mistakes, but they learn from them. We need to have a rational debate over whether the benefits of offshore mineral development justify the environmental risks. I vote yes.

Cross-posted at stevemaley.com.


COMMENTS

  • onionman

    Have you seen this video? Granted it is from Al Jazeera, hardly an objective source, but the imagery speaks for itself:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=_VVyPiV5xdY#!

    As a native son of New Orleans I feel very protective of both the marshlands and our petroleum industry. You’re absolutely right to weigh our energy needs as a higher priority than the environmental risks of offshore drilling, especially when there are proven safeguards and the cost of gas is strangling the economy. But folks down here are justifiably angry at BP for what amounted to criminal negligence, and scary mutations do not count as a “natural way of dealing with” contamination.

    • citizenkh

      Actually my neighbor who is a biologist at LSU (he also completed his post-doc work there) and who has grown to love the open marshes and coast tells me a different story.

      What biologist have done is the actually put their traps right in any emulsified oil they can find (not clean it up) to trap sea life. They WANT to find contamination. He has seen the traps himself and as a scientist is disgusted.

      They are hurting local fisherman with this pure crap.

      Just like ALL “conservative” blogs did while the well was leaking with shiite piles of false info. I read not a single article that was accurate.

  • stan25

    It is the media and the eco-terrorists are the ones that need to get move on. They keep on perpetuating this myth as long as someone will listen.

  • johnt

    Well that takes care of offshore drilling to the satisfaction of the destructionists, if only they can hold the line and increase hardship.
    Now back to terra firma and protecting muskrats and rabbits. Yes, the threat so called of the Canadian pipeline. Mother Gaia would be so much happier if we all just moved into caves and ate each other.

  • colton341

    Do not be like the left and just accept that this is all crazy lefties and eco-terrorists just because you think they are the only ones who care for the environment. Ducks Unlimited and Field and Stream both have commented on the destruction the oil spill has caused. As a sportsman it is concerning what is to become of the gulf after this. Lets not just throw this away as green radicalism, but lets look at it with prudence and open mindedness.

    • skorrent1

      Is exactly what the post calls for, and exactly what scary stories when “There’s no saying for sure what’s causing” the problem, or even if there is one, do not contribute to.

  • Viet71

    Corexit, the solvent BP used to break up and disperse the oil, was a problem. A big problem.

    Scientists here and in Europe urged BP not to use Corexit. The Obama administration, leaning on BP, forced it to do so, so that cameras would not show oil slicks.

    The real crime of the Gulf oil spill lies not with BP, which was merely grossly negligent, but with Obama, who tried to show the American people he could make a big problem just go away.

    • http://stevemaley.com Steve Maley

      I get mine from Dr. Ed Overton, Professor Emeritus in Environmental Science at LSU (PDF link)

      As Dr Overton points out, the use of dispersants is a trade off. At Macondo, the situation was perfect for the maximum benefit at minimal environmental impact. Corexit is what caused the crude to form dispersed droplets: maximum surface area to let the digesting bacteria get to work ASAP.

      Yes, the ingredients of Corexit (see the link) have long chemical names, but they are found in household products. The formulation was designed to minimize environmental damage.

    • citizenkh

      There was a lot of seriously flawed reporting about Corexit being banned in other countries. It is NOT. It approved everywhere EXCEPT near shore or in shallow water, and that goes for the U.S. as well. It is no more harmful than your dish soap, and in fact is quite similar but MORE eco-friendly that household detergents (also made from oil/natural gas).

  • massachusettsdemocrat

    to touch this, because the Democratic Party wants to cover for Obama’s cynical malevolence in this issue (ignoring an EPA report to allow Corexit, sending the Coast Guard to keep reporters away). Meanwhile, too many Republicans were and are willing to reflexively support BP, and thus don’t want to touch it either.

    For the left media, it’s an environmental crisis, there are lots of nice victims the media can talk to, and they still don’t want to touch it because they need to get Obama reelected. Which leaves foreign sources and nonpartisan sources, like the ones coltor341 cites upthread.

    • citizenkh

      reported on both Leftist and “Conservative” blogs during the spill was pure made up crap. The leftists to “GET BIG OIL” and the “conservatives” to GET OBAMA & BP.

      • http://stevemaley.com Steve Maley

        -

        • citizenkh

          better than anyone reported within a day after they well leaked to the surface, the had hired almost all emergency spill response companies at full rates (not standby) and all equipment was deployed strategically across the coast from Florida Panhandle to almost Texas.

          Dutch ships came over and were rigged with Dutch open ocean skimmers ASAP at a shipyard in Galveston capable and ready, then put to work at sea.

          All available watercraft for the job at hand were even pulled out of mothballs and recertified at great expense. Barges, tugs & supply boats of the right specs.

          BP deserves a great deal of respect and credit for the way it responded.

          And of course most of the spill was OUTSIDE of U.S. Territorial waters and under International Law and treaties.

  • dennism