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23 May 2010
By Stephen
Lendman
From the start,
Obama administration and BP officials lied and
deceived the public about the Gulf spill's severity,
BP CEO Tony Hayward saying (on May 18) its
environmental effect will be "very modest," when, in
fact, it's already catastrophic, spreading, causing
long-term or permanent ecological destruction over a
vast area, will likely persist for months, and,
according to some experts perhaps years if nothing
tried to stop it works.
Initially, BP
reported a 1,000 barrels per day leak, then 5,000
after the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration's (NOAA) estimate, while independent
analysis of company supplied video and satellite
imagery suggest somewhere between 50 - 100,000
barrels, the consensus settling on 70,000 or an Exxon
Valdez equivalent every 3.5 days - by far, America's
greatest ever environmental disaster, worsening
daily.
On May 19,
McClatchy Newspapers Marisa Taylor and Renee Schoof
headlined, "BP Withholds Oil Spill Facts - and
Government Lets It," saying:
It "hasn't
publicly divulged the results of tests on the extent
of workers' exposure to evaporating oil or from the
burning of crude....even though researchers say that
data is crucial in determining whether the conditions
are safe."
Further, BP
isn't monitoring conditions or releasing videos, and
the Obama administration isn't pressing it despite
experts, like University of Miami's fisheries
biologist Peter Ortner saying "We have been screaming
from day one for" it.
Meanwhile,
University of Miami's Rosenstiel School of Marine and
Atmospheric Science's satellite imagery analysis
reported on May 18 that the spill covers 7,500 square
miles, or about the size of New Jersey. Other accounts
say 10,000 square miles or a Maryland equivalent.
Either way, it's huge.
On May 19,
McClatchy Newspaper writers Renee Schoof and Lauren
French headlined, "Gulf oil spill may be 19 times
bigger than originally thought," saying:
New video
footage "indicates that around 95,000 barrels, or 4
million gallons, a day of crude oil may be spewing
from the leaking wellhead," according to Purdue
University's Professor Steve Wereley's May 19
testimony to the House Commerce and Energy Committee.
He based his calculation on BP video, saying the spill
could be from 76,000 - 104,000 barrels daily, but
wants more footage over a longer period for a more
precise calculation, what BP hasn't released up to now
and won't, absent Interior Department pressure to do
it.
Yet if the
wellhead fails completely, these figures potentially
could double, begging the question about how long
Washington, BP, and the major media can deny the
peril, pretending it's minor.
Wereley said the
"media keeps using the 5,000 (figure), but there is
scientifically" no basis for its accuracy. "BP's
estimate is nowhere near correct. It is certainly
larger." He sees no "possibility (under) any scenario
(that the publicized) number is accurate," imagine how
much less so under a worst case scenario.
On May 14, the
Center for Biological Diversity (CBD) "filed a formal
notice of intent to sue Interior Secretary Ken Salazar
for ignoring marine-mammal protection laws when
approving offshore drilling operations in the Gulf of
Mexico."
Salazar's
Interior Department approved "three lease sales, more
than 100 seismic surveys, and more than 300 drilling
operations without permits required by the Marine
Mammal Protection Act and the Endangered Species
Act."
According to
CBD's oceans director, Miyoko Sakashita:
On Salazar's
watch, the Gulf was treated "as a sacrifice area where
laws are ignored and wildlife protection takes a
backseat to oil-company profits." The Interior
Department "is well aware of its obligations under the
law....yet it has simply decided it cannot be
bothered. You and I have to follow the law, but
Interior Secretary Salazar seems to think that he and
the oil companies he is supposedly overseeing do not.
That is unacceptable."
CBD is suing
Salazar and the Minerals Management Service (MMS) for
flagrantly violating the Marine Mammal Protection Act
and Endangered Species Act. Hundreds of individual and
class action ones have begun coming against BP,
Transocean, Halliburton and their complicit corporate
partners for compensatory and punitive damages, but
whatever their resolutions, they'll never compensate
for lost livelihoods, destroyed lives, and
environmental devastation that courts can't redress.
Of course, the
problem goes back decades and was extreme under the
Bush-Cheney White House, run by former oil men who
cared only about profits, and didn't give a damn about
the environment. Neither does Obama and his
corporate-controlled administration.
In 2007, Bush's
Interior Department sold BP the affected lease under
its 2007 - 2012 Five-Year Offshore Oil Drilling Plan.
In April 2009, the Obama administration approved
exploratory drilling, after which CBD and its allies
won a court order vacating the Bush Five-Year Plan.
Rather than seek
an alternative, Interior Secretary Salazar filed a
special motion to exempt approved Gulf sites,
identifying BP's as one to be allowed. In July 2009,
the court agreed, despite BP having the worst
environmental and safety records of any company
operating in America.
No matter. It
downplayed a spill possibility, saying it was unlikely
or virtually impossible. MMS then rubber-stamped its
exploration plan with no environmental consideration.
In other words, it should never deter business or
stand in the way of profits - the same attitude shown
Wall Street, corporate health providers, and other
corporate favorites given generous legislative or
direct handouts.
As a result,
regular large and smaller spills are assured, heavy
oil from this one having reached the fragile Louisiana
marshlands - nurseries for shrimp, oysters, crabs, and
fish that make Louisiana America's leading commercial
seafood producer and a favorite tourist destination
for recreational anglers.
Oil also now
affects the South Pass Mississippi River entrance, the
Mississippi delta, Gulf Shores and Dauphin Island,
Alabama, Whiskey Island on the Chandeleur Islands
south end, the protected bird breeding sanctuary
Raccoon Island, and the Loop Current, a powerful
clockwise conveyor belt heading it toward Florida, up
the East Coast, and into the Atlantic, threatening
Western Europe and perhaps West Africa. The potential
devastation is incalculable but at minimum will be
huge.
According to
European Space Agency satellite images, visible proof
shows its position, suggesting it'll reach the Keys
around May 25, America's only living coral barrier
reef - the world's third most productive marine
ecosystem with its patch and bank reefs, seagrass
meadows, soft and hard bottom communities, and coastal
mangroves. They support one of North America's most
biologically diverse amounts of marine life,
endangering them, according to Dr. Hu Chuamin,
executive director of the Institute for Marine Remote
Sensing (IMaRS) at the University of South Florida.
An optical
oceanographic expert, he says there's "no doubt that
(oil) will reach the Florida Keys. (Advancing about
100 miles a day), we know that (Mississippi Rivers
waters are heading for) the Florida Straits and will
impact the Keys." Once there, major damage is likely
to an ecosystem providing shelter, food and breeding
sites for many plants and animals as well as coastal
storm protection. According to Florida's Department of
Environmental Protection, reefs also help the state's
economy through millions of dollars annually from
recreational and commercial fishing.
No one knows the
potential damage, but if oil flows over the reef, the
amount will depend on whether it stays on the surface.
According to Eugene Shinn, recently retired US
Geologic Service reef ecology expert, "Under no
circumstances should dispersants be used on an oil
slick in the vicinity of a coral reef." They would
cause oil droplets to sink and potentially destroy
tiny coral polyps.
Worse still, the
Loop Current joins the Gulf Stream, North America's
most important ocean current system, sparking fears
about oil entering it and traveling up the entire East
Coast into the Atlantic. En route, it could foul
beaches, mangroves, sea-grass, and coral reefs, vital
to area wildlife, local economies and human health,
besides crossing the Atlantic for more damage.
Earlier,
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
head ,Jane Lubchenco, told reporters that an
"unprecedented and dynamic" slick was on course to
sweep along Florida's coastline, was "increasingly
likely" to reach the powerful Gulf Loop, then be
carried to the Keys and beyond.
No doubt to
prevent his congressional testimony, MMS associate
director of Offshore Energy and Minerals Management,
Chris Oynes, will take an accelerated retirement May
31. He got his position despite being key to an
offshore leasing foul-up, costing taxpayers an
estimated $10 billion in lost revenue - the Interior
Department's inspector general calling his
mismanagement "a jaw-dropping example of bureaucratic
bungling."
So bad, in fact,
he got a better job to rubber-stamp BP's right to
operate recklessly, wreck the environment, and reward
its shareholders with billions in profits. Maybe a new
high-paying job as well, the usual revolving door
payoff for allies leaving government service.
BP's Criminal
Negligence
Besides lying,
covering up, and deceiving all along, BP knew the
vital blowout preventer was damaged weeks before the
spill, yet did nothing to fix it, according to a May
17 Judith Evans Timesonline report headlined, "BP
pressured rig disaster workers to drill faster,"
saying:
According to
chief electronics technician Mike Williams, one of the
last workers to leave the doomed platform, the blowout
preventer was "damaged when a crewman accidently moved
a joystick, applying hundreds of thousands of pounds
of force. Pieces of rubber were found in the drilling
fluid, which he said implied damage to a crucial seal.
But a supervisor declared the find to be 'not a big
deal.' "
Engineering
Professor Bob Bea disagreed, telling 60 Minutes that
inaccurate pressure readings followed. The real
situation was concealed. The rig no longer was safe,
and without blowout preventer protection, "a
catastrophic accident like the Gulf oil spill" might
happen.
Bea also said BP
ignored an even more critical safety measure, ordering
the rig operator to remove the "drilling mud," the
heavy liquid used before the well was sealed to keep
oil and gas from escaping.
MMS drilling
engineer Frank Patton calls drilling mud "the most
important thing in safety for your well." Explosion
eyewitnesses, including nearby fishermen, saw it being
extracted beforehand. BP told rig workers that
"things" were plugged when, in fact, final cementing
wasn't in place. Without it and the drilling mud, an
operable blowout preventer was the last line of
defense. Drilling without it was willful criminal
negligence.
So wasn't the
whole operation, approved by Obama's Interior
Department, including EPA's authorizing the use of
toxic dispersants, causing more problems than
solutions to the environment, wildlife, affected
residents, and fishermen hired as first responders,
already getting sick.
BP said
respirators and other special protections weren't
needed, despite strong hydrocarbon vapors and massive
toxic chemical amounts dumped on the slick to make it
more water soluble.
As a result,
fishermen report bad headaches, burning eyes,
persistent coughs, sore throats, stuffy sinuses,
nausea, and dizziness - unsurprising based on EPA
monitored unsafe airborne levels of dangerous hydrogen
sulfide, benzene and other toxins, way exceeding
acceptable standards for humans and wildlife.
BP and
Washington ignore them, risking chemical poisoning to
show up later in long-term illnesses, disabilities and
deaths, what happened to Exxon Valdez and 9/11 first
responders, never told of the dangers they faced.
Again, expediency and corporate interests trump
environmental considerations, public health, worker
safety, and common sense - swept aside by
Washington-BP collusion.
On May 20, with
over 600,000 gallons of surface dispersants used and
another 55,000 underwater, the EPA told BP officials
to choose less toxic ones in 24 hours, submit a list
of alternatives, then begin using them within 72
hours.
According to
Washington Post writer Juliet Eilperin (on May 20) in
her article titled, "EPA demands less-toxic
dispersant:"
An unnamed
administration official said "Dispersants have never
been used in this volume before," let alone ones as
toxic as Nalco's Corexit 9500A and 9527A.
Nalco is
well-connected, having formed a joint venture with
Exxon Chemical in 1994, has oil-industry insiders on
its board, including an 11-year BP board member. No
wonder Defenders of Wildlife's senior policy advisor,
Richard Charter, calls Corexit "a chemical that the
oil industry makes to sell to itself, basically." Only
profits matter, not long-term harm to people, wildlife
and the environment.
Washington
Coverup of a Massive Underwater Oil Blob
According to
investigative journalist Wayne Madsen in his May 20
article headlined, "White House Covers Up Menacing Oil
'Blob:' "
FEMA and US Army
Corps of Engineer sources say that "US Navy submarines
(in the Gulf and Atlantic off the Florida coast) have
detected (and are tracking) what amounts to a frozen
oil blob....at depths of between 3,000 to 4,000 feet.
(It's now) transiting the Florida Straits between
Florida and Cuba (and parts of it) are breaking off
into smaller tar balls that are now washing ashore in
the environmentally-sensitive Florida Keys and Dry
Tortugas."
Lies and coverup
try to hide it, Madsen saying NOAA operates as a
"virtual public relations arm for BP," and the Coast
Guard is "lying in order to protect the Obama
administration" to limit its damaged image.
Six months ago,
without federally required permits, the BP/Transocean/Halliburton
troika drilled a 35,000 foot well, causing "a major
catastrophic event that required the firms' oil rig
personnel to quickly pull up the drill and close (its)
hole."
Even so, BP
"re-sank the drill (causing) another, more destructive
chain of events following the (Deepwater Horizon)
explosion....When (it) blew up, (it) also 'blew down,'
cracking the sub-seabed pipe" as deep as 30,000 feet,
"again, without a government permit."
BP also wants to
recover "as much oil as possible from the (site)
rather than simply plugging and capping (it), which
would then place it off-limits to further drilling."
Company
officials are deceiving the Obama administration and
public about their so-called "kill shot" or "top kill"
plan to permanently seal the well. Instead, they
intend "to shoot cement into the pipe in an attempt to
cap" it temporarily, later hoping to dig "a trench for
side drilling (to) recover as much oil as possible,"
no matter the risk of an even greater disaster that
won't deter their quest for profits.
The Exxon
Valdez Connection
Greg Palast's
Exxon Valdez fraud investigations found BP mostly to
blame, a topic his May 5 Truthout.org article
explained, titled "Slick Operator: The BP I've Known
Too Well."
What the company
did to Alaska, it's now doing to the Gulf, and a
vastly greater ecosystem under a worst case scenario.
"Tankers run aground, wells blow out, pipes burst. It
shouldn't happen, but it does (after which) the name
of the game is containment," coverup, and spending the
least amount possible for cleanup and restitution.
In Alaska and
today, BP "was charged with carrying out the Oil Spill
Response Plans (it) drafted....filed with the
government, and is handling the same way by "l(ying),
prevaricat(ing), fabricat(ing) and obfuscat(ing)."
Spills are
contained with "lot('s) of rubber, long skirts of it
called a 'boom' (used to) surround (them), then pump
(them) out into skimmers, or disperse it, sink it or
burn it."
However, "booms"
have to be ready to respond like a fire department's
equipment and personnel to operate it. In Alaska, it
was BP's job as principal Alyeska pipeline consortium
owner - its same job in the Gulf as principal
Deepwater Horizon lessee.
In 1989, Alyeska
claimed that equipment and response crews were in
place with trained Alaskan natives ready if needed. It
also "certified in writing that a containment barge
with equipment was within five hours sailing of any
point in the Prince William Sound, (and that) it had
plenty of boom and equipment cached on Bligh Island,
where the Exxon Valdez hit Bligh Reef.
In fact, it had
nothing there, and Alyeska earlier fired Alaskan
workers, "replacing them with phantom crews, lists of
untrained employees with no idea how to control a
spill. And the containment barge (in fact was) laid up
in a drydock in Cordova, locked under ice, 12 hours
away." Instead of containing the spill, 1,200 miles of
shoreline were wrecked, contaminated enough to remain
so for decades at minimum.
For a company
with the worst safety and environmental record in the
industry "here we go again. Valdez goes Cajun" with
contagion enough to contaminate vast parts of the
Gulf, Florida Keys, fragile ecosystems, and the entire
US East coast and beyond.
This goes way
beyond BP and its decades of criminal negligence. It's
a regulatory problem for lack of it; a government one
for no oversight, public or environmental concern; and
a long-term systemic one giving business free reign to
plunder and pollute without limit, then when caught
call it an accident, paper it over, and repeat again
because complicit government officials allow it.
Stephen
Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site
at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge
discussions with distinguished guests on the
Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio
Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and
Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are
archived for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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