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Six Years Ago Today: Deepwater Horizon Explodes

Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:00 am
Posted by AU_251
Your dads room
Member since Feb 2013
11559 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:00 am
Six Years Later: What's Ahead for the Gulf

quote:

Q. What kind of impacts are we still seeing?

A: Since 2010, more than 1,400 dolphins have been found dead on the Northern Gulf of Mexico, marking the longest “unusual mortality event” recorded in the area, according to NOAA. Credible estimates of the loss of up to 1 million birds also tell the story. But more mysterious and just as worrying is what scientists have a much harder time measuring, like the impacts on deepwater corals, zooplankton and many types of marine life that live in the middle depths of the sea, explains EDF Chief Oceans Scientist Douglas N. Rader. “To top it off, all of this occurred near the Mississippi River Delta, an ecosystem already under enormous pressure,” Rader says. This pressure is driven by century-old development choices that favored commerce and development over sustainability of the Delta. And now research has shown that the rate of marsh shoreline erosion increased with oiling.


quote:

Q. Isn’t BP supposed to pay for spilling oil into the Gulf?

A: Yes. The Clean Water Act sets the rule for such penalties, and in 2012, Congress passed the RESTORE Act, which ordered that the majority of civil fines stemming from the oil spill be spent on Gulf Coast restoration — this is the source of the more than $20 billion that BP has agreed to pay. Those funds will go a long way toward healing the delta and restoring the Gulf, since the majority will be used for coastal restoration. “It represents a significant step toward justice for the Gulf Coast ecosystems, economies and communities that were damaged by the disaster,” said EDF president Fred Krupp. Beyond that, BP is also liable for Natural Resources Damages Assessment fines and economic losses.








Posted by The Cool No 9
70816
Member since Jan 2014
9947 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:01 am to
I forgot that was on 4/20.

Making strides. Glad the payout was settled.
This post was edited on 4/20/16 at 8:02 am
Posted by AU_251
Your dads room
Member since Feb 2013
11559 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:02 am to
One of the most tragic, disasters of our time. I will never forgive BP for their failure to have prevention in place if something like this were to happen. This is our home, the water we were born and raised in.

Sure, oil is a necessity, but there has to be something in place in case a pipe busts a mile deep.

I still remember how they tried to say how few barrels were spilling every day, only for the number to climb and climb until it was all of "millions of barrels a day"
Posted by Boudreaux35
BR
Member since Sep 2007
21420 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:03 am to
quote:

Since 2010, more than 1,400 dolphins have been found dead on the Northern Gulf of Mexico


Any idea what the average numbers per year were prior to 2010? Just curious.
Posted by TigerFanatic99
South Bend, Indiana
Member since Jan 2007
27483 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:04 am to
Can you elaborate on how DWH caused that island in the 6 year time lapse picture you posted to shrink?
Posted by northshorebamaman
Cochise County AZ
Member since Jul 2009
35465 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:04 am to
Deepwater Horizon
Hitler's special day
Columbine
Hippies get all excited
Is there a worse day on the calendar?
Posted by CadesCove
Mounting the Woman
Member since Oct 2006
40828 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:07 am to
quote:

Sure, oil is a necessity, but there has to be something in place in case a pipe busts a mile deep.


I'm sure the oil industry is all ears.
Posted by soccerfüt
Location: A Series of Tubes
Member since May 2013
65533 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:14 am to
I have a wack-job sister who was born on 4/20. So yes, it can get worse.
Posted by J Murdah
Member since Jun 2008
39779 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:20 am to
Damn time flies
Posted by Tchefuncte Tiger
Bat'n Rudge
Member since Oct 2004
57150 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:23 am to
I was in the Navy Gateway Inn on board NASJRB Belle Chasse when this happened. The USCG helicopters were going non-stop, and I had no idea what was going on at the time.
Posted by AU_251
Your dads room
Member since Feb 2013
11559 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:23 am to
quote:

Damn time flies


You ain't lying...
Posted by slackster
Houston
Member since Mar 2009
84642 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:26 am to
quote:

Can you elaborate on how DWH caused that island in the 6 year time lapse picture you posted to shrink?


The picture is misleading in the story and the OP. This was Cat Island in 2010 during the disaster:



And while it has lost significant vegetation due to the spill which exacerbated the erosion problems, it isn't noticeably worse off because of the spill.

The BP Spill is one of these textbook cases where the truth about the event and the effects are bad enough, but people still feel the need to exaggerate almost all of the claims.

ETA: For reference, this is what it looked like in 2006. This was obviously a severe problem well before BP.

This post was edited on 4/20/16 at 8:30 am
Posted by AU_251
Your dads room
Member since Feb 2013
11559 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:30 am to
quote:

And while it has lost significant vegetation due to the spill which exacerbated the erosion problems, it isn't noticeably worse off because of the spill


I'd say this statement does not make sense.

It HAS lost significant vegetation BECAUSE of the spill, yet you say it isn't noticeably worse off? I'd say those are damn near opposite views
Posted by slackster
Houston
Member since Mar 2009
84642 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:32 am to
From the pictures it appears to have plenty of dead vegetation, but the erosion doesn't appear to have accelerated any faster than it was in the previous time frame.

Does it help? No. Is it responsible? That is a stretch.
Posted by ForeverLSU02
Albany
Member since Jun 2007
52147 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:32 am to
quote:

It HAS lost significant vegetation BECAUSE of the spill
I take it that you've conducted your own study?
Posted by htownjeep
Republic of Texas
Member since Jun 2005
7612 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:32 am to
quote:

The picture is misleading in the story and the OP.
"Misleading" is putting it mildly. I'd put it in the category of a "damned lie". Here's a video showing Cat Island from 1998 to 2015. That island has been disappearing for a very long time and to simply blame BP is bullshite.

LINK

Are they innocent? Hell no. But at least be truthful about the argument presenting (not anyone in this thread, but people in general) because when you're caught in a lie like this, I start to doubt every other thing you say.

Posted by Chuker
St George, Louisiana
Member since Nov 2015
7544 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:34 am to
quote:

I still remember how they tried to say how few barrels were spilling every day, only for the number to climb and climb until it was all of "millions of barrels a day"



Yeah that was pretty damning.
Posted by dukke v
PLUTO
Member since Jul 2006
202663 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:40 am to
I have not eaten any kind of seafood since that day. Not even catfish.
Posted by Topwater Trout
Red Stick
Member since Oct 2010
67589 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:40 am to
quote:

I take it that you've conducted your own study?


I have fished last island all my life. No oil spills caused the erosion that I have seen over the years. Winter storms do lots of damage not to mention one bad hurricane can cut some of those islands in half. I would not blame the erosion on Cat island on the oil spill.
Posted by Topwater Trout
Red Stick
Member since Oct 2010
67589 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 8:41 am to
quote:

Not even catfish


they don't come from the gulf
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