Sunday, May 2, 2010
Environmental Effects of Offshore Drilling
Most of the United States coastal areas are banned from offshore drilling (drilling in the ocean for oil and natural gas). Last month, President Obama proposed legislation to reverse that ban on parts of the east coast and on the northern Alaskan coast. In total, over 297 million acres of the ocean will be fair game for oil exploration. Drilling for oil in these parts of the ocean would allow the U.S. to lessen their dependence on foreign oil without affecting current levels of oil consumption. In addition, the U.S. government would be able to generate a profit from the offshore leases that would be negotiated with oil exploration companies like BP and Transocean. The reversal could also lead to the creation of thousands of jobs for Americans – something the American people could really use during this bad economic climate.
While politically it may make sense to lessen our dependence on other countries and their oil supply, and economically we need more jobs for Americans, expanding offshore drilling is a terrible idea because of the environmental risks that are involved. The ban on offshore drilling was put into place over twenty years ago because of the environmental risks that would threaten our oceanic ecosystems if drilling were to occur. If an accident were to happen on an offshore oil rig, it could affect marine life in that area, as well as jeopardize the beaches. As Dr. Jill Stein says in an article about offshore drilling, “There is no way to guarantee complete safety from spills. If part of the east coast of the US suffered a spill comparable to the Exxon Valdez spill of 1989, the result would be a catastrophe for public health and valuable natural habitats.” And many other people agree with her. Greenpeace members have been quoted in a number of their blogs saying, “It’s not a matter of if a spill will occur, but when — and where.”
And as it turns out, those Greenpeace members were right. Last Thursday, an oil rig exploded, and then sank just 21 miles off the Gulf Coast (see full story here). Besides the safety issues for the workers on the rig – currently eleven workers are officially missing and presumed dead – the impact this event will have on the environment may be detrimental. Oil and natural gas from the rig burned for over 36 hours causing thick black clouds of smoke to rise away from the scene heavily contributing to air pollution in that area. But even worse, the amount of oil that spilled – and continues to leak from the deep-water well – will pollute the surrounding oceanic and coastal habitats, harming many organisms that live there. There are two different wildlife preserves located only a few miles from the explosion and the impact on those preserves is still unknown. Marine biology professor, Chris Frid was quoted on forests.org saying, "That part of the gulf's coastline consists of a sedimentary shore with lots of muddy inlets. The oil will penetrate into the mud, and because it contains no oxygen the oil will not biodegrade. For generations, any disturbance of the sediment will bring oil back to the surface and that will happen over a very large area."
With an estimated 8,000 barrels of crude oil leaking each day, it is reported that officials are doing their best to clean up the spill as fast as they can. But so far, they have been unsuccessful in their attempts to both stop the oil leak, which is leaking from the sunken rig and the deep-water well in three different spots, and clean up the spill. Instead, the ocean currents are spreading the spill making the clean up area larger and more difficult to deal with. We have let the technology that allows us to drill for oil surpass the technology we currently have to clean up any resulting accidents. Experts say that at the current rate of oil leakage, in 40 days the spill will surpass the 260,000 barrels spilled by Exxon Mobil when the Valdez tanker hit a reef off the Alaska coast in 1989. That spill caused the death of hundreds of marine animals and cost millions of dollars in environmental work to try to reverse harms caused to thousands of other animals. This week, dead sea turtles, catfish, horseshoe crabs and marine birds have begun to wash up on the shore in Mississippi. They are not coated in oil, and cannot yet be directly linked to the spill, but the number of animals found dead makes marine biologists believe that their deaths are linked to the pollution from the oil spill.
While this oil rig explosion has been, and will continue to be a huge problem, a more common problem with offshore drilling the is minor leaks and spills from oil tankers that transport oil from the rig to land, as well as minor leaks from rig platforms themselves. Each incident does not do that much damage on its own and therefore does not really receive as much press as huge explosions do. But the frequency of these spills makes them just as big of a problem. Offshore drilling is filling our pristine oceans with oil and harming innocent marine animals as well as running delicate ecosystems that we depend on for food.
What can be done to prevent future oil spills? Really nothing can be done except to stop offshore drilling. No one is even sure of the cause of this most recent explosion, and obviously the problems that can occur because of offshore drilling are unpredictable. If the U.S. needs to lessen their dependence on foreign oil, it might be a better idea to heavily invest in other forms of energy – ones that are cleaner and better for the environment than oil – which is not a renewable resource anyway. These new forms of energy could also create thousands of new jobs for Americans, and they would be jobs that would be able to last longer than jobs associated with offshore drilling since they would be environmentally friendly and the resources would not be finite. An even better solution would be to cut down energy consumption in the U.S. overall reducing our general need for oil and other polluting sources of energy. But that is just an environmental pipe dream. I am sure that is not going to happen until something really drastic forces Americans to reduce their consumption.
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Organic Coupons
There is nothing that I love more than a good deal. And right now over at the Earth Fare website, you can print over $85 worth of manufacturers coupons for organic groceries and products. Save money while saving the environment! What could be better? And included in this coupon book is a coupon for $1 off any Seventh Generation cleaners which you can read about in my previous post.
LA Ranked Smoggiest City
State of the Air, a report, was released today by the American Lung Association that -- after completing extensive research -- found Los Angeles has the worst air quality of any city in the United States. In one year, the report found that the average Los Angeles resident was exposed to 140 days where the air was at a dangerous level. The American Lung Association's California director, Bonnie Holmes-Gen, said that this is not just a problem, but a crisis. People are actually dying early because of the terrible air quality. California as a state had the most cities (ten) with harmful air quality out of any state in the country. It is true that the air quality is not as bad as it used to be, and that state and county legislators have been working on this problem for a while now, but obviously more needs to be done.
On the other side of the spectrum, my hometown, Honolulu, was reported as the city with the best air quality in the nation. Too bad I am moving to LA for good!
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Cruises Bully Alaska
For over a year now, cruise lines have been bullying the Alaska government through lawsuits and threats. And recently, the Alaskan government has started to give in. A few weeks ago, they lowered taxes for cruise ships by 25% and today they relaxed pollution legislation, allowing cruise ships that come into Alaskan waters to dump chemicals from fecal waste. Alaska's pristine waters and marine organisms are about to experience more pollution just because the cruise ships are unwilling to invest in waste management systems.
I think that this power that the cruise ships are lording over governments trying to protect their natural environments is disgusting. The cruise ships don't even pay any tax because they just charge it to the passengers. It is all a power move to try and sway legislation their way and it is working. Alaska has given in to increased levels of pollution just so the cruise lines won't stop coming to their ports. There will come a day when people care more about the environment and the consequences of pollution than making money. And I can't wait for that day to come.
Read more about the injustice of the cruise lines here.
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Did You Know?
Glass produced from recycled glass instead of raw materials reduces related air pollution by 20%, and water pollution by 50%. Enough glass was thrown away in 1990 to fill the Twin Towers (1,350 feet high) of New York's World Trade Center every two weeks.
For more facts on recycling and pollution, click here!
For more facts on recycling and pollution, click here!
Friday, April 23, 2010
Climate Scientist Sues Newspaper
A lawsuit was launched this week by a climatology professor, Andrew Weaver, from the University of Victoria against The National Post newspaper. Apparently, a number of articles written in The National Post misquoted Prof. Weaver and when he asked them to retract the articles, the paper flat out refused.
The articles have now been quoted on other websites, and the lawsuit demands not only The Nation Post take down the articles where he was misquoted, but that they track down every other website that quoted them, and have them delete his affiliation from their websites as well. Weaver explained, "If I sit back and do nothing to clear my name, these libels will stay on the Internet forever. They’ll poison the factual record, misleading people who are looking for reliable scientific information about global warming.”
The articles that are being disputed are Weaver's Web, posted on December 10, 2009, Weaver's Web II, posted January 27, 2010, Climate Agency Going Up in Flames, posted January 27, 2010, and So Much for Pure Science, posted February 2, 2010.
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Happy Earth Day!
Today is Earth Day! And it is a day to celebrate the earth and its environment. Earth day was started 40 years ago to promote awareness for the environment and it is even more important to do that today then it was 40 years ago. Many people feel that the current economic climate makes it difficult to convince people of the importance of issues like global warming and oceanic pollution. And with the political sides so evenly matched on these issues, it is unclear whether any climate legislation will be able to make it through congress. An interview with Denis Hayes, the coordinator of the very first earth day, discusses these issues as well as many more.
On another note, Disney's Oceans was released today to the general public, giving people an awe inspiring view of the beauty of our oceans. As part of Disney's nature division, Oceans allows people to be more in touch with the wonders of oceanic ecosystems creating awareness of the amazing creatures we need to protect.
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