Earth ChangesS


Attention

Environmentalists, Lawyers, and Fishermen Go After BP

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© U.S. NavyMembers of Elastec/American Marine Inc. inspect a fire boom containing collected oil prior to conducting a controlled burn in the Gulf of Mexico, May 5, 2010.
Reporting from New Orleans

Even though a 4-story, 100-ton metal box, also known as a "Coffer Dam," has been placed on a gushing wellhead of crude deep in the Gulf of Mexico, the disaster here is far from over.

Countless gallons of crude has covered over 2000 miles of water and there is no guarantee that the Coffer Dam will stop the leak 100 percent, which means that more crude will spill into Gulf.

Environmentalists are worried that the damage could be irreversible, saying that the shrimp and fishery industry that people in Louisiana and lower Mississippi have depended on for generations may be coming to an end.

Arrow Down

Is Gulf Oil Rig Disaster Far Worse Than We're Being Told?

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© NaturalNews
Reports about the massive Gulf of Mexico oil spill have been largely underestimated, according to commentators, including Paul Noel, a Software Engineer for the U.S. Army at Redstone Arsenal in Alabama. He believes that the pocket of oil that's been hit is so powerful and under so much pressure that it may be virtually impossible to contain it. And Noel is not the only person questioning the scope of this disaster.

A recent story from the Christian Science Monitor (CSM) reports that many independent scientists believe the leak is spewing far more than the 5,000 barrels, or 210,000 gallons, per day being reported by most media sources. They believe the leak could be discharging up to 25,000 barrels (more than one million gallons) of crude oil a day right now.

The riser pipe that was bent and crimped after the oil rig sank is restricting some of the flow from the tapped oil pocket, but as the leaking oil rushes into the well's riser, it is forcing sand with it at very high speeds and "sand blasting" the pipe (which is quickly eroding its structural integrity).

Bizarro Earth

Magnitude 7.2 - Northern Sumatra, Indonesia

Indon earthquake_090510
© USGSEarthquake Location
Date-Time:
Sunday, May 09, 2010 at 05:59:44 UTC

Sunday, May 09, 2010 at 12:59:44 PM at epicenter

Location:
3.728°N, 96.081°E

Depth:
61.4 km (38.2 miles)

Distances:
200 km (125 miles) SW of Lhokseumawe, Sumatra, Indonesia

220 km (135 miles) SSE of Banda Aceh, Sumatra, Indonesia

625 km (390 miles) W of KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia

1620 km (1010 miles) NW of JAKARTA, Java, Indonesia

Hourglass

Oil catcher dome hits snag near leak site -BP exec

BP says will take 48 hours to assess new solution

Robert, Louisiana - London-based BP Plc's plan to lower a giant containment dome to trap oil from a blown-out Gulf of Mexico oil well on the sea floor hit a technical obstacle on Saturday in the form of methane hydrates, or flammable ice, a BP (BP.L) executive said on Saturday.

BP officials are scrambling for a solution after methane hydrates stopped up the 98-ton containment dome as they were maneuvering it into place, Doug Suttles, BP's chief operating officer, told reporters at a briefing in Robert.

"As we were placing the dome over the leak source a large volume of hydrates formed inside the top of the dome, requiring us to move the dome to the side of the leak point," Suttles said. "I wouldn't say it's failed yet."

Bizarro Earth

Volcanic Sunset

Clouds of ash from Iceland's Eyjafjallajokull volcano are blowing across Europe again, closing airports and causing fantastic sunsets. Vincent Phillips sends this picture, taken May 7th from Hale Village near Liverpool, England:

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© Vincent Phillips Hale Village near Liverpool, England
"Volcanic ash from Iceland continues to influence our skies here in the UK, and as a massive ash cloud now gathers off the coast of Ireland, there could be many more fantastic volcanic sunsets and sunrises in the days ahead," says Phillips.

Bad Guys

Investigation: Rule Change Helped BP Dodge Preparedness Reporting on Deepwater Horizon Gulf of Mexico Project

containment for oil spill
© The Associated PressThe containment vessel is lowered into the Gulf of Mexico at the site of the Deepwater Horizon rig collapse, Thursday, May 6, 2010
A rule change two years ago by the federal agency that regulates offshore oil rigs allowed BP to avoid filing a plan for handling a major spill from a blowout at its Deepwater Horizon project - exactly the kind of disaster now unfolding in the Gulf of Mexico.

Oil rig operators generally are required to submit a detailed "blowout scenario." But the federal Minerals Management Service issued a notice in 2008 that exempted some drilling projects in the Gulf under certain conditions.

BP met those conditions, according to MMS, and as a result, the oil company had no plan written for the Deepwater Horizon project, an Associated Press review found.

In a series of interviews, BP spokesman William Salvin insisted the company was nevertheless prepared to handle a blowout because it had a 582-page regional plan for dealing with a catastrophic spill anywhere in the central Gulf.

"We have a plan that has sufficient detail in it to deal with a blowout," Salvin said.

MMS has long been criticized as too cozy with the industry it regulates.

Bizarro Earth

Bubble of methane triggered rig blast in Gulf of Mexico


The deadly blowout of an oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico was triggered by a bubble of methane gas that escaped from the well and shot up the drill column, expanding quickly as it burst through several seals and barriers before exploding, according to interviews with rig workers conducted during BP's internal investigation.

While the cause of the explosion is still under investigation, the sequence of events described in the interviews provides the most detailed account of the April 20 blast that killed 11 workers and touched off the underwater gusher that has poured more than 3 million gallons of crude into the Gulf.

Portions of the interviews, two written and one taped, were described in detail to an Associated Press reporter by Robert Bea, a University of California Berkeley engineering professor who serves on a National Academy of Engineering panel on oil pipeline safety and worked for BP PLC as a risk assessment consultant during the 1990s. He received them from industry friends seeking his expert opinion.

A group of BP executives were on board the Deepwater Horizon rig celebrating the project's safety record, according to the transcripts. Meanwhile, far below, the rig was being converted from an exploration well to a production well.

Bad Guys

South America Gets Rattled By Quake

South American countries Peru, Bolivia and Chile were all rattled by a 6.4 magnitude earthquake early Thursday, May 6.

Hundreds of Peruvians fled for safety in Tacna, Peru, around 26 km from the epicentre. The quake struck near the border of the three countries and was even felt in La Paz, Bolivia -- where the intensity was around 3 or 4.

Buildings shook and walls cracked but there have been no reports of heavy damage or deaths,

The movement in Chile was very strong --which didn't help ease people's earthquake fears. The country has been spooked since the February earthquake killed hundreds of people north of Santiago.

Bizarro Earth

Flash Floods Kill At Least 66 People in Afghanistan

Flash floods have killed at least 66 people and destroyed hundreds of houses in Afghanistan, the Government said.

Hundreds of livestock have also been destroyed by the flooding, caused by torrential rain in northern and western Afghanistan, said the head of the National Disaster Management Authority for the region.

"Twenty-three people have died in Badghis, 21 in Ghor and another 22 in Herat province,'' said Abdul Hameed Mubariz Hameedi, referring to the three worst-hit provinces.

The Afghan government and the United Nations have sent relief teams to the affected areas, which are among the poorest in the country.

Natural disasters are common in mountainous Afghanistan, where more than 200 people lost their lives in heavy avalanches earlier this year.

Bizarro Earth

Thunderstorms Kill 43 People in India

Fierce thunderstorms have uprooted trees and destroyed hundreds of homes, crushing dozens of people to death and injuring scores of others in northern India.

At least 43 people were killed and 70 hurt in the deluge and squalls.

The powerful storms slashed a wide swath across Uttar Pradesh and Bihar states, uprooting trees and power pylons and damaging homes and crops.

In eastern Uttar Pradesh, 21 people were killed and about 50 others injured when heavy rains lashed the region, police spokesman Surendra Srivastava said.

"A majority of the victims were crushed under uprooted trees or when houses collapsed due to the squall,'' he said.