Mother of all gushers - BP Oil Disaster in Gulf of Mexico

I am reading more and more info that 'appears' (being the operative word) to substantiate this was done intentionally. Coast Guard saying there was an explosion 3 hours before the rig actually went up (article has since been deleted), People saying that there were Bureau of Land management officials on board the same day to do 'safety' inspections (um really?). But of course, now, that begs the question why. Why was it done on purpose? That could be spun into all sorts of reasons. I've heard info from law officials talking about how they are gearing up members to do emergency training in evacuations, which they feel they will have to do as the methane gas spreads to coastal areas/cities. So now your'e talking FEMA involvement. Is this part of why they did it? To round up millions of people into 'camps'? In any case, I am finding myself struggling, as I'm sure many are, with the overwhelming emotions that are being created as a result of this disaster, intentional or otherwise. You're now talking its going to effect jobs of those in the fishing industry, destruction of ocean/coastal animal/plant life, effecting our oxygen supply due to the destruction of the plankton, effecting our food supply and water supply, destruction/collapse of seabeds, effecting tectonic ocean plates. The enormity of it is mind boggling really.

I mean no disrespect by this but I am wondering why we haven't heard anything from the C's on this. IMHO it is worse than 9/11 because now you're talking about the planet and effecting millions of people for years perhaps decades.
 
truthseeker said:
I mean no disrespect by this but I am wondering why we haven't heard anything from the C's on this. IMHO it is worse than 9/11 because now you're talking about the planet and effecting millions of people for years perhaps decades.

I might be wrong but I would say that the spill happened after the latest session. So maybe in the next one ???
 
I just received this email from our representative Gene Taylor concerning the oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico.

Dear Friends,
This week the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure held a hearing on the Deepwater oil spill in the Gulf. As a member of this committee, I had the opportunity to question the President and CEO of Transocean, Ltd., which is one of the companies responsible. I also questioned a director for the U.S. Department of Minerals Management Service. A video of these interrogations is now on my website along with a copy of the transcript.
The Gulf Oil section of my website provides up-to-date information on the ongoing situation, which I continue to monitor rigorously.

On Monday night, I will be part of the panel on WLOX-TV, which is airing a special, one hour, expanded edition of "WLOX News at 6: Coastal Crisis." I hope that you will tune in to watch and perhaps consider submitting a question to be asked to the panel.
GENE TAYLOR
Member of Congress

Rep. Gene Taylor (D-Miss.) posed tough questions to Steven Newton, President and CEO of Transocean, Ltd., one of the corporations responsible for the Gulf Oil spill. Through Rep. Taylor tough, pointed questions, Mr. Newton admitted that Transocean is owned by a Swiss parent company and its vessel in the U.S. waters of the Gulf operates under a foreign flag, that of the Mashall Island flag.

Rep. Taylor asked "given the harm this accident has caused - how much taxes did Transocean pay the United States of America last year, because you have obviously cost our nation a great deal of money? So I'm just curious what was the contribution of Transocean to our nation taxwise?" Mr. Newton claimed he did not know.

Transcript of the hearing:
HOUSE COMMITTEE ON TRANSPORTATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE

HEARING ON THE DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL

MAY 19, 2010

PANEL 1 WITNESSES:

LAMAR MCKAY, PRESIDENT, BRITISH PETROLEUM, P.L.C.

STEVEN NEWMAN, PRESIDENT AND CEO, TRANSOCEAN LTD


*** GENE TAYLOR EXCERPT ***

TAYLOR: Mr. Newman, was the -- where was the Deepwater Horizon built?

NEWMAN: The Deepwater Horizon was built in a shipyard in Korea.

TAYLOR: And under what flag did that vessel operate?

NEWMAN: The vessel operates under the flag of the Marshall Islands.

TAYLOR: How many drilling rigs or ships does Transocean have?

NEWMAN: 139.

TAYLOR: How many of those are flagged in the United States of America?

NEWMAN: I don’t know the answer to that question.

TAYLOR: Are any of the sister ships of the Deepwater Horizon flagged under the American flag?

NEWMAN: There is one sister ship to the Deepwater Horizon, which is the Nautilus. I don’t know what flag the Nautilus operates under.

TAYLOR: Mr. Newman, you obviously are aware, as Mr. Cao pointed out, of the enormous amount of suffering the people of the Gulf Coast have gone through, first with the loss of 11 lives. But the enormous amount of suffering that continues as a result of this mishap. The loss of income; the uncertainty whether the shrimp crop will ever come back; the long term effects of the seafood industry. People immediately lost a paycheck. My way, just devastated the tourism industry, the seafood industry. Seafood processors being told “Don’t send me any American-processed shrimp. We don’t know if it’s got oil on it. I want nothing but imports.” You guys have really messed things up.

So my question is – given the harm this accident has caused – how much taxes did Transocean pay the United States of America last year, because you have obviously cost our nation a great deal of money? So I’m just curious what was the contribution of Transocean to our nation taxwise?

NEWMAN: I don’t have that number available with me today.

TAYLOR: Well, let me ask you another question. There has been a tendency for some foreign flag operators to create a separate entity for the work they do in the Gulf of Mexico. It's called a corporate inversion. And they see to it that the costs that they pay to the parent company, either through the mortgage on the vessels or the -- the overhead costs that the parent company charges them, they see to it that that exceeds their revenues or is very close to their revenues, so they end up paying no U.S. taxes, even though they're operating in the Gulf of Mexico.

So my question to you is, is that part of your company that operates in the Gulf of Mexico an inverted corporation?

NEWMAN: The company that operates in the Gulf of Mexico is a U.S. company. It's a Delaware corporation.

TAYLOR: OK. But is it owned by a parent corporation?

NEWMAN: Yes, it is owned by a parent company.

TAYLOR: And where is the headquarters of the parent corporation?

NEWMAN: The ultimate parent company, Transocean Limited, is a Swiss corporation.

TAYLOR: OK. Mr. Chairman, the reason I ask these questions is, you know, since the earliest days of our republic, we've reserved the right of coast-wide commerce for American-made, American-crewed, and American-built vessels. Now, somebody somewhere along the line has given these folks an exemption from that law.

And when we go to recover the funds, that the enormous amount of money that the Air Force, the Coast Guard, all the state governments, city governments hiring extra policemen, extra firemen, the call-up of the National Guard, when we go to recover those funds, I've got to believe it would be a heck of a lot easier to recover those funds from an American company that's got some assets here in the United States than someone in Switzerland.

Tell me again where the ship was actually flagged, in the Marshall Islands?

NEWMAN: The ship was operating under a Marshall Islands flag.

TAYLOR: Marshall Islands. And, again, given what the people of Mississippi went through just trying to get the insurance industry in America to pay claims in Mississippi after Katrina, I have a very strong suspicion we're going to have a heck of a time getting someone out of the Marshall Islands or Switzerland to pay these bills.

So, Mr. Chairman, I would hope that you would give -- and, again, they're pulling American minerals out of the ground on an American sea bottom with a foreign flag vessel and, quite possibly, a foreign crew.

Mr. Chairman, with all respect, I would certainly hope that, when we go forward from this, that you would give every consideration to extending the Jones Act to cover this sort of vessel in this sort of circumstance.

I thank you very much.

CHAIRMAN JAMES OBERSTAR: The gentleman and I have had conversation about the application of Jones Act to this situation, and I have asked staff to prepare a guidance memorandum on the applicable law and the problems of dealing with the WTO requirements.

And there are some legal obstacles that we have to overcome on some aspects of that issue, so this is something that the gentleman and I and others of interest in the committee will work our way through. But I appreciate the gentleman raising that issue; it's of vital importance.




PANEL 2 WITNESSES:

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY ADMINISTRATOR LISA JACKSON

JANE LUBCHENCO, ADMINISTRATOR, NATIONAL OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION

REAR ADMIRAL BRIAN M. SALERNO, ASSISTANT COMMANDANT FOR MARINE SAFETY, SECURITY, AND STEWARDSHIP, U.S. COAST GUARD

REAR ADMIRAL PETER NEFFENGER, U.S. COAST GUARD

S. ELIZABETH BIRNBAUM, DIRECTOR, MINERALS MANAGEMENT SERVICE

SYLVIA EARLE, PH.D., EXPLORER-IN-RESIDENCE, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY


*** GENE TAYLOR EXCERPT ***

TAYLOR: Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

And thank you, gentlemen, for sticking around. We've had the Armed Services markup today.

Admiral, it really struck me -- number one, let me commend Captain Ed -- Captain Ed Stanton for the work that he has done in trying to make the best of a terrible situation. Between the booms, the dispersants, he was handed a really bad situation and has tried to make something that's really terrible less bad.

But one of the things that the average citizen would really be surprised at, and has been surprised at, is they thought of booms, both the containment boom, the absorbent booms and even the collection booms, it took a while for it to sink in to the general public that they're only good to about one knot of current and about three foot seas.

Going back to 1971, that technology really hasn't changed much in 40 years. I think those were the same numbers 40 years ago, when you ran me through Yorktown.

So my question is - I realize that the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 was passed and a lot of things that were in place then, a lot of the technologies that were in place then are still being used. What I think is missing -- and I understand that there would always be those who said if we forced to you upgrade the booms in the absence of a spill, somebody would scream foul, that why are you making them spend money in the absence of a spill.

But now that it has happened, has the coast guard looked around to NOAA, or the Navy, or anyone in the private sector and identified a better boom? Because, again, you can't collect unless it's less than one knot of current with three-foot seas. You can't collect it and burn it unless you have less than one knot of current and three-foot seas. Those have both been -- and you can't contain it unless it's one knot of current in three-foot seas. And all of those things are not the norm in the Gulf of Mexico, nor would they be the norm off the Atlantic or Pacific coast.

So have there been advances in boom technology that we have not taken advantage of or mandated to those companies that are in the business of responding to a spill?

SALERNO: Sir, I'm not aware of any technology that hasn't been taken advantage of. I would agree with you that the technology really hasn't changed all that much. There is, as Ms. Birnbaum indicated, a test facility in Leonardo, New Jersey, that looks at new capabilities. I think there have been -- maybe been some minor incremental changes, but nothing of an order of magnitude that we would all like to see.

TAYLOR: Ms. Birnbaum, at the hearing in New Orleans, Captain Nguyen has a really profound statement when he said, referring to the blowout preventer, it was designed to industry standard, manufactured by the industry, and installed by the industry with no government witnessing or oversight of the construction or installation.

I don't mind the private sector designing it. I have no problem with the private sector building it. I have no problem with the private sector installing it.

What I do have a problem with, if that is true, is that no one from your agency really has the expertise to see if it's going to work.

Is that true? Because Captain Nguyen sure implied that in his statement.

BIRNBAUM: I do not believe that that is correct. We have more than...

TAYLOR: OK. Why don't you -- why don't you correct it for the record?

BIRNBAUM: We have more than five pages of regulations actually covering what a blowout preventer must do. In addition, we do inspect them. We don't inspect them at every time that the operator tests them. We require them to test them every 14 days when they're in operation. But we do inspect them when they're visible on the rig deck and we do have people with the capacity to inspect them and determine whether they're in working order. Our inspectors also review the logs of the tests that go on in between their visits to the rigs.

TAYLOR: The questions that were raised by Congressman Stupak as far as either the dead or missing battery, the leaking hydraulics, would you address those at this time? Because it doesn't sound to me, if that is true, that you folks were doing your job.

BIRNBAUM: I really cannot speak to those matters, because those matters that are subject to the current investigation. There are a lot of rumors going on. There's that information. There's the information that everybody saw on "60 Minutes" or I read the transcript of.

All of that information is part of the ongoing investigation and we don't yet know what happened, we don't yet know exactly what was wrong with the blowout preventer.

And I have to say that I have personally stayed away from the details of the outcome of the investigation because it's required to be an independent investigation. So I can't tell what you has been discovered and what is determined to be true or false. We won't really know until that stack is pulled and is basically reverse engineered, is examined to determine what's going on with it.

TAYLOR: Ma'am, for the record, if you can't do it now, how do you check a battery being there or being alive or dead when it's 5,000 feet down? How do you check to see if -- and I appreciate that all hydraulics leak a little bit. So it's the degree of the leak and how much it affected the ram. How do you test that 5,000 feet down?

BIRNBAUM: We do require testing, as I said, every 14 days while it's on the sea floor, and they are required to pressure it up. That should indicate if it's operational.

However, we are also looking at the question of whether there ought to be additional test procedures that we would require, and we are examining all of that, as I said, in addition to safety precautions that we will consider, and the secretary may recommend further testing as part of his recommendations to the president. We are looking at all of that.

TAYLOR: Do any countries require two blowout preventers?

BIRNBAUM: Not...

TAYLOR: Do any mandate a redundancy?

BIRNBAUM: Not that I know of. There has actually been some information about what other countries require, and just to clarify, we don't know of any nation that actually requires an acoustic trigger, which a lot of people have suggested that Norway or Brazil or Canada requires.

We've inquired with their regulatory bodies, because we didn't think that they did, and their regulatory bodies have informed us that their policies are very similar to ours, that they do require a secondary backup mechanism. That may be an acoustic trigger, that may be a backup trigger using an ROV, as was tried in this case, which was the backup mechanism for this blowout preventer.

But we are looking at everything that might serve as more safety measures to require on blowout preventers. I don't know of anybody who requires two.

TAYLOR: Mr. Chairman, you've been generous.

Admiral, for the record, because I know Mr. Cummings deserves his turn, for the record, I would like you side by side to compare what sort of inspections you had on that foreign flag drill ship as opposed to had that been an American flag vessel.

SALERNO: Sir, this is a foreign flag. It is flagged in Marshall Islands. And so what we do essentially is a port-state control type inspection, although it's very extensive. We seek to -- just as a general statement, we look for parity. We want to make sure that that rig when it's operating on our outer continental shelf meets a level of safety and equipment standards and environmental protection equivalent to a U.S. flag rig of the same type.

For a U.S. flag rig, of course, it's Coast Guard inspected. We go through it from the design phase all the way through its life cycle. There are periodic inspections that are required. Coast Guard people go out and visit it.

We visit the rig to perform structural examinations as well, or dry dock surveys. Typically, they're done while the rig is floating. We make sure that they're adequately manned. All of the safety systems are checks on a regular basis, including drills for firefighting, lifesaving. We pay very close attention to hazardous conditions.

On a foreign rig, we look at all of that same equipment, but we also -- there are some differences because on a foreign rig, a lot of the work, for example, the hull structural surveys, would be performed by a recognized organization authorized by the flag state. Typically, it's a classification society.

We would make sure that they are current, in compliance with all international requirements, and with our requirements for operations on the outer continental shelf. We also take a first-hand look at all of their firefighting, lifesaving, hazardous conditions on a rig, just as we would on a U.S. rig to make sure that there are no obviously safety hazards for that ship operating.

So we approach it somewhat differently between U.S. and foreign, but we make sure that all of the same types of checks have been performed either directly by us or by a recognized authority for a foreign flag vessel so that there is parity for the safety level, whether it is U.S. or foreign.

I hope that answers your question.

Gulf Oil Update:
For the latest in the Gulf Oil response from the Department of Defense (DoD), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the U.S. Coast Guard, and BP, please go to Gulf Oil Update on my website. There you will find information and articles regarding the status of the ongoing efforts of the Federal government to address and solve the challenges that this explosion has brought. Click here for BP Claims Submission Form, Federal disaster assistance information, and many other fact sheet forms. Other forms will be uploaded as they become available.

Link Here: http://www.taylor.house.gov/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1639&Itemid=114

View From Above:
BILOXI — On Thursday, the one-month anniversary of the Deepwater Horizon explosion, the Gulf oil spill appeared to have moved further from Mississippi shores. A helicopter flight over the area revealed small, patchy sheets of sheen could be seen starting about 40 miles out from Gulfport. Oil in the form of pinkish-orange streaks and patches was visible about 70 miles from Gulfport.

Boats pulling boom were collecting the oil for skimmer ships. About 20 miles away from the Deepwater Horizon site, crews were burning oil.

Bill Walker, head of the Mississippi Department of Marine Resources, had arranged the National Guard flight for local media. He said the bulk of the spill appears to be moving further from Mississippi shores, and breaking up from the skimming, burning and dispersant use.

Current within a current

NOAA Administrator Jane Lubchenco said her agency would more aggressively study the loop current in the Gulf, which has the potential of moving the spill south dramatically. But trajectories Thursday showed the spill being affected more by a part of the loop current that flows in a circle in the middle of the Gulf.

BP concedes it’s more

Scientists who have been saying more oil is gushing into the Gulf than BP has been estimating were proven right Thursday as BP conceded the point and federal agencies tackled the job of accurately calculating the flow.

This week is not the first time BP has been corrected about its estimates of oil flow in this slow-motion disaster unfolding in the Gulf. Early on, BP estimated the gusher at 1,000 barrels a day until satellite images of the spill size, translated through the academic community, put the flow at least five times that. BP began using the 5,000-barrels-a-day figure.

Now one estimate put before Congress this week has the flow as high as 95,000 barrels per day. Another professor put it at 50,000.

The news came as more of the brown mousse-like crude came ashore in Louisiana’s sensitive southernmost marshes, coating everything in its path.

Reining in BP

The federal government took the reins in two key areas Thursday. The EPA gave the company 24 hours to pick a less-toxic and more-effective dispersant, the chemical BP uses to break up and sink the oil, and the EPA and Homeland Security sent a letter to BP requiring the company to “promptly provide the United States government and the public all data from the spill.”

By midmorning Thursday, live footage of the flow was available on the Internet showing a large plume of oil and gas spewing into the water next to the stopper-and-tube BP had inserted to carry some of the crude to the surface. The House committee Web site where the video was posted promptly crashed as so many people tried to view it.

"These videos stand as a scalding, blistering indictment of BP's inattention to the scope and size of the greatest environmental catastrophe in the history of the United States," said Rep. Edward J. Markey, D-Mass.
Larry Schweiger, president of the National Wildlife Federation, called the Gulf of Mexico a crime scene and said, "The public deserves sound science, not sound bites."

Flow rate hard to pin down

NOAA's Lubchenco, fielding questions from reporters, called the task of determining how much oil is coming to the surface, "extraordinarily challenging."
She said BP's flow estimates had always been considered rough and the response was never based on its figures.

She said a federal interagency task force would get to the bottom of the issue and produce a credible flow amount based on science and reviewed by peers. She said it was important to know how much oil is flowing into the Gulf.

She said NOAA would use boats, such as the Gordon Gunter in Pascagoula, to collect water and surface data and try to get a handle on the amount of oil that's been reported floating under the surface.

Dispersants defended

Lubchenco defended the decision to use oil dispersants, even though they're toxic. Sinking the oil was an attempt to keep it out of the marshes and bayous. Dispersants are significantly less toxic than oil, she said. However, BP has four days to find and begin using a dispersant less toxic than Corexit

Reports have surfaced that BP's own United Kingdom has for 10 years banned a form of the dispersant the oil giant chose to use in the Gulf — Corexit 9500 and 9500a. John Schoen, a spokesman for Nalco, the manufacturer, told the Sun Herald that report needs to be qualified. The UK bans dispersants that cannot be used along a shoreline.

"Our product is to be used in open water only," Schoen said. And that's where it has been used in the Gulf.

U.S. senators in Florida and California called for a Justice Department probe into claims BP made when it sought the drilling permit for the Deepwater Horizon rig. The company claimed it had the technology necessary to handle a big oil spill in the Gulf.

Firm staging in Biloxi

A company from North Carolina, Hepco, began filling a major staging area between Biloxi and Gulfport on DeBuys Road on Thursday afternoon, packing in 60 to 70 medium-sized tanker and vacuum trucks, three large trucks, dozens of boats and a swarm of workers.

The flurry of activity stirred concern BP's ramping up meant something for Coast beaches, but Harrison County's emergency management director, Rupert Lacy, said ramping up is the kind of action the county needs from BP, both for general protection and the economic value.

On Thursday more than 930 vessels were working as skimmers, tugs, barges and recovery vessels. BP reported recovering a total of 187,000 barrels of oily liquid; deploying more than 1.9 million feet of boom, 500,000 feet of it absorbent; and paying about 8,000 of the 19,000 claims filed.

Scientist: undersea oil indicated from leak is a mystery?

Are you kidding me???!?!?!?

BILOXI, Miss. -- More study is needed to determine how much oil from the Deepwater Horizon leak remains submerged in the depths of the Gulf of Mexico, according University of Southern Mississippi oceanographer Vernon Asper.

Asper, chairman of the Commission on Marine Resources, responded to weekend news reports that scientists had found deepwater oil plumes, one 10 miles long, 3 miles wide and up to 300 feet thick.
He was one of several scientists who spent two weeks within 30 miles of the oil spill site taking samples on the research vessel Pelican.

"We don't have any idea of how much oil is down there, if it is oil," Asper said after Tuesday's commission meeting.

"We call it a working hypothesis that it is oil. It has all the indications so far that is what it is, but we just don't know."

The plumes were discovered using ultraviolet light that is reflected by organic molecules, he said. Water samples were also taken, he said.

"If you look at those water samples, they are clear," he said. "You can't see any oil. So, if it is oil it is not a lot of oil compared to what you see on the surface. The stuff on the surface is significant."

Asper said the reports of giant subsurface oil plumes were blown out of proportion in the news.

"It is an interesting finding, but it is nothing to panic about," Asper said. "It could be a good thing if the oil is down there and not on the surface. We won't know until we do some analyses."

No connection could be made between the plume and dispersants, he said.

Lower oxygen levels around the spill were detected, but they are "not a cause of massive concern."

Asper said no dead marine life was spotted during the voyage.

"I cannot stress enough, we don't know what is down there. It is just an electrical signal from an optical device at this point and that is all we know," he said.

Eastern portion of Louisiana Marsh reopened for fishing : I wouldn't eat ANYTHING from these waters for a very long time.

By Al Jones - Sun Herald, May 19, 2010

The eastern portion of the Louisiana Marsh has been reopened by state officials.
The marsh, which includes the Biloxi Marsh, was closed last week by the Louisiana Department of Wildlife due to the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

On Wednesday, Sonny Schindler of Shore Thing Charters in Bay St. Louis, reported clear water, large amounts of baitfish and plenty of speckled trout, redfish and white trout.

‘‘It is beautiful,’’ he said. ‘‘You can load the boat with white trout and there’s plenty of specks and redfish, too.

‘‘We saw shrimp, pogies and minnows. In all, we caught 20 trout with several near four-pounds while scouting our normal spots. We fished 5-to-7 miles deep into the marsh and caught fish at every stop. This is great news.’’

Well, here you have it. Lots of lies, back-peddling, finger-pointing and a whole lot of nothing while a good portion of the Gulf of Mexico is slowly poisoned to death.


Cleaning up this mess will be like trying to soak up the Great Lakes one teaspoon at a time....


Here's a YouTube link that shows a time-laps video from a birds-eye view. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u2_UXTQ2JJk&feature=player_embedded#!
 
I stumbled across some info at whatreallyhappended.com that lead to a link regarding benzene and that Florida may be evacuated (http://sfawbn.com/news/?p=1923). It seemed to be pure speculation so I googled and this came up:

http://www.examiner.com/x-17299-Hernando-County-Political-Buzz-Examiner~y2010m5d9-Gulf-Oil-Spill-2010-Plans-to-evacuate-Tampa-Bay-area-expected-to-be-announced said:
Florida Gulf oil spill: Plans to evacuate Tampa Bay area are in place

As FEMA and other government agencies prepare for what is now being called by some, the worst oil spill disaster in history, plans to evacuate the Tampa Bay area are in place.

The plans would be announed in the event of a controlled burn of surface oil in the Gulf of Mexico, if wind or other conditions are expected to take the toxic fumes through Tampa Bay.

This practice is common for the US Forestry service, when fire and smoke threaten the health and well being of people.

The elderly and those with respiratory problems would be more susceptible to health risks, in the event of a controlled burn.

Estimates of the rate of BP's Deepwater Horizon oil spill have varied. SkyTruth.com, estimates the numbers at more than 1 million gallons a day, based on satellite and Coast Guard images.

Since the April 20th explosion, which resulted in the sinking of the rig, there have been more than 650,000 gallons of chemicals poured into the Gulf of Mexico in efforts to break up the spill. However, the chemicals have come under some scrutiny recently, because of their own toxic nature.

It is not certain if the massive slick will have to be set on fire near Tampa Bay, but the possibility has not been ruled out. BP has been using controlled burns as a way to control the oil spill since the crisis began more than a month ago.

The top google links were from _http://www.godlikeproductions.com/forum1/message1074627/pg1 indicating MASSIVE MULTI STATE GUARD MOBILIZATION. Also, previously, I was listening to some recent talk radio, which I don't consider reliable, but it was stated that Blackwater and the Coast Guard were present on Deepwater Horizon rig and held the crew for 28 hrs with no food (only coffee) until they signed some kind of release regarding liability. Supposedly, one of the crew was on NPR live during this siege and there was some kind of incident (explosions/gunfire? - can't remember now) 3 hours before the rig actually destructed. It was said that the live conversation was later edited and now doesn't include all the pertinent information. There is some speculation that this is just one of the planned events to bring about the prophecies of Revelations. (Also note the mysterious fungal disease that has broken out on the US west coast that could be seen as a plague.)

Disinfo or some basis in fact yet to be determined. Hopefully, forum members may be able to provide more facts regarding this disaster.
 
Regarding mobilization:

http://freepressinternational.com/breaking-world-news/ said:

Reports Surfacing of Multi-State National Guard Mobilizations


Eye witness reports from Georgia, Minnesota, Alabama, Kansas, and perhaps Texas suggest large scale mobilizations and deployment in progress for National Guard Units.

We were under the impression that National Guard in Georgia were being deployed to help evacuate Florida in the event of toxic fumes from the oil spill if the government decided to light the booms.

However, we are seeing reports from multiple states throughout the country.

The Minnesota mobilization has been confirmed by MPR News, as of May 20, 2010 but suggests deployment may not be immediate:

Soldiers and families around Minnesota know there’s a deployment in their future. Within the next few months, 2,700 Minnesota National Guard soldiers from around the state will get their training orders for deployment.

It’s not clear yet which units of the 1st Brigade Combat Team will be activated. But this alert marks the largest deployment of Minnesota military forces since World War II.

The Minnesota Guard deployment above is reportedly for soldiers deploying to the middle east next year.

Reports regarding the Georgia National Guard are from a person close to a soldier that is being deployed:

Just got a call from my son…driving home from spring semester at North Georgia College. He is in the reserves and attending the Corps of Cadets there. He is telling me something big is up. Just got a call from his unit that they are mobilizing immediately. ALL GEORGIA UNITS. Unconfirmed at the moment. Don’t see anything on any big news besides Korea. Wonder if there is more going on there than we think….will break more as I find out whether this is a big deal or not.

From Kansas:

My old friend who’s in the army and just got back from Iraq and is not due to go to Afghanistan until August was just deployed too. He’s reserved in Kansas, so it’s definitly not the oil. I don’t know if everyone has been deployed, only him.

I’m hoping it is something minor or just a coincidence, deployment from more than one state is DEFINITLY not a good sign.

EDIT TO ADD: Just called his mom, I am talking to his mom right now. She doesn’t know what’s going on or where he’s going, he couldn’t tell her anything except “I love you and I am being deployed”. I am not one to be afraid because most things are just rediculous, but I’m am hoping this is just a mere coincidence.

Texas:

I have lived in the Tomball, Texas area forabout 33 years. I know whats normal and whats not. I also workout side and can tell you the type of helo by the sound. With that in mind.

Today I have seen wave after wave of Blackhawks pushing hard toward the east/southeast over Tomball. These things were nose-down and they were moving. VERY NOT normal. Just thought I’d FYI.

Possibly Exercises?

A mobile Iraqi war zone has taken shape on the rolling plains and ridges of eastern Wyoming, the latest incarnation of an Army National Guard training exercise meant to quickly shape citizen soldiers into battle-ready warriors.

…The Wyoming National Guard’s Camp Guernsey is currently hosting the training exercise for the Nebraska Guard’s 67th Battlefield Surveillance Brigade, which is scheduled for deployment to Iraq this summer. About 1,400 soldiers from the 67th and other units are honing their skills in the makeshift Middle Eastern environment for three weeks in May.

More Training:

The New York Air National Guard’s Eastern Air Defense Sector (EADS) is participating in a large scale North American Aerospace Defense Command and U.S. Northern Command air defense exercise designed to train military members to respond to potential scenarios that could affect the Continental U.S. May 16-20.

EADS is performing its homeland defense mission of detecting, identifying, tracking and possibly scrambling aircraft. Although held in Georgia, members from the unit will control the exercise missions from Rome, N.Y.

There has been no official confirmation from the US government or State governments involved. Mainstream news has yet to pick up this story.
 
Thanks, JEEP - this was posted earlier today on SOTT: http://www.sott.net/articles/show/209201-Reports-Surfacing-of-Multi-State-National-Guard-Mobilizations
 
Thanks 1984 - just saw it myself on Sott. Here's something on air quality from the oil spill:

http://www.southernstudies.org/2010/05/air-tests-from-the-louisiana-coast-reveal-human-health-threats-from-the-oil-disaster.html said:
Air tests from the Louisiana coast reveal human health threats from the oil disaster

Today the Louisiana Environmental Action Network released its analysis of air monitoring test results by the Environmental Protection Agency. The EPA's air testing data comes from Venice, a coastal community 75 miles south of New Orleans in Louisiana's Plaquemines Parish.

The findings show that levels of airborne chemicals have far exceeded state standards and what's considered safe for human exposure.

For instance, hydrogen sulfide has been detected at concentrations more than 100 times greater than the level known to cause physical reactions in people. Among the health effects of hydrogen sulfide exposure are eye and respiratory irritation as well as nausea, dizziness, confusion and headache.

Louisiana's ambient air standard for the VOC benzene, for example, is 3.76 ppb, while its standard for methylene chloride is 61.25 ppb. Long-term exposure to airborne benzene has been linked to cancer, while the EPA considers methylene chloride a probable carcinogen.

Air testing results show VOC concentrations far above these state standards. On May 6, for example, the EPA measured VOCs at levels of 483 ppb. The highest levels detected to date were on April 30, at 3,084 ppb, following by May 2, at 3,416 ppb.

Here's a chart based on the data from LEAN's analysis, which was done by award-winning analytical chemist Wilma Subra:

The concentration threshold for people to experience physical symptoms from hydrogen sulfide is about 5 to 10 parts per billion. But as recently as last Thursday, the EPA measured levels at 1,000 ppb. The highest levels of airborne hydrogen sulfide measured so far were on May 3, at 1,192 ppb.

Testing data also shows levels of volatile organic chemicals that far exceed Louisiana's own ambient air standards. VOCs cause acute physical health symptoms including eye, skin and respiratory irritation as well as headaches, dizziness, weakness, nausea and confusion.

lean_analysis_oil_spill_air-thumb-450x285.jpg


(Satellite image of the Gulf oil spill taken May 9 from SkyTruth.)
skytruth_oil_image_5-9-2010.jpg

From: http://gazbom.blogspot.com/2010/05/benzene-killer-plans-in-place-to.html
Hopi prophecy: you will hear of the sea turning black

Accident or plan? Not looking good at all.
 
Headlines -

Oiled pelicans, and eggs, along coast

Louisiana won't wait for federal OK, moves to build berms

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/37306684/ns/us_news-environment/

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Even if some of these oiled birds are captured and cleaned up, the natural waterproofing oils that protect the birds when they immerse themselves in seawater is also taken away. They become unable to feed and eventually starve to death anyway. :(
 
http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1202458416347&pos=ataglance

Interior Department Hit With Lawsuit Over BP Oil Spill

Marcia Coyle

The National Law Journal

May 19, 2010

As lawsuits over the BP oil spill mount, a group of conservationists and fishermen have a new target: the U.S. Department of Interior's Minerals Management Service.

Earthjustice, an environmental law firm, and New Orleans' Waltzer & Wiygul filed suit in federal court on Tuesday against the federal agency. The suit -- Gulf Restoration Network and Sierra Club v. Salazar -- charges that the agency violated federal law by exempting oil companies that drill in the Gulf of Mexico from disclosing blowout and worst-case spill scenarios as well as plans for dealing with them before approving the companies' offshore drilling plans.

For the BP Deepwater Horizon exploration plan, the Minerals Management Service, according to the suit, had issued notices to the oil companies that they did not have to comply with the blowout and worst-case oil spill rules. The agency also failed to analyze the potential environmental impact of a blowout and spill as required by the National Environmental Policy Act.

"This case is about lax regulation by the Minerals Management Service," said Earthjustice attorney David Guest in a statement. "It is actually easier to get a permit for an offshore oil well than for a hot dog stand."

The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court in the Eastern District of Louisiana, seeks to invalidate the agency's practice of sending notices to oil companies informing them they don't have to comply with the rules and to order review of existing offshore drilling plans that do not comply with existing rules.

"The basic problem here is that the Minerals Management Service tried to change the law without telling anybody," said Robert Wiygul. "That's bad policy, and the BP mess proves it's a disaster for the environment."

The federal agency, at press time, had no comment on the lawsuit.
 
It's interesting to note that FEMA has removed the phrase "Unified Command / USCG Response:" from its on-line National Situation Updates. It was changed to "FEMA Actions" last week.

*******

National Situation Update: Thursday, May 13, 2010
Homeland Security Threat Level: YELLOW (ELEVATED).

_http://www.fema.gov/emergency/reports/2010/nat052010.shtm

Mississippi Canyon 252 Update:

Unified Command / USCG Response:
Current Situation and Operations
The well head continues to discharge approximately 210,000 gallons of oil a day. Over 4 million gallons of oil-water mixture have been recovered to date. Resources have been shifted away from the cofferdam, which is currently on the sea floor, to a smaller device called a “top hat.” It could be up to 2 weeks before the top hat is functional. A pressure gauge was successfully installed on the Blowout Preventer. Readings from the pressure gauge on the Blowout Preventer indicate a restriction in oil flow. Drilling operations for the relief well remain delayed until further testing of the riser and blow out preventer is conducted. All shipping channels and ports remain open in the Gulf Coast Region. Cleaning stations were established offshore and in the Mississippi River to remove oil from ship hulls. A total of 436,246 gallons of surface dispersants and 27, 899 gallons of subsea dispersants have been applied to date. All dispersants operations suspended pending an operational audit and all in Situ Burn/skimming operations have been suspended due to weather conditions. Booming operations continue with more than 1.5 million feet of boom deployed. Thirteen staging areas are in place to protect sensitive shorelines: 3 in Alabama, 2 in Florida, 5 in Louisiana and 3 in Mississippi. Air monitoring was conducted between Venice, LA and Panama City, FL to address public concerns for oil vapors; no oil vapors were detected.
Environmental Impacts
Recreational and commercial fishing areas remain closed in impacted areas of the Gulf of Mexico. Oil has been confirmed on Chandeleur and Free Mason Islands in wetlands and beaches. Skimmers have been deployed to Chandeleur Islands and the Rigolets (an 8 mile long straight in Louisiana). Tar balls found along a 2 mile strip on Dauphin Island, Alabama were cleaned. Protective snare booms remain deployed around the island. Florida Department of Environmental Protection reports beaches are open; no oil landfall is expected in the next 48 hours. Twenty-five National Wildlife Refugees adjacent to the Gulf of Mexico have potential for impacts from the oil spill.
(DHS SITREP)
Federal Actions
The lead federal agencies responding to the incident are the U.S. Coast Guard and the U.S. Department of Interior.
(DHS National Operations Center)

___________________________________

National Situation Update: Thursday, May 20, 2010
Homeland Security Threat Level: YELLOW (ELEVATED).

_http://www.fema.gov/emergency/reports/2010/nat052010.shtm

Mississippi Canyon 252 Update

FEMA Actions
The lead federal agencies responding to the incident are the U.S. Coast Guard and the U.S. Department of Interior. FEMA is providing the U.S. Coast Guard with radios for communications support for Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama.

Riser Insertion Tube Tool (RITT-1) is in place recovering an oil and gas mixture with no water at the separator. It is siphoning off approximately 147,000 gallons of oil and 12 million cubic feet of natural gas per day. Siphoned oil is being stored on board the Discoverer Enterprise drill ship, with the capability to separate the oil, gas and water mixture, burn off the gas, and eventually store or offload the recovered oil onto another vessel. The Top Hat Containment System remains on the seabed and is standing-by pending the effectiveness of the RITT. Containment and sorbent booms and surface and subsurface disbursements and skimming operations resulted in the recovery of 7,873,992 gallons of oil-water mixture to date. Controlled burns were conducted for the last two days to remove oil from the open water. Monitored injection of subsea dispersants near the RITT continued overnight.

The National Park Service is deploying hydrocarbon sensors on beaches in the Dry Tortugas, Florida, to monitor for oil/tar balls. All shipping channels and ports remain open. No large commercial vessels have required cleaning at decontamination stations. The area closed to commercial and recreational fishing encompasses approximately 19 percent of the Gulf of Mexico exclusive economic zone. The majority (81%) of federal waters in the Gulf of Mexico remain open to commercial and recreational fishing. All inland Alabama waters, including Mobile Bay, Mississippi Sound, Perdido Bay, Wolf Bay, and Little Lagoon are closed to shrimping.
(Deepwater Horizon JIC Rpt)
 
Taking a look at the online videos showing of the rate of flow coming from a 21-inch pipe, I believe the flow far exceeds what they are claiming (210,00 Gallons a day). Anyone know how much water the average in-ground swimming pool holds? There are claims the river of oil on the ocean floor is 300 miles long by 100 miles wide by 300 feet thick. Sounds like a lot more oil per day than they are admitting.
 
Here is an informative map showing the 'progress' of the oil spill, including the currents, closed fishing areas, etc.

_http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/05/01/us/20100501-oil-spill-tracker.html?src=tptw
 
According to this week's update, FEMA has gone from "providing the U.S. Coast Guard with radios for communications support for Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama" to"supporting the operation by providing personnel to the National Integration Center as well as Logistics and External Affairs support "

_________________________________________________
National Situation Update: Monday, May 24, 2010
Homeland Security Threat Level: YELLOW (ELEVATED).

FEMA Actions
FEMA is supporting the operation by providing personnel to the National Integration Center as well as Logistics and External Affairs support for the Federal On-Scene Coordinator.
Situational Update
243,859 barrels (10,242,078 gallons) of oily water mixture has been recovered and 788,663 gallons (686,904 gallons surface/101,759 gallons subsea) of dispersants have been deployed to date. The Riser Insertion Tube Tool (RITT) remains inserted; recovery of oil/gas mixture continues; an average of 2,143 barrels (90,000 gallons) of oil is recovered daily. Drill Rig DDIII drilling operations continue with a depth at 10,100 feet below the sea floor. Drill Rig DDII current drill depth is 6,750 ft below the sea floor; casing has been set and cemented.
__________________________________


_http://www.fema.gov/about/divisions/nic.shtm
National Integration Center
Overview

The National Integration Center (NIC) is responsible for developing, managing, and coordinating all homeland security training, education (external), exercise and lessons learned programs, as required, to ensure the Nation is prepared to prevent, protect against, respond to, recover from, and mitigate all hazards, natural or manmade.
 
Hey everybody, some folk last night said that the attempt for 'top kill' would take place today. True? Thanks.
 
Interesting video on the possible evacuation of the Gulf Coast. Lots of speculation, claims the "leak" is intentional, could contain dis-info, but still interesting.

_http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4KbcLMxBV2o&feature=player_embedded#!
 
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