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Oil Plagues Sound 20 Years After Exxon Valdez
Future risk assessments must look at longer impacts, recovery council says
Twenty years after the Exxon Valdez spilled 11 million gallons of crude oil in Alaska's Prince William Sound, oil persists in the region and, in some places, "is nearly as toxic as it was the first few weeks after the spill," according to the council overseeing restoration efforts.
Rescue workers hold a cormorant that was caught in the Exxon Valdez oil spill. (Gary Braasch / Corbis) "This Exxon Valdez oil is decreasing at a rate of 0-4 percent per year," the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council stated in a report marking Tuesday's 20th anniversary of the worst oil spill in U.S. waters. "At this rate, the remaining oil will take decades and possibly centuries to disappear entirely."
The council's findings come two decades after the March 24, 1989 disaster, when the single-hulled Exxon tanker hit a reef, emptying its contents into Alaskan waters. The spill contaminated more than 1,200 miles of shoreline and killed hundreds of thousands of seabirds and marine animals.
Captain convicted of misdemeanor
The council, made up of three state and three federal appointees, was created to administer the $900 million that Exxon paid to settle lawsuits filed after the accident, which also resulted in criminal charges against the ship's captain, Joseph Hazelwood.
Hazelwood, was accused but then acquitted on a charge of being drunk at the time. He was, however, convicted of negligent discharge of oil, a misdemeanor, and sentenced to a $50,000 fine and 1,000 hours of community service.
In the weeks and months following the spill, thousands of people tried to clean up the contamination. But two decades later, oil persists and is estimated to total around 20,000 gallons, according to the council. One of the lessons learned is that a spill's impacts can last a long time in a habitat with calm, cold waters like Prince William Sound, the council said.
"Following the oil and its impacts over the past 20 years has changed our understanding of the long-term damage from an oil spill," the council stated. "We know that risk assessment for future spills must consider what the total damages will be over a longer period of time, rather than only the acute damages in the days and weeks following a spill."
"One of the most stunning revelations" from studies over the last decade, the council said, "is that Exxon Valdez oil persists in the environment and, in places, is nearly as toxic as it was the first few weeks after the spill."
As a result, some sea otter populations as well as bird species have been slow to recover. Overall, some 200,000 seabirds and 4,000 otters were thought to have died from the contamination.
Oil found 450 miles away
Moreover, surveys "have documented lingering oil also on the Kenai Peninsula and the Katmai coast, over 450 miles away," according to the council.
None of that was expected "at the time of the spill or even ten years later," it added. "In 1999, beaches in the sound appeared clean on the surface. Some subsurface oil had been reported in a few places, but it was expected to decrease over time and most importantly, to have lost its toxicity due to weathering. A few species were not recovering at the expected rate in some areas, but continuing exposure to oil was not suspected as the primary cause."
It turns out that oil often got trapped in semi-enclosed bays for weeks, going up and down with the tide and some of it being pulled down into the sediment below the seabed.
"The cleanup efforts and natural processes, particularly in the winter, cleaned the oil out of the top 2-3 inches, where oxygen and water can flow," the council said, "but did little to affect the large patches of oil farther below the surface."
Sea otter concerns
That area is also biologically rich with mussels, clams and other marine life that help sustain sea otters and ducks.
"Sea otters usually have very small home ranges of a few square kilometers," the council said. "In these small ranges, it is unlikely that the otters are avoiding areas of lingering oil when foraging.
As a result, "while overall population numbers in western Prince William Sound have recovered, local populations in heavily oiled areas have not recovered as quickly."
There is a plus side to the foraging by otters, since digging in oiled areas does release the contaminants to the water, where they are diluted and dispersed.
Bird concerns
The American Bird Conservancy issued its own warning, stating that while many bird species have recovered several significant ones have not.
The spill killed 5-10 percent of the world's population of Kittlitz's Murrelets, the group said, a species whose numbers declined 99 percent from 1972 to 2004.
"Prior to the spill, the rate of decline was 18 percent per year, but since 1989 that rate has increased to 31 percent," the group stated. "The growing impact of global warming in the Arctic and the melting of glaciers, caused by the burning of oil and other fossil fuels, may also be a factor in this decline."
Two other species cited are: the Pigeon Guillemot, whose populations have steadily declined throughout the sound since the spill; and the Marbled Murrelet, which has not met the recovery objective of a stable population.
The group cited a faster transition to double-hulled oil tankers as the best protection for wildlife. Single-hulled tankers are still allowed in U.S. waters until 2015.
"A similar requirement for double-hulled tankers needs to be made globally to protect birds and other wildlife from future spills," said Michael Fry, the group's conservation director. "Additional marine reserves and no-go zones for tankers during sensitive breeding and staging seasons should also be implemented to protect the most vulnerable species."
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16 Comments so far
Show AllDisasters can last a long time, TMI, Bhopal and Toxic George's assets.
Unfortunatley, we can not allow these types of disasters to continue occuring. With global warning and all, we are quite rapidly destroying ourselves as a species along with the planet we inhabit.
MSNBC doesn't mention the human deaths Exxon caused. Neither do they give a true account of what happened. Greg Palast does, in his abbreviated article below. But, even Palast doesn't mention that many of those who participated in the "clean up" are dead from diseases caused by prolonged exposure to the oil toxins.
To this day, I don't buy Exxon-Mobil gas.
___________________________________________________________________
STICK YOUR DAMN HAND IN IT
20th Birthday of the Exxon Valdez Lie
by Greg Palast
March 23, 2009
***
Tuesday marks the 20th Anniversary of the Exxon Valdez grounding and the smearing of 1,200 miles of Alaska's coastline with its oil.
It also marks the 20th Anniversary of a lie. Lots of lies: catalogued in a four-volume investigation of the disaster; four volumes you'll never see. I wrote that report, with my team of investigators working with the Natives preparing fraud and racketeering charges against Exxon. You'll never see the report because Exxon lawyers threatened the Natives, "Mention the f-word [fraud] and you'll never get a dime" of compensation to clean up the villages. The Natives agreed to drop the fraud charge -- and Exxon stiffed them on the money. You're surprised, right?
Doubtless, for the 20th Anniversary of the Great Spill, the media will schlep out that old story that the tanker ran aground because its captain was drunk at the wheel. Bullshit. Yes, the captain was "three sheets to the wind" -- but sleeping it off below-decks. The ship was in the hands of the third mate who was driving blind. That is, the Exxon Valdez' Raycas radar system was turned off; turned off because it was busted and had been busted since its maiden voyage. Exxon didn't want to spend the cash to fix it. So the man at the helm, electronically blindfolded, drove it up onto the reef.
So why the story of the drunken skipper? Because it lets Exxon off the hook: Calling it a case of "drunk driving" turns the disaster into a case of human error, not corporate penny-pinching.
Indeed, the "human error" tale was the hook used by the Bush-stacked Supreme Court to slash the punitive damages awarded against Exxon by 90%, from $5 billion, to half a billion for 30,000 Natives and fishermen. Chief Justice John Roberts erased almost all of the payment due with the la-dee-dah comment, "What more can a corporation do?"
Well, here's what they could have done: Besides fix the radar, Exxon could have set out equipment to contain the spill. Containing a spill is actually quite simple. Stick a rubber skirt around the oil slick and suck it back up. The law requires it and Exxon promised it.
So, when the tanker hit, where was the rubber skirt and where was the sucker? Answer: The rubber skirt, called "boom" -- was a fiction. Exxon promised to have it sitting right there near the Native village at Bligh Reef. The oil company fulfilled that promise the cheap way: they lied.
And the lie was engineered at the very top. After the spill, we got our hands on a series of memos describing a secret meeting of chief executives of Exxon and its oil company partners, including ARCO, a unit of British Petroleum. In a meeting of these oil chieftains held in April 1988, ten months before the spill, Exxon rejected a plea from T.L. Polasek, the Vice-President of its Alaska shipping operations, to provide the oil spill containment equipment required by law. Polasek warned the CEOs it was "not possible" to contain a spill in the mid-Sound without the emergency set-up.
Exxon angrily vetoed ARCO's suggestion that the oil companies supply the rubber skirts and other materiel that would have prevented the spill from spreading, virtually eliminating the spill's damage.
Regulations state that no tanker may leave the Alaska port of Valdez without the "sucker" equipment, called a "containment barge," at the ready. Exxon signed off on the barge's readiness. But, that night twenty years ago, the barge was in dry-dock with its pumps locked up under arctic ice. By the time it arrived at the tanker, half a day after the spill, the oil was well along its thousand-mile killing path.
Natives watched as the now-unstoppable oil overwhelmed their islands. Eyak Native elder Henry Makarka saw an otter rip out its own eyes burning from oil residue. Henry, pointing down a waterside dead-zone, told me, in a mix of Alutiiq and English, "If I had a machine gun, I'd shoot every one of those white sons-of-bitches."
***
[Around the 1,200 mile contaminated coast, towns and villages] decayed into alcoholism. The Mayor of fishing port Cordova killed himself, citing Exxon in his suicide note.
***
Lee Raymond, President of Exxon at the time of the spill -- and its President when the company made the secret decision to do without oil spill equipment, retired in April 2006. The company awarded him a $400 million retirement bonus, more than double the bonuses received by all AIG executives combined.
As impossibly ricidulous as it may seem to many the only way to assure that this and other destructive episodes created by human greed and corruption do not occur again would have been to cease all of Exxon assets, hold them in trust and keep them there until all of the reparations had been made.
If this had happened as the author states on the East Coast of the US Exxon would be spelled backwards with a large black streak across the name; instead they are now known as Exxon/Mobile, and reporting the highest gains of any Corporation in History.
The reason for this is that most Americans care little about things that do not impact them directly, and even less about things that impact others........
On a personal level, I have boycotted Exxon since 1991, and carry that over to Mobile as well. I am sure they "miss" my contributions, but it is all I have available to me, so I use it.
Good Luck America, you really need it.
At the time I wondered how long it would be until some truth and justice arised from the disaster...I figured 10 years at the most...and then 20 years later the Supreme Court sided ultimately with the Corporates, leaving us all with no doubt that they (the major oil companies) reign supreme in this country. So much for the lies of making it whole again, (which could never be), but to treat the natives, residents, fishermen and marine fauna like collateral damage...outrageous. Thank you, Greg Palast, for the truth at last.
"Hazelwood (Exxon Valdez Captain), was accused but then acquitted on a charge of being drunk at the time. He was, however, convicted of negligent discharge of oil, a misdemeanor, and sentenced to a $50,000 fine and 1,000 hours of community service."
"Lee Raymond, President of Exxon at the time of the spill -- and its President when the company made the secret decision to do without oil spill equipment, retired in April 2006. The company awarded him a $400 million retirement bonus, more than double the bonuses received by all AIG executives combined."
Exxon doesn't care and when they say they do...who ever says it for them...THEY ARE A WELL PAID LIAR!
Despite the BILLIONS of dollars in profit, Exxon will fight with every means possible to keep every dollar. Typical of corporations allowed to existed under the system of gangster capitalism.
The only solution is to NATIONALIZE (Socialize) the entire energy industry.
Nationalize to make the entire industry a PUBLIC UTILITY. This includes OIL, GAS, COAL, NUCLEAR, ELECTRICAL, etc. Then the income from oil can be used to finally clean up the environment and start to transition to a sustainable energy environment.
By nationalizing the oil industry alone, you remove the major motivation for the wars in the Middle East and Central Asia. The foreign wars for oil, profit and hegemony will have to end as the bankrupt U.S. economy cannot maintain unending wars. Shutdown the 700 plus foreign military bases. Cut the military budget by 50 percent.
The funds used for war is needed to sustain public education, Social Security, national health care, etc. The NATIONAL SECURITY of the people will thus be maintained.
The entire ecnomy must transition to a socialist economy for humanity to survive.
Right On!
Is it worth saying that we should all boycott Exxon petroleum products when and where ever possible? Surely the Rockefeller famiiy is wealthy enough without our continuing to contribute to their fortunes.
Poet
As a few of you have commented here and elsewhere, I have not bought Exxon or Mobil gasoline or products since this preventable disaster. What really bothered me at the time was not the "accident", for truly, accidents happen. It was the typically arrogant response of the people in power to do "busy work" to make it look like they were "cleaning up the mess". Men with powerful hoses spraying down oil-covered rocks with hot water--where the hell do they think the runoff goes? It simply becomes hidden, just as most Americans want--make it look good and we're satisfied (as long as it doesn't affect us, and those backward natives don't really count).
I can really sympathize with the man who said that "if he had a machine gun...". when people feel so helpless, so meaningless to those in power, the rage becomes unbearable.
Our Native brothers lived on this side of the globe for tens of thousands of years in balance and harmony with the environment (most of the time), and yet it only took a couple of hundred years for the European barbarians to really get into high gear destroying it. Many times, I have been embarrassed to be a "white man", considering the absolutely obscene and totally thoughtless actions of our ancestors. Fortunately, some of my friends whose ancestors have ALWAYS been here assure me that the burden of guilt lies not on my shoulders, but on those who perpetrate the horrible deeds.
Whether you claim to be any of the "colors" (a totally racist, artificial concept), you are also brothers and sisters on this little ship racing endlessly around the Sun, which, along with the Earth Mother, gives us all life and sustenance. We have poisoned our own living space beyond it's ability to recover. Very rough times are ahead (and starting to occur already). Make sure you get your heart right, no matter what your "religious" beliefs, and make conscious connections with your brothers and sisters. Very soon our survival will depend on learning how to take care of each other. My life philosophy is: "To Learn; To Grow; To Share". Make it a part of yours, too, and we will all get along much better; some may even survive. To hi du.
In your service, Grandmaster Chuck Blackburn.
"Knowing ignorance is strength;
Ignoring knowledge is sickness. Lao Tzu
Just amazing timing on this story. Mount Redoubt in Alaska is erupting. Chevron managed to build an oil storage facility and port right near the volcano. The facility is currently holding 6 million gallons of oil.
Some volcanoes like Mauna Loa in Hawaii have free-flowing lava. They erupt often but don't cause much damage. Mount Redoubt has viscous lava and can really explode, something like Mount Etna in Italy which buried Pompeii.
Or Mt. St. Helens back in '80.
Poet
I hate Exxon.
The US's most profitable Corpse-eration, raking in around 20 bill profit Quarterly, THAT MUCH CASH COULD FIX THIS MESS.
Those murdering scum drive wars, ruin our Mother Earth, fund studies denying global warming and should be shot.
I volunteer. You make over a quarter mill a year for Exxon, form a line, get on your knees, put your head on the ground like your praying and say good-bye.
I'd go to hell for the pleasure of sending them first.
Oil spills are another form of chemical class warfare...
Yet the entire corporate class structure was built by Big Oil or modeled after...
Some folks profit enormously as shareholders and CEO's...
some folks are well off as engineers, managers, operators...
Some folks are exploited as laborers and consumers...
Some folks are exterminated as local indigenous cultures or union leaders...
The seal hunt in Canada has started and I dont see any CD articles on it.
Isnt that what Canada wants?
To keep it quiet.
I am disappointed.
I gave money to CD because it had articles on causes like that.
That's the end of that.
You are right. I support your comment. but I think this information is also very important to know.
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BBQ Chickene
http://scnbnc.com