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Tar Balls in Texas Mean Oil Hits All 5 Gulf States
TEXAS CITY, Texas - More than two months after oil from BP's blown-out seafloor well first reached Louisiana, a bucket's worth of tar balls that washed onto a Texas beach means the crude has arrived in every Gulf state.
A beach is closed to the public after oil from the Deepwater Horizon spill is washed ashore in Orange Beach, Alabama. BP faced a broadening crisis Tuesday with tar balls from the Gulf oil spill turning up on Texas beaches, as the firm's clean-up costs soared and British officials reportedly mulled a possible BP collapse.… Read more »
(AFP/Getty Images/File/Joe Raedle) Oil is still on the move, but the fleet of skimmers tapped to clean the worst-hit areas of the Gulf of Mexico is not. A string of storms has made the water too choppy for the boats to operate for more than a week off Florida, Alabama and Mississippi, even though the gusher continues.
The number of tar balls discovered in Texas is tiny compared to what has coated beaches in other Gulf states. Still, it provoked the quick dispatch of cleaning crews and a vow that BP PLC will pay for the trouble.
"Any Texas shores impacted by the Deepwater spill will be cleaned up quickly and BP will be picking up the tab," Texas Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson said in a news release.
The oil's arrival in Texas was predicted Friday by an analysis from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which gave a 40 percent chance of crude reaching the area.
"It was just a matter of time that some of the oil would find its way to Texas," said Hans Graber, a marine physicist at the University of Miami and co-director of the Center for Southeastern Tropical Advanced Remote Sensing.
About five gallons of tar balls were found Saturday on the Bolivar Peninsula, northeast of Galveston, said Capt. Marcus Woodring, the Coast Guard commander for the Houston/Galveston sector. Two gallons were found Sunday on the peninsula and Galveston Island, though tests have not yet confirmed the oil's origin.
Woodring said the consistency of the tar balls indicates they could have been spread to Texas water by ships that have worked out in the spill. But there's no way to confirm how they got there.
Galveston Mayor Joe Jaworski said he believed the tar balls were a fluke, rather than a sign of what's to come.
"This is good news," he said. "The water looks good. We're cautiously optimistic this is an anomaly."
Hurricane Alex, which blew through the Gulf last week and made landfall along the border between Texas and Mexico, may have played a small role in bringing the oil ashore in Texas by increasing the westerly current near land, Graber said. But it was more likely due to normal coastal currents and local weather patterns.
NOAA scientists are looking at local weather, Hurricane Alex and Gulf vessels as possible sources for the tar balls, agency spokeswoman Monica Allen said Monday.
The distance between the western reach of the tar balls in Texas and the most eastern reports of oil in Florida is about 550 miles. Oil was first spotted on land near the mouth of the Mississippi River on April 29.
The spill is reaching deeper into Louisiana. Strings of oil were seen Monday in the Rigolets, one of two waterways that connect the Gulf with Lake Pontchartrain, the large lake north of New Orleans.
"So far it's scattered stuff showing up, mostly tar balls," said Louisiana Office of Fisheries Assistant Secretary Randy Pausina. "It will pull out with the tide, and then show back up."
New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu said assets would be deployed to protect the Lake Pontchartrain basin.
Pausina said he expected the oil to clear the passes and move directly into the lake, taking a backdoor route to New Orleans.
The news of the spill's reach comes at a time when most of the offshore skimming operations in the Gulf have been halted by choppy seas and high winds. A tropical system that had been lingering off Louisiana flared up Monday afternoon, bringing heavy rain and winds.
Last week, the faraway Hurricane Alex idled the skimming fleet off Alabama, Florida and Mississippi with choppy seas and stiff winds. Now they're idled by the smaller storms that could last well into this week.
Officials have plans for the worst-case scenario: a hurricane barreling up the Gulf toward the spill site. But the less-dramatic weather conditions have been met with a more makeshift response.
Skimming across the Gulf has scooped up about 23.5 million gallons of oil-fouled water so far, but officials say it's impossible to know how much crude could have been sucked up in good weather because of the fluctuating number of boats and other variables.
Jerry Biggs, a commercial fisherman in Pass Christian, Miss., who has had to shut down because of the spill, is now hiring out his 13 boats and 40-man crew to BP for cleanup. He said skimming is severely hampered by the weather.
"This isn't going away. This isn't a sneeze or a hiccup. This is diarrhea for a long time," he said. "My lifestyle is screwed. It's over. The thing that I love the most I'm not going to be able to do anymore."
The British company has now seen its costs from the spill reach $3.12 billion, a figure that doesn't include a $20 billion fund for damages the company created last month.
The storms have not affected drilling work on a relief well BP says is the best chance for finally plugging the leak. The company expects drilling to be finished by mid-August.
Associated Press writers Tom Breen and Mary Foster in New Orleans and Brendan Farrington in Pass Christian, Miss., contributed to this report.



22 Comments so far
Show AllWith the possibility of oil getting into Lake Pontchartrain, all it will take is a near miss by a hurricane to render New Orleans uninhabitable.
So far you are looking at tens of thousands of jobs lost, regional economic chaos, and as yet undetermined environmental destruction. Was it worth the cost of near useless oversight and abandonment of regulation?
at 'tens of thousands of jobs lost, regional economic chaos, and as yet undetermined environmental destruction.'............
sounds like the whole of the u.s.......................
And will we learn anything or change anything? I'm already sensing a waning interest, a strong desire to return to denial mode. Even the small number of comments on CD discourages me. Maybe we will learn to live with dead zones --- out in the middle of the Pacific or where thriving cities once stood or along hundreds of miles of beach or in tens of thousands of acres of gunk that were once productive, breathing wetlands. As long as despair and anger are localized and paid off, life goes on?
Denial mode hasn't really disappeared. I haven't seen traffic congestion in my area decrease even after the BP scandal got worse and virtually all of the BP gas stations in my area are crowded everyday but so is every gas station this summer so far.
I wonder what "Crowsnest" who called me a dense noggin has to say now that his state has been hit the BP mess. That poor fool !
Few poeple are aware that Gulf also has coral reefs.
About 100 miles off of the Tesas/Louisiana border, lie the lush, pristine salt-dome mountaintop coral reefs of the Flower Garden and Stetson Banks. Their far-offshore location has protected them from the pollution and high temperature-related destruction that the Carribean and South Florida reefs have suffered.
It looks like it will be all over for them now.
Same crime 30 years ago:
http://www.wimp.com/oilspills/
This is what happens when corruptions settles in and oil companies take over your government!
Thanks! Good post
Did you see that...A journalist that calls this by its
proper name...A Gusher....I am taken aback!!!!!!
I still contend that the "live" feeds are a hoax.
I faxed to Markey what I saw June 30th on SKANDI ROVII
between 1730 and 1740 that the camera flashed for one second
while it was being adjusted. (except they are probably wi BP
I thought they were a fraud before I even saw that.
I hope that I am wrong but highly unlikly.
They are going to go forward with the relief well fix
and all of a sudden , bingo, look, no more oil out of the
top of BOP, we fixed it...............DO DA DAY.
how much news would we be getting about oil if it weren't being actively suppressed? I meant the news, but the word would apply to the oil, too, I guess...
any word on oil in the Atlantic Gulf Stream?
You're right, MSM, should be on it 24/7, like they cover irrelevant nonsense. I'm seeing less and less news about it now. A bad hurricane will fix that.
This represents the inevitable consequences of the cult of 'personal freedom' intersecting capitalism.
Unfortunately in our system BP, as a person, has a perfect right to do what it wants to do on its own 'land' - or in this case ocean, notwithstanding the consequences to the greater community. Oh we may be able to demand compensation for the damage done, but not actually punish those who made the decisions that led to the damage. For heinous crimes like polluting the Gulf of Mexiso - the corporate death penalty is required. Execute BP. Disenfranchise them. Remove their license to do business in the US.
Until the community at large is considered when personal freedoms are exercised we will inevitably have such disasters.
The tarballs at night,
are big and brown,
deep in the beach of Texas...
would Fucking Bastards Do?!?
New PR flack at BP was reportedly sacked after suggesting the name for the gala BP benefit banquet and dance to be called the "Save the BP Tar Ball."
There has been no mention of potential damage to Mexican coast lines.
Will BP reimburse clean-up efforts in Mexico
And eventually, will they reimburse Cuba?
THANK YOU FOR THINKING ABOUT OTHERS: an increasingly rare phenomenon.
Good question and should have been part of the questioning when the BP officials were in front of Congress. If anyone has the answer, please post it with link to the details. Also, does anyone know if oil has already reached non-US coasts?
That sure is good news: Tarr Balls on yer beach.... Thank Goodness. The water looks good he says..... spin, spin, spin
Then there's no doubt about it. The old eyeball test from the Mayor of Gastown says that that there sea water is clean dagnabit. No need to test it for dispersant/solvent content.
Come on down to [Bubbaland] and play some golf [in the oil rains]. Go to the beach. Catch a fish. - Gov of Mississippi in response about Oil found on the shore in his state.
Just what the Hail does BP stand for anyway?
British Police? They apparently tell the coast guard and the media what the hell to do all the time.
I guess now, that the whole gulf is BP's private property, and that no journalist can photograph oil/dead animals or else it's a felony. They patrol in vehicles with the US Army on the beaches of Florida.
There's only one phrase that describes our predicament: Corporate Tyranny.
No waning interest with me. Mad as hell and impotent as hell too. But maybe American Idle is back on. Between this and UE and all the other shit going on in the corporate US, maybe our brains are just overloaded. I want to know what the ogliarchs really have in mind for us. Would suck to be a child now. Their future looks really bleak. Good job you wacky rich people. Are your grandkids going to live in a nice gated community? Bastards!
SEIZE THEIR ASSETS, NOW, and put Tony Hayward on the beach with a plastic bag and no respirator.
Supper time here. We're eating good. Thought you might have all the problems of your Simpson World you built in our land solved today including the oil gushing out of the Gulf.
No?
Myself and mine are going for a walk in Creator's woods after we eat. Enjoy being in Creator's woods. Like a living breathing painting Creator created for us to enjoy with lots of Creator's critters romping and flying around Creator's creation.
Maybe your Simpson world will have all the problems of your Simpson Nation solved later tonight, and the oil gushing out of the Gulf stopped.
And maybe not?
That food is sure smelling good. Some good eating coming.
Myself, and mine, have to eat, too, you know.
Life is good. What an experience! It's always best to forgive