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Has BP Really Cleaned Up the Gulf Oil Spill?
Has BP really cleaned up the Gulf oil spill? Officially, marine life is returning to normal in the Gulf of Mexico, but dead animals are still washing up on beaches – and one scientist believes the damage runs much deeper
There are few people who can claim direct knowledge of the ocean floor, at least before the invention of the spill-cam, last year's strangely compulsive live feed of the oil billowing out of BP's blown-out well in the Gulf of Mexico. But for Samantha Joye it was familiar terrain. The intersection of oil, gas and marine life in the Mississippi Canyon has preoccupied the University of Georgia scientist for years. So one year after an explosion on the Deepwater Horizon offshore drilling rig, about 40 miles off the coast of Louisiana, killed 11 men and disgorged more than 4m barrels of crude, Joye could be forgiven for denying the official version of the BP oil disaster that life is returning to normal in the Gulf.
A brown pelican coated in heavy oil wallows in the Louisiana surf, June 2010. More concerning for Samantha Joye, however, is the destruction that occurred -- and is occurring -- deep below the surface. (Photograph: Win Mcnamee) The view from her submarine is different, and her attachment is almost personal. On her descent to a location 10 miles from BP's well in December, Joye landed on an ocean floor coated with dark brown muck about 4cm deep. Thick ropes of slime draped across coral like cobwebs in a haunted house. The few creatures that remained alive, such as the crabs, were too listless to flee. "Most of the time when you go at them with a submarine, they just run," she says. "They weren't running, they were just sitting there, dazed and stupefied. They certainly weren't behaving as normal." Her conclusion? "I think it is not beyond the imagination that 50% of the oil is still floating around out there."
At a time when the White House, Congress, government officials and oil companies are trying to put the oil disaster behind them, that is not the message from the deep that people are waiting to hear. Joye's data – and an outspoken manner for a scientist – have pitted her against the Obama adminstration's scientists as well as other independent scientists who have come to different conclusions about the state of the Gulf. She is consumed by the idea that she – and other colleagues – are not really being heard."It's insanely frustrating," Joye says.
She never expected to be a science dissident, she says, or gain such a large public profile. She sees herself as a science nerd and a brainiac who never knew how to play, even as a child. To round off the picture of a ferocious intellect, Joye says she had a photographic memory when she was younger. Her perfect recall has faded, now that she is in her 40s, but that intensity of focus is still there.
In the past year, Joye – as well as other independent scientists – has repeatedly challenged the official version of the oil disaster put forward by the White House and other administration officials. Last May, her research team was the first to detect the presence of a vast plume of oil droplets swirling at high speed through the deep waters of the Gulf. The discovery – initially disputed by government scientists – suggested that far more oil and gas had entered the sea than they had originally estimated.
In December, Joye's team knocked down another White House claim – that the vast majority of the oil was gone – when she discovered a thick coating of oil, dead starfish and other organisms on the bottom of the ocean, over an area of 2,900 square miles.
It remains to be seen whether Joye can prove the deniers wrong. She has a new scientific paper coming out, and a return research voyage to the Gulf this week, with several more follow-up voyages scheduled this summer to areas within range of the BP well. Can she convince her fellow scientists that the majority of BP's oil is still stuck on the bottom of the ocean? How long will it remain there, and what effect will it have in the future?
It's undeniable that time has moved on since the initial disaster. After 87 days, BP engineers managed to cap the well last July. Last year's images of pelicans entombed in thick layers of crude now belong to history.
So too, very nearly, do the various investigations into the disaster. Most are complete, with blame spread between BP and other companies. Transocean owned the Deepwater Horizon oil rig. Halliburton was responsible for the cementing job on the well, which has been much criticised by investigators. However, BP executives could still face criminal charges.
The oil business in general is looking up. The Obama administration last month started issuing new permits for deepwater wells in the Gulf – the first since the BP blowout. Meanwhile, Congress has yet to act on any of the issues arising from the oil spill – from raising the liability on oil companies to strengthening environmental regulations. Senators even blocked a bill that would have given the 11 workers killed in the blowout the right to sue for damages comparable to those on land.
BP, which seemed in danger of collapse a year ago, is on the financial rebound. Ken Feinberg, the independent administrator of BP's $20bn compensation fund, says he is close to finishing compensating individuals and businesses who were hurt by the disaster – without even coming close to exhausting the $20bn. He paid out only $3.6bn last year.
The cleanup operations are also winding down, at a cost to BP of about $13bn (it has also pledged $500m to scientific research in the Gulf). The company took out an ad campaign this week to express regrets for the spill, showing a picture of shimmering Gulf waters. It could still be liable for up to $18bn in penalties and fines, however, under a US law that imposes a levy of $4,300 for each barrel of oil. But Feinberg was so upbeat he told reporters the Gulf could see a complete recovery by 2012.
Government scientists have not gone so far. A spokesman for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency (NOAA) said there was "no basis to conclude that the Gulf recovery will be complete by 2012", and warned that some of the consequences of the spill may not be known for decades. The spokesman went on to note that about 60 miles of the coastline remain oiled. Tar mats continue to wash up on beaches in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and the Florida Panhandle. And although Gulf waters have reopened to fishing, many oyster beds were wiped out when state authorities flushed fresh water into the Gulf in the hopes of rolling back the oil. At a public meeting last month in Biloxi, Mississippi, fishermen said they were hauling up nets full of oil with their shrimp.
So how could the disaster possibly be over, asks Joye. "You talk to people who live around the Gulf of Mexico, who live on the coast, who have family members who work on oil rigs. It's not OK down there. The system is not fine. Things are not normal. There are a lot of very strange things going on – the turtles washing up on beaches, dolphins washing up on beaches, the crabs. It is just bizarre. How can that just be random consequence?"
More than 150 dolphins, half of them infants, have washed up since the start of 2011. At least eight were smeared with crude oil that has been traced to BP's well, NOAA said, and 87 sea turtles – all endangered – have been found dead since mid-March.
"To me it makes no sense to think that it is random consequence, but it is kind of maddening because there has been a lot of energy and effort put towards beating the drum of everything is wonderful, everything is going to be fine by 2012," says Joye.
Other studies have disputed Joye's findings. Terry Hazen, a scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Labs, failed to detect any traces of underwater oil in the six weeks after the well was capped. But he did find evidence of naturally occurring bacteria that ate the oil. John Kessler, a scientist at Texas A&M, found that the huge quantities of methane gas, which were released along with the oil, had also rapidly degraded.
But Joye was unfazed. In her lab, technicians have been running experiments for months to learn more about how the oil could be broken down once it sank into the ocean floor. "The micro-organisms are not happy. They are not metabolising this stuff," she says. "They should be having a picnic and feasting, and they are not. Why is that? I have no idea, but we are trying a lot of different combinations to try to find out what is regulating their activity."
When the first reports came in of a blowout on the Deepwater Horizon last year, Joye was laid up at home with a bad back. But part of her team was only a few miles away from the well – the only research vessel in the area – and posted pictures on the web of the flames shooting into the sky. In those early days, Joye says she had just one thought – to more research vessels getting out there to see what was happening to the oil.
Those first weeks of the oil disaster were a time of immense frustration for scientists. BP and government officials were extremely reluctant to produce any estimate of the magnitude of the spill. An investigation commission appointed by Obama would later deliver harsh criticism to officials for gross underestimates of the spill.
Independent scientists were clamouring for access to data. Joye, by a stroke of good luck, already had a research trip scheduled; the scientists simply re-purposed the cruise to check for traces of oil from BP's well. They found the cloud of droplets suspended in the water and immediately posted an update to the research mission's website, complete with measurements. The response came as a shock.
Tony Hayward, then chief executive of BP, simply denied there could be any oil at depth. "The oil is on the surface," he told reporters during a quick trip to the cleanup command centre in Louisiana. "There aren't any plumes."
The government reaction was arguably even more discouraging. Jane Lubchenco, the head of NOAA and herself an ocean scientist, said publicly it wasn't at all clear there was any oil in the depths. "We need to make sure that we are not jumping to conclusions," she told PBS television.
Off-camera, Joye and other scientists were bombarded with phone calls from furious officials, from NOAA and other government agencies. "I felt like I was in third grade and my teacher came up to me with a ruler and smacked my hand and said: 'You've just spoken out of turn.' They were very upset," Joye says.
Other scientists have suggested that the clash between Joye and government scientists was due to the enormity of the Gulf disaster. Scientists have no prior experience of a release of oil of this size, and over such a long period of time. There are huge areas of uncertainty, they say. It is conceivable that both parties could be proved right. But Joye will take some convincing. "I am somebody who if I believe in something, I give it 180%," she says. "I believe in the Gulf of Mexico and I love the ecosystem, that is why I have not stopped doing what I have been doing, and saying what I have been saying. When I see evidence that convinces me otherwise I will change my opinion."
But, she adds: "I have not seen anything that changes my opinion to this point."
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30 Comments so far
Show All"We need to make sure that we are not jumping to conclusions," she told PBS television.
Not jump to any conclusions, eh? Why, isn't it weird that the conclusions our business community and fascist-owned government ALWAYS jump to seem to harm us citizens?
The levees will hold.
The air in downtown Manhattan is safe to breathe.
Genetically modified food is ok to eat.
Nuclear power is safe.
Hydraulic fracking is beneficial.
An unregulated market is a safe and efficient market.
The oil spills has dissipated.
And on and on and on.
There isn't a reason in the world to trust one single conclusion that our business community and fascist government pour into our ears through their armies of propagandists and shills.
When dealing with amoral monsters, the average person's default stance must always be: we are being lied to and we are being attacked.
WOW !!! I love what you said "polycarpe"
I could not have said it any better myself.
Not jump to any conclusions, eh? Why, isn't it weird that the conclusions our business community and fascist-owned government ALWAYS jump to seem to harm us citizens?
The levees will hold.
The air in downtown Manhattan is safe to breathe.
Genetically modified food is ok to eat.
Nuclear power is safe.
Hydraulic fracking is beneficial.
An unregulated market is a safe and efficient market.
The oil spills has dissipated.
And on and on and on.
There isn't a reason in the world to trust one single conclusion that our business community and fascist government pour into our ears through their armies of propagandists and shills.
When dealing with amoral monsters, the average person's default stance must always be: we are being lied to and we are being attacked.
*** We need to all come together in agreement to Boycott all of these companies & Boycott our own government..........Until a REAL Change is made !!!!
good one poly
in my posting style too
everything you said was right on the money
the gulf coast is safe just like the reactors in japan are not a safety hazard
yeh right
and the message of the controllers is always the same: don't worry be happy
in fact, you never know that anything is true anymore until its been denied by the government
Nice. Adding one more:
Hope and change you can believe in.
Amen! Selah!
What polycarpe said!
I frequently use the phrase, "complacent, unreflective citizens" and the term "Normals" (with a capital N) in comments. I mean exactly the well-meaning, conventional-minded "average" person who's conditioned to automatically assume that government and business authorities and spokespersons are reasonably honest and responsible-- the person who finds polycarpe's uncommon sense recommendation to be unpalatable because it's too "cynical" or even "nihilistic".
The items polycarpe lists, and others like them, are not only "conclusions"-- they're foregone conclusions.
BTW, I can't forebear giving dishonorable mention to another familiar "conclusion" presented by the amoral monsters: it is regrettably necessary to initiate military action against X because of X's actual or imminent crimes against humanity which compel immediate humanitarian intervention.
Right on OS.
Hey what's the big deal? We don't get our seafood from the Gulf of Mexico; rather, we get it from the supermarket. (sarcasm)
M$M tows the government line of denial. The Gulf of Mexico is becoming like so many lakes and rivers in this country that are so polluted that fishing and swimming aren't allowed and much of the public doesn't care because they don't see it affecting them.
Actually, we get most of our seafood from China and Thailand, from polluted megafarms that create ghastly environmental problems of their own.
add to that -
there's no harm to humans from the radiation showing up in milk and drinking water......
hell it's good for us!
All the blood-stained and oil-stained money in the world cannot fix the damage to the Gulf of Mexico. We could totally liquidate BP, and the money cannot bring back one dead crab, or one dead baby dolphin, let alone repair the damage to the Gulf ecosystem.
Isn't crude oil heavier than water? Surely it didn't all evaporate (does crude oil evaporate? I don't think so but that would be another problem) So if the oil isn't still floating on the surface or washing up on beaches, surely a lot of it has settled on the bottom or is particulate in the Gulf waters. There are no magic oil-removing elves or chemicals
Oil floats on water until you mix it with soap, then it no longer floats, but becomes an ugly cohesive blob. Corexit acts like soap.
BP should Invest some of its money in the Health Care industry. This will provide dynamite returns in a few decades time when all the long term illnesses manifest themselves in the population with researchers "puzzled" by the root cause.
Smacked with a ruler? Joye is in mortal danger. Look what is happening to Bradley Manning for speaking the truth--and his exposé didn't cost anybody anything, except reputation.
pictures of the affected Gulf floor would go far...
"Can she convince her fellow scientists that the majority of BP's oil is still stuck on the bottom of the ocean"? Sadly, those government "scientists"know the truth, but are too morally corrupt to ever admit it.
"The discovery – initially disputed by government scientists – suggested that far more oil and gas had entered the sea than they had originally estimated." There's no such thing as a government scientist, there are paid government spokespersons who have science backgrounds. They cannot speak for the Gulf or for the environment.
Obama and the legislature are in bed with big oil, there is no reason to believe anything the government tells us.
I was thinking this as I read it. Joye isn't in a fight to convince scientists. They know the reality. She is going toe-to-toe with a government agency.
EPA has the same constraints as do evaluators for endangered species listings.
I worked for a state health department's STD/HIV prevention program and we were forced to deny the great effectiveness of condoms and fund abstinance only programs.
Government is not based on best, most scientific information, but on lobbying and culture war.
Joye could get the Bradley Manning and Karen Silkwood treatment if she keeps running her brilliant mouth. These government and BP officials play for keeps, as there are billions of $ at stake here. The ecosystem and the Gulf are expendable, as far as they're concerned, and the whole disaster can easily be spun in MSM from now to eternity, because the overriding factor is PROFITS and maintaining the illusion in the public eye that the "spill" is fully contained, all the oil was eaten up by microbes or space aliens, and we need to get back to business as usual.
Obama is as married to the illusion that the disaster is over and we need more drilling as any off-the-shelf Republican. Joye will be blocked at every turn by his smoke-and-mirrors team and BP liars. Or, they'll just find some way to drown her out in the Gulf, among the strangled crabs, oil-slicked dolphins and sea turtles, and assorted catastrophes ceaselessly vomited forth by disaster capitalism. Our criminal president and his corporate masters aren't about to be waylaid by a do-gooding truth teller.
Socialized Loss!
The government can't pay for it; it's broke! The BP / Transocean disaster costs, go directly on the backs of Gulf Coast residents.
Isn't BP and their 20 bn, compensating these people? Your read in this article how they brag how Ken Feinberg has only spent 3.6 billion, while gettin a generous bonus for doing such a fantastic job.
Not according to the locals!
http://www.wkrg.com/gulf_oil_spill/
article/feinbergs-raise-still-angers-
oil-spill-victims/1205815/
Mar-28-2011_7-58-pm/
Expect no help from the government; they tax the poor and subsidize the rich!
Who pays for the nuke disaster? Not the people who profited from it before it became a disaster. (By the way, a bunch of their profit, came from subsidies awarded to build nuclear plants!)
Seems appropriate to introduce considerations about Bidding paddle #70
http://www.grist.org/article/2011-02-22-tim-de-christopher-utahs-auction-hero-goes-to-trial-february-28t
The notion that the coastal ecosystem of the Gulf of Mexico is uniformly the same from Florida to Mexico is nonsense. Likewise the notion that the entire ecosystem is befouled today is arrant nonsense. I cannot speak for the coastal region from Florida to High Island in Texas. However, last Sunday I made my round trip Houston-High Island-Bolivar Island-Ferry-Galveston-Houston. There was no tar on the beaches. I saw hundreds of healthy seabirds including the brown pelicans and thousands of human bathers. I have no problem eating seafood caught by local fishermen sold in Galveston or Kemah.
A real problem I saw was at the Anahuac Wildlife Refuge where many of the once open ponds are now overgrown with water plants. I believe that to be due to the increased CO2 content of the atmosphere which is not caused by BP but by us all.
Neither Joye nor this article suggests that "the coastal ecosystem of the Gulf of Mexico is uniformly the same from Florida to Mexico," so it's hard to discern who or what you're referring to. But is your impressionistic tour around the south Texas coast supposed to be proof that Joye is exaggerating, or what? Because you saw healthy sea birds and brown pelicans and swimmers, this means she's an alarmist?
The woman has done probably the most important scientific work done anywhere on the REAL consequences of this disaster, but your personal impressions and observations are curiously superior? Go ahead and eat that seafood, no one says you can't. But there are MANY scientists who have stated publicly that they won't. The science is telling them it probably isn't safe.
What is your point? - "I cannot speak for the coastal region from Florida to High Island in Texas" - Do you have any knowledge of the current patterns in the Gulf of Mexico? Do you think some oil is going to magically swim against the currents and end up in Texas? You thing global warming is real, but you think all of the oil in the Gulf magically disappeared also? This post is very confusing and contradictory. But I'm glad you had a nice trip!
Yes I know the pattern of currents in the Gulf of Mexico. One point is that showing a brown pelican covered in oil to represent all of the Gulf coast today is a damned lie for where I live.
Where in my writing did I say that "all of the oil in the Gulf has magically disappeared"?. That is your tricky-Dicky manner of putting words into my writing that I have not used.
I went outside today and even though it was raining I didn't see any animals with tumors. From this I conclude that radioactive fallout from Japan has had no impact here.
Crowsnest, you are showing why we need more reporting on the scientific features of the Gulf. Nonsense, arrant nonsense, indeed, you keen observer.
The currents from Macondo float away from Texas. Texas has never recovered from the Ixtap, though.
I bet if you dig a little in the sand, you'll strike oil.
That you are capable of rating the health of seabirds is questionable. At the very least, we know from scientists they have plastic in their stomachs. How healthy is that?
"Overgrown by water plants" sounds like a phosphorous/nitrogen problem from agricultural run-off to me. It isn't from the carbon (not CO2) in the atmosphere, which causes climate change.
What is there to "convince" anybody about? If there is a 4 inch layer of oil on the Gulf floor, there is no opinion involved. What other "proof" of its existance do they need? This astonishes me.
I'm wondering if anybody is doing analysis of how the oil in the Gulf might be affecting the weather above it. It seems as if the oil might affect water temperatures and flow patterns. We've already heard of how the "loop current" is damaged. This is part of the engine of the entire world's weather patterns. It seems to make sense that if the water conditions have changed, the weather patterns above it would also change. Doesn't it seem as if we have been experiencing abnormally severe weather with record cold temperatures in the US and Europe, and there seems to be many other "record breaking" weather events occurring. Is it possible to do computer models on how the changes in the Gulf waters may be affecting all of this?
"What is there to "convince" anybody about?"
They don't want the facts to obscure the narrative.
I keep waiting for media to educate all of us about what we've lost in the Gulf.
When are they going to really explore coasts and birds and currents and pelagic (deep sea) life and how mammals lose reproductive capacities when exposed to oil, and the death of 500 year old corals and tube worms and blue fin tuna nurseries and endangered turtles and dolphins beating on their dead fetuses to try to get them to breathe and what it means for life to have 2900 square miles of oil-coated floor?
2900 square miles. And we are still allowing profiteers to pilfer struggling animals from the waters. Yuck.
There is an appalling lack of reporting on life system and the health of our planet in the US media.
Even this report comes from the Guardian in London.
There is an appalling inertia for the government to keep permitting an exterminating course. Which agency has altered any regulation in response to this? Aaarghh.
There is gawdawful hole in American understanding that Nature has been written out of our dialogue, out of our laws, out of our knowledge, out of our awareness. This is only to the detriment of all, even the 1% richie rich honchos calling the shots.