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Murphy’s Law and the Stupidity of Obama’s Drill-Drill-Drill Offshore Oil Policy
British Petroleum had a fail-safe system for it's Deepwater Horizon floating deep-water drilling rig.
You know, the one that blew up and sank in the Gulf of Mexico, leaving a tangled spaghetti pile of 22-inch steel pipe one mile long all balled up on the sea floor a mile below the surface, and that is leaking oil at 42,000 gallons per day...so far.
The thing is, the fail-safe system, about the size of a McMansion sitting at the wellhead on the ocean floor, um, failed. It didn't collapse and shut off the flow of oil as intended, and it could take months now to shut the well down--during which time the leak rate is likely to increase to up to 300,000 gallons per day, or over two million gallons a week.
President Obama claimed last month that off-shore drilling technology had become so advanced that oil spills and blowouts were a thing of the past. Of course, as he said this, Australia and Indonesia were still assessing the damage from a similar offshore oil platform, the Montana, in the Timor Sea, which blew out and poured millions of gallons of oil into the ocean off Western Australia for over three months before it could be sealed off.
Murphy's Law: Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
Given that this is true, particular of complex technological enterprises, the question that needs to be asked is not, what is the probability of a catastrophic failure of an offshore well, but what is the potential damage in the event of even one such catastrophe for the local environment?
In the case of the Deepwater Horizon, the potential damage if this well really blows is staggering. Just 50 miles off the coast of Louisiana, it poses a near fatal risk to the region's wetlands and bayous, with their shrimp and oyster fisheries, not to mention the breeding grounds they provide for endangered birds, fish and other animals.
But the real lesson of the Deepwater Horizon is what it means for expanded drilling in the Arctic waters north of Alaska.
Oil companies, including BP, Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Shell and others, like Goldman traders looking at a tranch of subprime mortgages, are casting covetous eyes on the Arctic Ocean and the oil and gas that studies suggest lie under the virgin sea floor. Their plan is to drill for these hydrocarbons once the summer sea ice vanishes as a result of rising global temperatures (more about this in a future article).
Obama, as part of his opening of more coastal areas to drilling, is including areas of the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas, which are already ice free during summer.
But let's think about this for a moment. Suppose there were a blowout like the one in the Gulf of Mexico at a rig drilling in the Arctic? Suppose it happened towards the end of the short summer, when the ice was about to return to cover the ocean surface? If it was a blowout that couldn't be plugged, like the Montana blowout in the Timor Sea, or if the fail-safe system at the wellhead failed, as with the Deepwater Horizon, and if the only solution was, as with the Montana well, to drill new wells to ease the pressure on the blown well, how would this be done, once the ice moved in?
Answer? It couldn't be done. Murphy's Law again. And so millions of gallons of crude oil would rise up out of the burst wellhead to spread out underneath the ice, whence it would eventually move on to destroy hundreds of miles of fragile coastline, probably killing untold numbers of species that live in the affected waters. The damage from such a completely predictable disaster wouldn't just be staggering, like the Montana or the Deepwater Horizon blowouts, but incomprehensible!
So why are we even talking about this?
The argument, made ad nauseum by Republicans and Democrats alike, is that the US needs more energy, and that we don't want to be dependent for our oil on "countries that hate us."
And yet, there is a much simpler answer than hanging a hydrocarbon Sword of Damocles over our nation's critical coastal areas. Just copy Europe and impose a 100% tax on gas and oil, to make people turn away from 15 or 20 or 25-mile-per-gallon vehicles and start driving fuel-efficient cars, car-pooling or forgoing cars altogether.
Even better, tax the crap out of cars that don't get at least 35 or even 40 mpg.
Oh, I know. People will say, "but poor people in rural areas or in the suburbs can't pay those rates for gas to get to work, and they have to buy used cars that don't get such high mileage rates."
I understand the problem, but it is solvable, by establishing refundable tax credits for low-income people who can document long commuting distances, for example.
The main point is that the country doesn't need to drill in risky settings. It needs only to cut oil consumption.
What's clear is that drilling in the open ocean is simply disaster after disaster waiting to happen.
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32 Comments so far
Show AllDavid, I like your idea of taxing the gas guzzler but there's one thing I would ask of you. Could you please help spread the word on hemp and algae for oil? Both can be grown almost anywhere and thereby cut down on wars for oil and drilling as far as our basic oil needs are concerned. Here's a plus for algal oil. It's carbon neutral. Hemp is not too far behind but beats most every source of biofuel. Do a google search on "hemp for fuel".
In addition to telling us how "safe" offshore oil drilling is, Obama also told us how we will need to subsidize "safe and clean nuclear power".
Isn't it time to impeach Obama?
unfortunately, pissing away the little remaining environmental integrity of the planet is not an impeachable offense.
-"I understand the problem, but it is solvable, by establishing refundable tax credits for low-income people who can document long commuting distances, for example."
That, that would be income redistribution(IR)!!!. Additionaly, it is income redistribution in the wrong direction. IR is socialism. There is nothing the Democrats run from faster than socialism. That is why Obama says Americans must continue destroying the environment, at least and until there is a way to make the poor pay for the clean-up.
V.P.. that was my take on the article too.
peace
Hey, Mr. Lindorff!
'oil spill' and 'clean-up' do not go together...
taxing will require legislation oil companies may oppose...
the inherent dangers of this technology, coupled with the uniqueness of our fragile, isolated, living world, leave us no logical choice but to abandon this practice...
taxing could be argued to be a step in this direction, but I don't believe it would be implemented, or effective in preventing, as alluded to in the article, the one spill, among hundreds of potentials, that it might take to wreck enormous swaths of living systems...
peace
Quite frankly, I do not see why Mass Transit systems could not be free of charge.
They pay for themselves.
- "Quite frankly, I do not see why Mass Transit systems could not be free of charge.
They pay for themselves."
Does anybody do that? Free of charge mass transit?
Transit in Geneva Switzerland for one.
Visit Dave Lindorff's website at www.thiscantbehappening.net
Mass transit was *almost* free in Eastern European communist states. If I'm not mistaken, the subways in Moscow and Leningrad cost 5 kopecks when I was there in the early 1980s; buses and trams were 3 kopecks. Ridiculously small sums, even at streetcleaner wages.
Now the Moscow subway system is falling apart, and I'll bet they charge a lot more for it.
See? Even the evil Commies did some things right.
Whidbey Island, WA state - all buses are free to the public.
http://www.islandtransit.org/
I hope people will finally give up the fantasy that we can continue to live the "American" lifestyle, as it requires enormous amounts of energy (and more all the time, as our economic system is set up to function only if it is growing constantly). There is a very elegant and simple solution, that doesn't require waiting until people can figure out how to grow enough algae...just redesign your life so you use MUCH less energy. It may be inconvenient and even downright challenging, but when weighed against the risks of continuing to demand more energy while burning fossil fuels, that strategy wins hands down.
We are fiddling while Rome (er, the Gulf) burns.
Dave ,this "Earth Day oil spill" showed the futility and danger of deep water off shore rigs better than a dozen environmental N.G.O.s with big budgets could.Your point about Arctic drilling is also well taken.Could floating oil coalesce on top of winter ice accelerating spring melting too?
My I.S.P. has a news service which gave scant coverage to the explosion ,fire, and attending spill.From the 20th when the initial explosion happened in the evening through the fire and sinking.
Various spokesmen from the Coast Guard were quoted with widely varying reports of the potential spill.I read ,up to 336,000 gallons a day, down to just the 700,000 gallons of #2 diesel aboard,with no leak.All this before they settled on 42,000 a day.
The attempt to downplay this disaster will go right out the window when and if they light the gulf on fire.The M.S.M. will have to cover the story in detail when people can smell and see it!
I prefer a point source Carbon tax on producers that cannot be passed on to consumers,and incentives instead of "tax credits"Oh yeah End the wars, Close the bases,Free Cannabis(for everyone)and Farmland for Food not Fuel!
peace
Dave, thanks for pointing out the potential major catastrophe of oil spreading under the arctic ice.
if oil freezes at temps below that of water, would not a leak that surfaces prior to the formation of the arctic ice hinder the formation of the ice?
experts?
not sure how much longer arctic ice will be a concern, though...
No, because whether it's frozen or not isn't an issue, especially since oil and water don't mix. It's just a question of relative temperature, and the oil would be the same temperature as the water. No impact.
Visit Dave Lindorff's website at www.thiscantbehappening.net
thank you, dave...
I look forward to your article on the arctic situation...I am monitoring the satellite images daily, and see alot of cracking approaching the pole...
young ice, permeated with cracks, is more susceptible to melt than thick, intact, multi-year expanses...
you may already know of this link, but here is current satellite imagery:
http://rapidfire.sci.gsfc.nasa.gov/subsets/?mosaic=Arctic
How much oil leaks from a damaged wind turbine or solar panel?
How much oil is used to power the machinery to extract and process the resources/ raw materials that make the wind turbines and solar panels, and then transport them to their final destination? The green alternatives ain't so green...
"How much oil is used to power the machinery to extract and process the resources/ raw materials that make the wind turbines and solar panels, and then transport them to their final destination?"
How much oil is used to power the machinery to extract and process the resources/raw materials that build the coal plants and the nuclear plants and the equipment that they employ, and then transport all of it to its final destination where the coal plants continue to pollute with millions of tons of CO2 and heavy metals, and the nuclear plants create highly radioactive waste that must be stored for hundreds of thousands of years?
Now you begin to see the scope of the problem... and it's just the tip of the iceberg.
My point is that wind and solar no longer pollute once they are established and online (except for the carbon footprint left behind during repair and maintenance). Coal, oil and gas fired power plants continuously pollute during their service lifetimes. Nuclear produces radioactive poison that must be "safely" stored for thousands of years.
Wind and solar installations need maintenance and repairs. Thus they continue to use oil derived resources. It may be 'trivial' amounts, but they do add up.
Nuclear power is, of course, one of the worst possible alternatives.
How many wind turbines could you build with the energy from one major oil spill, the Valdez for instance? Green energy looks a lot better.
They're a lot greener than nuclear and hydrocarbon-based production, which have all these costs and more, and then ongoing problems.
They are not as green as conservation. Of course, conservation and green energy are not mutually exclusive.
It does make sense to note the entire footprint of various green projects. However, there is another factor that favors them that nay-sayers tend to obscure.
When we measure the carbon and cost of green production, we measure it by what it costs in highly costly current technologies. That is only accurate for the first pieces produced.
while sarah was pouting the words, "drill, baby, drill", her sturdy and resolute partner was heaving the words, "yes, we can!" over and over again. sounds to me like a match made in hydrocarbon heaven.
Sigh.
Think of all that lovely potential fertilizer and pesticide bound for US Government subsidized fields growing GM corn for bio-diesel. All the gasoline, oil and grease to power and lubricate the tractors, combines and trucks to plant, harvest and transport the corn to the bio-diesel distilleries. Now it's going to go up in smoke.
I'm gonna raise a glass to Yankee hubris, and laugh... my... ass... off.
British Petroleum had a fail-safe system for ITS (not "it's") Deepwater Horizon floating deep-water drilling rig.
A little proofreading, particularly in the very first sentence, goes a long way towards building credibility for your story.
As long as resource "ownership" and the technology for production, development, and re disbursement of said resources is remains private and controlled by a few[the wealthy] at the expense of everyone else, "we" will continue to experience lack on a global level. This theory of trickle down economics is responsible for what is and what is to come [if we don't change]. I look at what is taking place in the gulf of Mexico as a direct sign of what is to come if we contiue down this arrogant path of resource abuse and ultimately self annihilation. It is clearly a warning of ominous proportions. Continued drilling for oil domestic or foreign is a short term "fix" for a broken system. The options exist, there are alternatives to the current system. Are we brave enough to choose them? Can we sacrifice the wants of a few for the good of many? Or will greed doom us all?
Can anyone tell me what happens to the void left from pumping oil? And how Natural Gas is often extracted? Maybe there is a correlation between the African drought and the Exploitation of oil in the African sub-continent. Also, and this is just a theory, maybe oil acts as a tectonic lubricant. It seems to me that there is a reason that oil is found where it is, often along the intersection of intercontinental plates, divides, or areas of past collision. There are theories pointing to past plate tectonic activities [continental subduction zones] as the cause of current oil deposits. The ocean, pound for pound has far more biomass[carbon] than land. I wonder how well the "Deep Water Horizon" was prepared for the massive world wide flurry of tectonic activity in recent history [Haiti, Chile, China, MEXICO, etc.]? Nature has a way of surviving with or without us. We need nature [mother earth] to survive, does it need us? Can it afford us?...........Can we aford not to change????
Good. Good and scary. Of course mother Earth does not need us. She's been very tolerant. We reward her with flogging.
Between the lack of anything resembling political will, and manufactured consent on every issue, we're haven't a hope. Think what it would take to turn enough humans. We'd need a God but we'd call him an antichrist.
Delightful - now it's 5 times the rate of the original lie. Do I hear 10?
Tap that goddamned pipe and shove it up someone's ass, and hurry up about it.