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Wednesday
Jun232010

Highest Risk Chemical Plant in U.S. Fails Security Inspection

12 Million People Remain at Risk in NY-NJ Metro Area

WASHINGTON - June 22 - TRENTON, NJ - Following a May 13th citizen's inspection of the highest risk chemical plant in the U.S., Greenpeace today cited the Kuehne Chemical Co., Inc. of South Kearney, NJ for "failure to prevent catastrophic risks." The report was given to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the United States Coast Guard and a copy to Kuehne. Greenpeace has also confirmed that the Kuehne facility is exempt from the temporary DHS security rules for chemical plants because it is subject to much less stringent rules under the Maritime Transportation Security Act.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Jun232010

BP's Other Toxic Legacy: 'Decades of Misery' for Gulf Health

by Marty Beckerman

Merle Savage was an "outdoors person" who found joy in the big things Mother Nature had to offer. She climbed Alaska's mountains and hiked the Grand Canyon. But then the big spill hit, and there would be no more climbing, no more hiking, and very little joy.

"We are setting up here for a giant human tragedy — decades of misery — especially if a storm or hurricane spreads it to normal everyday people onshore."

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Jun232010

Stanley Sporkin: BP's Ombudsman Fixer 

by Stephen Lendman

Some call him Stanley the Fixer, Catherine Austin Fitts for one, a former high level government and Wall Street insider, now editor of Solari.com and running Solari, Inc., an ethical online investment firm specializing in preserving family wealth. Besides on her own firm and a wealth of information on important topics, her site provides extensive coverage of Sporkin, including unanswered questions about him.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Jun232010

American Power Act Fails to Reduce Emissions Enough to Avoid Catastrophic Climate Change

Analysis by Center for Biological Diversity

http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2010/06/22-14

WASHINGTON - June 22 - As the worst environmental disaster in U.S. history devastates the Gulf of Mexico, clarifying the urgent need for bold, effective climate legislation, a new Center for Biological Diversity analysis of the American Power Act demonstrates the bill’s gross inadequacies.

Click to read more ...

Monday
Jun212010

Gulf oil spill: A hole in the world

By Naomi Klein

Reprinted from The Guardian

http://img121.imageshack.us/img121/5782/85945057.jpg

Obama cannot order pelicans not to die (no matter whose ass he kicks). And no amount of money not BP's $20bn, not $100bn can replace aculture that's lost its roots.' flickr image by kbaird

Everyone gathered for the town hall meeting had been repeatedly instructed to show civility to the gentlemen from BP and the federal government. These fine folks had made time in their busy schedules to come to a high school gymnasium on a Tuesday night in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana, one of many coastal communities where brown poison was slithering through the marshes, part of what has come to be described as the largest environmental disaster in US history.

Click to read more ...

Monday
Jun212010

EXCLUSIVE: BP Funds Front Group Claiming Oil Spill Jobs Are Better Than ‘Normal’ Ones, Storm Will Clean Up Oil 

Quenton Dokken

http://thinkprogress.org/2010/06/18/bp-gulf-foundation/

Shortly after BP’s catastrophic oil spill in the gulf, the New York Times spoke to Quenton Dokken, the executive director of the Gulf of Mexico Foundation, about the environmental impact. “The sky is not falling,” Dokken told the paper, adding “it isn’t the end of the Gulf of Mexico.” ProPublica dug into the Gulf of Mexico Foundation, and reported that the Times had failed to disclose that Dokken and his group are funded by a consortium of oil companies with business in the gulf, including companies involved in the Deepwater Horizon rig, Transocean and Anadarko. Today, the Times reported that the Foundation has been downplaying effects of the spill, possibly because of its funding from oil companies.

Click to read more ...

Monday
Jun212010

BP estimates oil spill up to 100,000 barrels per day in document

Sun, Jun 20 2010

By Ernest Scheyder

BURAS, Louisiana (Reuters) - BP Plc estimates that a worst-case scenario rate for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill could be about 100,000 barrels of oil per day, according to an internal company document released Sunday by a senior U.S. congressional Democrat.

Click to read more ...

Monday
Jun212010

U.S. Sidelined in Fight for Arctic's Future

Discovery News | Mon Jun 21, 2010 07:00 AM ET

As the BP oil spill continues to destroy marine life and ruin livelihoods along the Gulf Coast, conservationists, energy companies and diplomats are preparing for the next big showdown over drilling -- this time in the Arctic.

A Russian icebreaker set sail recently on a scientific voyage to chart its northern underwater boundary, part of its stated plan to claim large hunks of the Arctic for oil, gas and minerals.

Click to read more ...

Friday
Jun182010

The 2010 Bush-Cheney Gulf Coast Oil Spill

 

By Rodrigue Tremblay

 

Global Research, June 17, 2010

http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=19776

 

 

“If ever a time should come, when vain and aspiring men shall possess the highest seats in Government, our country will be in need of its experienced patriots to prevent its ruin." Samuel Adams (1722-1803), statesman, political philosopher, and one of the Founding Fathers of the United States, 1776

“America is addicted to oil.” President George W. Bush, State of the Union address, 2006

“Let me be clear: BP is responsible for this leak; BP will be paying the bill.” President Barack Obama, May 2, 2010

More often than not, the consequences of public policies, good or bad, are felt many years after they have been taken. The 2010 BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico is a good example. This disaster is, to a large extent, a consequence of the Bush-Cheney energy policy  of 2001 and later. [http://www.commondreams.org/headlines01/0826-02.htm]

After being ushered into power by a one-vote-majority Supreme Court decision, one of the first decisions made by the new Republican administration was to establish an Energy Task Force (the National Energy Policy Development Group) under the authority of oil-man Dick Cheney, former CEO of Halliburton (1995-2000). As some have asserted, chief deregulator Dick Cheney was not only a vice president but a genuine co-president in the split Bush-Cheney administration [http://www.amazon.com/Co-Presidency-Cheney-Stanford-Politics-Policy/dp/0804758182/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1276440586&sr=1-1] .

After some 106 days of mainly secret consultations and deliberations with the executives and interest groups representing the U.S. electricity, coal, natural gas and nuclear industries, with a pledge to keep secret the names of participating individuals, the Task Force's 163-page final report was sent to President George W. Bush on May 16, 2001.

The report focused on how to open up new domestic petroleum sources and on the need to expand and control the all-important Middle East oil production. A parallel report to the official Cheney report (Strategic Energy Policy Challenges for the 21st Century) even stated that “Iraq has become a key 'swing' producer, posing a difficult situation for the U.S. government”, ... a harbinger of things to come. This is all well documented in my book “The New American Empire”. 

Soon after the secretive Cheney's Task Force report came out, things began rolling for the U.S. petroleum industry. The regulatory rulebooks for energy development on public property were rewritten with the idea of making the world environment safe for oil business companies. It was going to be “Drill, baby, drill”, including for deep-ocean drilling with minimal precautions, and damn the consequences! Regulations and clean energy budgets began to fall.

On April 9 2002, President George W. Bush announced deep cuts  in public clean energy research and development. [http://www.allbusiness.com/technology/3583319-1.html

In 2001-02, the Bush-Cheney administration's energy policy goals were incorporated into an energy bill (H.R. 4) titled the Securing America's Future Energy Act (SAFE) that included $33.5 billion in tax breaks and other incentives for oil companies and that lifted the oil drilling ban on the Coastal Plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska. In May 2002 the Democrat-controlled Senate narrowly rejected the bill.

On August 8, 2005, however, President George W. Bush signed into law the new approach and enacted a new sweeping pro-oil bill, the “Energy Policy Act of 2005

”. The bill followed closely in the footsteps of Vice President Cheney’s 2001 energy report and provided $27 billion to coal, oil and gas, and nuclear industries, and $6.4 billion for renewable energy.

Then, also in 2005, the Bush-Cheney administration allowed the U.S. oil and gas industry to regulate itself. The federal agency responsible for managing oil and gas resources and for collecting royalties from companies, the Interior Department's Minerals Management Service (MMS), decided, on August 30, 2005, that oil companies, rather than the government, were in the best position for determining their operations’ environmental impacts. In effect, MMS decided on that date to de facto merge its services with those of the oil companies, even to the point of letting the oil industry fill out MMS's inspection reports. MMS officials also had other cozy relations with the companies they were supposed to regulate.
[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-/content/article/2008/09/10/AR2008091001829.html]  


Then again, on July 14, 2008, just months before leaving office, President George W. Bush signed an executive order to lift the moratorium on offshore drilling in the eastern Gulf of Mexico and off the Atlantic and Pacific coasts. Such a moratorium had been put in place in 1990 by President George H.W. Bush.

There is also some confusion concerning the scope of responsibility that oil companies have in the event of an environment catastrophe. Since 1986, there already was on federal books an Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund (OSLTF) [http://www.uscg.mil/npfc/About_NPFC/osltf.asp] that set a cap on losses that a business could suffer from an oil spill. That liability cap was set at $75 million by the George H. Bush administration, as part of the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, after the Alaska Exxon Valdez [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exxon_Valdez] spill of March 1989. Only proven negligence can render that liability cap inoperative. Since the puny $75 m. cap has not been increased in twenty years, that may explain why some analysts still recommend to their clients to buy the BP stock. [http://www.energyandcapital.com/articles/bp-stock-selloff-is-overdone/1141] BP is a worldwide oil company that makes in excess of $25 b. a year.

Covered from losses by the liability cap, oil companies persuaded the Bush-Cheney administration that expensive security measures were not required, even for drilling in deep oceanic waters. For example, Minerals Management Service (MMS), decided not to require oil companies to install a remote-control oil blowout preventer [See Wall Strret Journal

] on their deep-sea oil drilling rigs, i.e. an acoustic blow off valve that immediately chokes off the flow of oil in an emergency. Even though they are expensive, (they cost $500,000 each), most offshore oil rigs in other countries—in Norway and in Brazil for example, but not in the U.S. or the U.K— have such a switch installed for cutting off the flow of oil in an emergency by closing a valve located on the ocean floor.

No such emergency switch was available on April 20, 2010, when BP's 18,000-foot-drilling-deep floating oil rig blew up, a catastrophe that killed eleven workers, injured many others, and which has spewed, so far, as much as 100 million gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico (some 2,400,000 barrels, or nearly ten oil tankers the size of the Exxon Valdez). The British-American BP company, seemingly, had cut corners [http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-investor/congress-accuses-bp-of-cutting-corners-to-create-nightmare-well/article1604215/] in order to take advantage of the lax regulatory environment.

However, contrary to the damage done by Hurricane Katrina [http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2010/06/oil_timeline.html] in 2005, a natural event, the 2010 Gulf oil spill is a man-made disaster (just as, by the way, the 2003 Iraq war and the 2007-08 financial crisis were also man-made disasters). It could have been prevented if the Bush-Cheney administration had not removed the regulations mandating basic safety procedures in oil drilling, especially for offshore drilling.

Of course, BP and its subcontractors (Transocean, Halliburton, etc.) are the ones who are directly responsible for the disaster. But the Bush-Cheney administration must share a large part of the blame and responsibility in preparing the regulatory background for the disaster.

President Barack Obama [http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/31/science/earth/31energy.html?ref=offshore_drilling_and_exploration] also doesn't escape all responsibility, because he was the one who insisted on keeping so many Bush-Cheney appointees in their high positions after he was elected. Moreover, on March 31, 2010, only weeks before the BP Gulf Oil Spill, his administration also proposed to open vast expanses of American coastlines to oil and natural gas drilling. [http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/o/offshore_drilling_and_exploration/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier]

Americans have reasons to be confused and appalled.

                                                                                


Rodrigue Tremblay

http://www.thenewamericanempire.com/author.htm is professor emeritus of economics at the University of Montreal and can be reached at rodrigue.tremblay@yahoo.com. He is the author of the book "The Code for Global Ethics" at: http://www.TheCodeForGlobalEthics.com/

 

The book “The Code for Global Ethics, Ten Humanist Principles”, by Dr. Rodrigue Tremblay, prefaced by Dr. Paul Kurtz, has just been released by Prometheus Books. Please visit the book site at: www.TheCodeForGlobalEthics.com/ The French version of the book is also now available. See: www.lecodepouruneethiqueglobale.com/ or on Amazon Canada

Thursday
Jun172010

Humility in a Climate Age

By Paul Wapner, Tikkun
Posted on June 15, 2010, Printed on June 17, 2010
http://www.tikkun.org/article.php/may2010wapner

Take your well-disciplined strengths

and stretch them between two opposing poles.

Because inside human beings

is where God learns.

—Rainer Maria Rilke

There is a battle going on for the soul of environmentalism. How it plays out will determine our ability to respond to a whole host of environmental dilemmas, especially climate change. All of us are partners in this struggle, since battle lines are being drawn not simply on the street or in policy debates but also inside each of us. We are torn between two visions of how to relate to the earth. Much depends on how we negotiate our way through the conflict.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Jun162010

Nasa warns solar flares from 'huge space storm' will cause devastation

Britain could face widespread power blackouts and be left without critical communication signals for long periods of time, after the earth is hit by a once-in-a-generation “space storm”, Nasa has warned.

By Andrew Hough
Published: 1:00PM BST 14 Jun 2010

National power grids could overheat and air travel severely disrupted while electronic items, navigation devices and major satellites could stop working after the Sun reaches its maximum power in a few years.

Senior space agency scientists believe the Earth will be hit with unprecedented levels of magnetic energy from solar flares after the Sun wakes “from a deep slumber” sometime around 2013, The Daily Telegraph can disclose.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Jun162010

Hightower: BP Is a Corporate Criminal

by Jim Hightower

Gosh, how quickly things turn. One day, you're a strutting peacock — the next day, you're just another gasping, oil-covered bird.

In early April, BP was strutting about in full corporate splendor, showing off the $9 billion in profits that it had soaked up in just the first three months of this year. It was also basking in a corporate re-imaging campaign, depicting itself as a clean-energy pioneer and declaring that BP now stood for "Beyond Petroleum."

Since its Gulf of Mexico well blew out on April 20, however, BP has proven to be beyond belief. The wider and deeper that this catastrophe spreads, the more we discover just how oily this giant is.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Jun162010

Battle the Corporatocracy by Demanding Sustainability

by John Perkins

"As you simplify your life, the laws of the universe will be simpler; solitude will not be solitude, poverty will not be poverty, nor weakness weakness." (Thoreau)

Being a father has been one of the seminal events in my life and to have the joy of being a grandparent has just doubled the blessing. It has also made me even more aware of my responsibility to my grandson and his sisters and brothers around our precious planet.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Jun152010

What US Scientists Are Forbidden To Tell The Public About The Gulf: Oil Volcano Pressure Too Strong For Containmentv

By Dr. James P. Wickstrom

http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=19730

Rense - 2010-06-09

It has been estimated by experts that the pressure which blows the oil into the Gulf waters is estimated to be between 20,000 and 70,000 PSI (pounds per square inch). Impossible to control.  

Click to read more ...

Monday
Jun142010

Global Warming Deniers and Their Proven Strategy of Doubt

For years, free-market fundamentalists opposed to government regulation have sought to create doubt in the public’s mind about the dangers of smoking, acid rain, and ozone depletion. Now they have turned those same tactics on the issue of global warming and on climate scientists, with significant success.

by Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway   

June 13, 2010 by Yale Environment 360

http://e360.yale.edu/content/feature.msp?id=2285

Click to read more ...

Monday
Jun142010

Gulf Oil Spill "Could Go on Years and Years" ...


The Obama Administration and senior BP officials are frantically working not to stop the world’s worst oil disaster, but to hide the true extent of the actual ecological catastrophe. Senior  researchers tell us that the BP drilling hit one of the oil migration channels and that the leakage could continue for years unless decisive steps are undertaken, something that seems far from the present strategy.

Click to read more ...

Thursday
Jun102010

The BP Disaster Marks the End of the Age of Arrogance About the Environment ... Can We Change?

We dreamed we were living in a fabulous mansion but are waking up in a greasy gutter.  The ecological and economic catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico makes our most infamous oil spill, the Exxon Valdez, look miniscule by comparison.  This time we have fouled our nest on an epic scale.  

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Jun082010

Planning for Disaster

by Ralph Nader

When the Executive Branch does not have worst case scenario planning for each kind of energy source-oil, gas, coal, nuclear, wind, solar and efficiency-the people are not protected.

Enter the 24/7 oil gusher-leak by BP and Transocean - the rig operator - and the impotence of the federal government to do anything but wait and see if BP can find ways to close off the biggest and growing oil leak in American history. Where is the emergency planning or industry knowhow?

Of course, we all saw Barack Obama's first full press conference in ten months where he said, "In case you were wondering who's responsible? I take responsibility. It is my job to make sure everything is done to shut this down...The federal government is fully engaged, and I'm fully engaged. Personally, I'm briefed every day. And I probably had more meetings on this issue than just about any issue since we did our Afghan review."

Click to read more ...

Thursday
Jun032010

Hightower: Who the Hell's in Charge Here? BP Disaster Caused by a Nasty Mix of Government Impotence and Corporate Rule

"What we're witnessing is not merely a human and environmental horror, but also an appalling deterioration in our nation's governance."

Many news reports about the Gulf oil catastrophe refer to it as a "spill." Wrong. A spill is a minor "oops" — one accidentally spills milks, for example, and from childhood, we're taught the old aphorism: "Don't cry over spilt milk." What's in the Gulf isn't milk and it wasn't spilt. The explosion of BP's Deepwater Horizon well was the inevitable result of deliberate decisions made by avaricious corporate executives, laissez faire politicians and obsequious regulators.

Click to read more ...

Thursday
May272010

In the Arctic, another oil spill looming

By STEFAN NICOLA
UPI Europe Correspondent

http://www.upi.com/Science_News/Resource-Wars/2010/05/26/In-the-Arctic-another-oil-spill-looming/UPI-81831274900912/

BERLIN, May 26 (UPI) -- Will Royal Dutch Shell do to the Arctic what BP did to the Gulf of Mexico?

That's the question troubling environmental experts across the globe ever since the Dutch minerals giant Shell announced its plan to begin exploratory oil drilling this summer in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas, two of the most pristine ecosystems on the planet.

Click to read more ...