Page added on September 3, 2016

A camera aboard the Landsat 8 satellite has been tracking the progress of oil fires in Iraq that have been burning since June. The dark plumes of smoke, which are wreaking havoc on local communities, are a stark reminder of the ongoing war in the region.
The dense plumes of smoke are emanating from multiple sites about 30 miles (50 km) south of Mosul. The fires were deliberately set by ISIS militants before abandoning the city earlier this summer. The smoke has been persistent over the past three months, blotting out the sun hours before nightfall.
These oil fires bear a striking resemblance to the blazes set in Kuwait during the Persian Gulf War in the early 1990s. Iraqi troops ignited more than 700 oil wells during their retreat, prompting fears (which proved to be unfounded) of a “nuclear winter” effect at the Earth’s surface.
The fires in Iraq aren’t nearly as bad, but they’re still cause for concern. As noted by Ralph Kahn, an atmospheric scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, the fires are producing noxious, grayish-white smoke palls, fueled in part by the high salt content from the briny substrate found in this desert region. Factors like humidity, wind, and fuel density are also affecting the plume’s constitution and color.
Until these fires are extinguished—and it’s not at all clear when that might happen—local residents will have to deal with the smoke and its effects. The region reeks of petrol, and many residents, including children, have developed coughs. Just a few minutes of exposure causes a burning sensation in the throat.
Sadly, it could take months, if not an entire year based on the earlier precedent in Kuwait, before these fires are extinguished and the wells capped.
5 Comments on "These Oil Wells in Iraq Have Been Burning For Months"
Apneaman on Sat, 3rd Sep 2016 6:47 pm
Yeah well there are serious consequences for all addictions. Fracking junkies & climate denying Okie “energy voters” are getting theirs in spades…..more to come.
Oklahoma earthquake among strongest in state history
“Oklahoma has suffered a series of earthquakes in the past year, with intensities as high as 5.1 and 4.7, and earlier this month the state felt three small quakes in a single weekend. Studies and government researchers have found that the underground disposal of wastewater from natural gas drilling is linked to the increase in 3.0 and stronger earthquakes in Oklahoma, and state regulators have recently limited disposal activity. Some parts of the state now are nearly as likely to suffer earthquakes as northern California. One Oklahoma region has a one-in-eight chance of having an earthquake this year.”
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/sep/03/oklahoma-earthquake-nebraska-north-texas
ghung on Sat, 3rd Sep 2016 7:48 pm
OK is rockin’ lately:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/eb/Oklahoma_3.0_earthquake_bar_graph_since_1978.png/800px-Oklahoma_3.0_earthquake_bar_graph_since_1978.png
rockman on Sat, 3rd Sep 2016 8:37 pm
If Ralph is concerned about the effect of 3 wells burning for a few months he shouldn’t look at the Google sat photos of the offshore Nigerian flares that have been burning for DECADES. I’m sure NASA has ever better shots. Even worse for him if he see the methane bloom over China from all those pigs. LOL.
Once again a post with no concept of relevance.
geopressure on Sun, 4th Sep 2016 7:48 am
The Oil Wells in Southern Iraq’s Rumaila Field burned from like 1992 until sometime after the fall of Saddam Hussein…
Cloggie on Sun, 4th Sep 2016 7:54 am
Indeed:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eWXnOp1SS-s
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Adair