by efarmer » Sat 21 Aug 2010, 14:07:38
On the simple issue of right and wrong it is clearly wrong, I have no reason to debate that point.
And on the issue of environmental impact to scale with Corexit or any other petroleum dispersant for use in marine environments, my notion is that no they really don't know other than hypothetical scenarios based on scientific speculation because they didn't do the work to find out.
We are dealing with an industry that became sure they would not have spills of this quantity that is being regulated by a government and it's agencies that reinforced the fallacy by declaring that they would not allow it, and set a regimen of fines in place to give their ban on large spills teeth.
And then one took place, and everyone had their bare ass sticking out in the wind without a clue.
So what if the spill was an earthquake ripping a reservoir open off the coast of California?
Do we find a new God, or do we fine, perhaps jail or define a probation period, and hope to
correct God's bad behavior? Do we only need proven tools for man made spills?
Some years ago Norway did a study to see what happened when they purposely released some
petroleum deep so they could understand how it behaved, dispersed, remediated, etc.
The MMS kicked in some funds so they could get some real world data, which implies they did not
have any similar to this rudimentary, first order, real world test.
If I were to go out on a mission to save wildlife amidst the crews doing controlled burning or skimming and booming and I appeared to be doing photojournalism or having an alternate agenda, I would fully expect to run foul of the factors that allowed me to pursue my stated mission. This doesn't mean that it is right, but it is very much in line with how such things are.
Not only do we not know the implications of such large scale usage of Corexit, we do not know what would be better, why, or what should be pursued as a combined strategy to insure that it is learned and mandated. The EPA is not able to allow small scale testing to drive disaster scale tool creation and the industry can buy the government to pretend along with them that the era of disasters is over due to "modern times" and "our recent track record".
You can't fix this with riveting photos of dying wildlife covered in oil, they can be sold for top dollar to the highest bidder, they can drive great political intrigue and ass covering and suppression of information release, but they don't drive the process of collaboration that is most likely to reduce the horrifying situation that the images document.
Oil buys government and government buys environmental protection and the media buys damning photographs to make them change figureheads and people buy this as justice and then go back to sleep. Like a Doctor at war, God bless her for saving some wildlife and suggest she whisper to a stealthy journalist where to slip in and get the damming photos and video so she can continue.
Nixon was brought down by journalism with a white hot story and inside information, he also got the EPA established during the mayhem that resulted, which to me was some good amidst the bad.
Did the expose and depose process that got Nixon repair the integrity of government?
I submit it isn't a sound solution for environmental protection with regard to petroleum either.
We need fundamental changes driven by good science which is allowed to independently compete for the truth,but we clamor for hot scoop and gossip good enough for a book and a movie version.
Our process is only yielding the latter, because as it sits right now the money on the science side is on why and how we have been doing things, and on the gossip side, the money is the best when the government and science process is the worst.