Oil Rig Explodes off LA Coast

Side note 'professor'.... please back up the above with some sort of data to support your claim.


You yourself provide some of the info that proves what he says...

Using the larger of the numbers you provided; 6,600 gallons of oil dispersed a day in santa Barbara, the tides alone would disperse most of what seeps into the environment.
 
I don't want to add fuel to the fire but sepage and this spill are in now way similar except they are oil. While cali has tar balls roll up on the coast we are looking at potential devestation to national wildlife preserve's or FLa beaches. Sepage prob mostly evaporates due to the slow nature, this sucker is spewing hope they burn the piss out of it and use dispersants, oil eating microbes and what ever other tricks they have. Just read BP has lost 20 billion in value since the fire.
 
You yourself provide some of the info that proves what he says...

Using the larger of the numbers you provided; 6,600 gallons of oil dispersed a day in santa Barbara, the tides alone would disperse most of what seeps into the environment.

I have provided a link to the man's website where I found the information. they have a nice 'contact us' button right there. If you wish to question the validity of their findings, feel free.
 
It doesn't cause systemic or widespread measurable environmental damage. The broader ecosystem functions normally in the presence of natural seeps. They are too diffuse and dispersed to cause any systematic environmental damage. At worst, it just a local nuisance. I don't like getting goo on my shoes, but I don't wig out about it either.

I don't know what rightwing blog you read this stuff on, but natural seeps are not a measurable environmental concern.

Your pathetic attempt to proclaim everything you disagree with as a rightwing blog is getting quite old.

I posted the links to the sites where the information came from. You on the other hand are simply stating your opinions without anything to support your claim.

I am not suggesting these are the same level by any means.

http://www.soscalifornia.org/about.html

These are the 'rightwing bloggers ' who stated the effects of the seepage.
 
I don't want to add fuel to the fire but sepage and this spill are in now way similar except they are oil. While cali has tar balls roll up on the coast we are looking at potential devestation to national wildlife preserve's or FLa beaches. Sepage prob mostly evaporates due to the slow nature, this sucker is spewing hope they burn the piss out of it and use dispersants, oil eating microbes and what ever other tricks they have. Just read BP has lost 20 billion in value since the fire.

You are not adding fuel to the fire. You are providing information from within the industry that you work. As you stated, the microbes at the site of the seepage do prevent a chunk of that oil from getting to the surface. (according to the link I provided)

What they are studying is why the microbes stop and dont consume all of the oil.
 
Another point, Valdez is not even close to the top ten volume spills at 257,000 bbls. But might be the worst ecological due to being in a bay. This thing is bearing down on the fishing grounds use use to hit weekly with my kids.
 
You are not adding fuel to the fire. You are providing information from within the industry that you work. As you stated, the microbes at the site of the seepage do prevent a chunk of that oil from getting to the surface. (according to the link I provided)

What they are studying is why the microbes stop and dont consume all of the oil.

Maybe they're full!!
 
Drill Baby Drill!


I Wonder is the Republicans will be using that line while campaigning in Louisiana any time soon?>
 
"Another result of our study is that for the first time, we can quantify the amount of oil residue that ends up in seafloor sediments after a “natural” oil spill. To compare the amount the oil in the Santa Barbara sediments with a figure people might understand, it's equivalent to 8 to 80 times the oil spilled in the Exxon Valdez accident. But our study by no means is a direct comparison on the overall fate and impacts of the Exxon Valdez spill and the Santa Barbara seeps. "
So by drilling we can reduce the natural tendency for the shit to leak up into the ocean. One more reason to drill baby drill.
 
Again: what has the economic & ecological impact been of the natural seepage, compared to a spill like this?

Probably huge.

An explanation for some of the disappearances focuses on the presence of vast fields of methane hydrates on the continental shelves. A paper was published in 1981 by the United States Geological Survey about the appearance of hydrates in the Blake Ridge area, off the southeastern United States coast. Periodic methane eruptions may produce regions of frothy water that are no longer capable of providing adequate buoyancy for ships. If this were the case, such an area forming around a ship could cause it to sink very rapidly and without warning. Laboratory experiments have proven that bubbles can, indeed, sink a scale model ship by decreasing the density of the water.

Hypothetically, methane gas might also be involved in aircraft crashes, as it is not as dense as normal air and thus would not generate the amount of lift required to keep the aircraft flying. Low levels of methane have also been shown to cause an aircraft engine to stall when added to the intake of air.
http://www.mysterieszone.com/bermuda-triangle.htm
 
Again: what has the economic & ecological impact been of the natural seepage, compared to a spill like this?

you're taking it to the extreme...in santa barbara for instance, the seepage ecological impact is vastly greater than the leaks from any of the rigs the entire time they have been in existence...
 
Probably huge? You're calling the economic impact of that "probably huge," based on that cut & paste?

Got any large-scale evidence of planes crashing & ships sinking because of that hypothetical?

Or do you just want to "drill, baby, drill" cuz Palin thinks it's bitchin'?
 
I don't want to add fuel to the fire but sepage and this spill are in now way similar except they are oil. While cali has tar balls roll up on the coast we are looking at potential devestation to national wildlife preserve's or FLa beaches. Sepage prob mostly evaporates due to the slow nature, this sucker is spewing hope they burn the piss out of it and use dispersants, oil eating microbes and what ever other tricks they have. Just read BP has lost 20 billion in value since the fire.
Man all that money they made when gas was pushing $4/gal after Katrina.....wooosh, down the drain....literally.......and this is just the beginning. If this hits the Florida coast BP is toast. Total cost will be in the trillions of dollars.

This will be a good time to be in the remediation business.
 
OH come on SM. Seepage is a problem but it's so diffuse and localized that comparing it to a spill of this magnitude is a joke. IF you took all the seeps in the world and collectively dumped them on 50 miles of shore line, you might have a point. As it is you don't. I got some more news for ya too. This won't be a partisan issue when it hits land. There's probably one hell of a lot more Republican land and business owners on the Gulf Coast then Dems and they will be screaming bloody murder.
 
Back
Top