LSU professor and wetland ecologist, Dr. Irving Mendelssohn, answers questions about possible oil spill effects on wetlands, mechanisms of damage to plants, and pros and cons of clean-up procedures. Mendelssohn has studied the coastal habitats along the Louisiana coast for over 30 years and has published more than 100 scientific articles on wetlands, 25 on oil spill impacts. For more information on wetlands: thewetlandfoundation.org Video Rating: 4 / 5
Smart Pipe is the the only company in the world that can manufacture, buoyancy controlled high strength, light weight pipe in diameters from 6″ to 48″ and in lengths from 100 feet to miles. This can be done “on site” — close to where the pipe is needed for emergency response situations, as in the case of our country’s greatest environmental disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. View our website at www.smart-pipe.com for more information. Video Rating: 4 / 5
BP is a major player in Washington, but is their political influence and money going to be enough to keep the regulators and investigators at bay? Mike Papantonio appears on MSNBC’s The Ed Show to talk about the political aspects of the BP oil spill. Video Rating: 4 / 5
Former President Bill Clinton said during a panel discussion in South Africa that it may become necessary to blow up the Deepwater Horizon well that continues to spew oil into the Gulf of Mexico. Watch the video at left. His comments on the leak start about 2:30 in. “Unless we send the Navy down deep to blow up the well and cover the leak with piles and piles and piles of rock and debris, which may become necessary – you don’t have to use a nuclear weapon by the way, I’ve seen all that stuff, just blow it up – unless we’re going to do that, we are dependent on the technical expertise of these people from BP,” Clinton said. There has been some pressure for BP to simply blow up the well, with critics suggesting the company is forgoing that option out of a desire to get as much oil as possible from the rig. “If we demolish the well using explosives, the investment’s gone,” former nuclear submarine officer and a visiting scholar on nuclear policy at Columbia University Christopher Brownfield said in a Fox News interview in May. “They lose hundreds of millions of dollars from the drilling of the well, plus no lawmaker in his right mind would allow BP to drill again in that same spot. So basically, it’s an all-or-nothing thing with BP: They either keep the well alive, or they lose their whole investment and all the oil that they could potentially get from that well.” (He penned an opinion piece in the New York Times making the argument.) Some lawmakers have also pushed for …
BP putting chemical dispersants in Gulf
NEW ORLEANS, July 2 (UPI) — BP has continued to use high levels of chemical dispersants on the gulf oil spill despite a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency order to cut back, CNN reports. Read more on Utica Daily News
U.S. spill panel to hold public meeting July 12-13
A U.S. presidential panel to probe the cause of the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and recommend new rules to prevent future disasters will hold its first public meeting in New Orleans on July 12 and 13 its co-chairs said on Saturday. Read more on Reuters via Yahoo! UK & Ireland News