IN A TIME OF UNIVERSAL DECEIT...TELLING THE TRUTH BECOMES A REVOLUTIONARY ACT

"Capitalism is the astounding belief that the most wicked of men will do the most wicked of things for the greatest good of everyone." John Maynard Keynes

" Labor is prior to, and independent of, capital; that, in fact, capital is the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. Labor is the superior of capital and deserves much the higher consideration" Abraham Lincoln

Thursday, May 20, 2010

IN CASE YOU'D FORGOTTEN [and] OUR NEW BACKYARD

IN CASE YOU'D FORGOTTEN

what kind of system we live under in the USA, here are a few reminders. This is a link to an event that occurred two days ago, when CBS-News reporters wanted to view some oil-threatened areas of the Louisiana coastline, from the Deepwater Horizon BP gusher. But were turned back by the US COAST GUARD, UNDER THREAT OF ARREST.



Here is the actual video.

Now, correct us if we are wrong, but isn't the US Coast Guard a part of the US government, which in theory is a democracy, answerable to the citizens of this country? Or is the US government for sale, to large corporations, to enable their profits to keep flowing? What do you think?

The corporate media though is slowly coming around to the magnitude of the BP gusher, as this NY Times article shows. It's hard to distort and suppress reality when it rears it's ugly head, as here, or when radiation spread around the Northern Hemisphere in 1986, after the Chernobyl explosion/fire.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/16/us/16oil.html?hp

Giant Plumes of Oil Forming Under the Gulf

Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar visited a wildlife treatment center in Louisiana on Saturday.

By JUSTIN GILLIS

Published: May 15, 2010

Scientists are finding enormous oil plumes in the deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico, including one as large as 10 miles long, 3 miles wide and 300 feet thick in spots. The discovery is fresh evidence that the leak from the broken undersea well could be substantially worse than estimates that the government and BP have given.

Times Topic: Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill (2010)“There’s a shocking amount of oil in the deep water, relative to what you see in the surface water,” said Samantha Joye, a researcher at the University of Georgia who is involved in one of the first scientific missions to gather details about what is happening in the gulf. “There’s a tremendous amount of oil in multiple layers, three or four or five layers deep in the water column.”

The plumes are depleting the oxygen dissolved in the gulf, worrying scientists, who fear that the oxygen level could eventually fall so low as to kill off much of the sea life near the plumes.

Dr. Joye said the oxygen had already dropped 30 percent near some of the plumes in the month that the broken oil well had been flowing. “If you keep those kinds of rates up, you could draw the oxygen down to very low levels that are dangerous to animals in a couple of months,” she said Saturday. “That is alarming.”

The plumes were discovered by scientists from several universities working aboard the research vessel Pelican, which sailed from Cocodrie, La., on May 3 and has gathered extensive samples and information about the disaster in the gulf.

Scientists studying video of the gushing oil well have tentatively calculated that it could be flowing at a rate of 25,000 to 80,000 barrels of oil a day. The latter figure would be 3.4 million gallons a day. But the government, working from satellite images of the ocean surface, has calculated a flow rate of only 5,000 barrels a day.

BP has resisted entreaties from scientists that they be allowed to use sophisticated instruments at the ocean floor that would give a far more accurate picture of how much oil is really gushing from the well.

“The answer is no to that,” a BP spokesman, Tom Mueller, said on Saturday. “We’re not going to take any extra efforts now to calculate flow there at this point. It’s not relevant to the response effort, and it might even detract from the response effort.”

[Wow, we certainly know who's calling the shots now, don't we? This is what happens with unregulated capitalism, the large corporations are the government. What did B. Mussolini call that? Oh yeah, FASCISM! eds.]

The undersea plumes may go a long way toward explaining the discrepancy between the flow estimates, suggesting that much of the oil emerging from the well could be lingering far below the sea surface.

The scientists on the Pelican mission, which is backed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the federal agency that monitors the health of the oceans, are not certain why that would be. They say they suspect the heavy use of chemical dispersants, which BP has injected into the stream of oil emerging from the well, may have broken the oil up into droplets too small to rise rapidly.

BP said Saturday at a briefing in Robert, La., that it had resumed undersea application of dispersants, after winning Environmental Protection Agency approval the day before.

“It appears that the application of the subsea dispersant is actually working,” Doug Suttles, BP’s chief operating officer for exploration and production, said Saturday. “The oil in the immediate vicinity of the well and the ships and rigs working in the area is diminished from previous observations.”

Many scientists had hoped the dispersants would cause oil droplets to spread so widely that they would be less of a problem in any one place. If it turns out that is not happening, the strategy could come under greater scrutiny. Dispersants have never been used in an oil leak of this size a mile under the ocean, and their effects at such depth are largely unknown.

Much about the situation below the water is unclear, and the scientists stressed that their results were preliminary. After the April 20 explosion of the Deepwater Horizon, they altered a previously scheduled research mission to focus on the effects of the leak.

Interviewed on Saturday by satellite phone, one researcher aboard the Pelican, Vernon Asper of the University of Southern Mississippi, said the shallowest oil plume the group had detected was at about 2,300 feet, while the deepest was near the seafloor at about 4,200 feet.

“We’re trying to map them, but it’s a tedious process,” Dr. Asper said. “Right now it looks like the oil is moving southwest, not all that rapidly.”

He said they had taken water samples from areas that oil had not yet reached, and would compare those with later samples to judge the impact on the chemistry and biology of the ocean.

While they have detected the plumes and their effects with several types of instruments, the researchers are still not sure about their density, nor do they have a very good fix on the dimensions.

Given their size, the plumes cannot possibly be made of pure oil, but more likely consist of fine droplets of oil suspended in a far greater quantity of water, Dr. Joye said. She added that in places, at least, the plumes might be the consistency of a thin salad dressing.

Dr. Joye is serving as a coordinator of the mission from her laboratory in Athens, Ga. Researchers from the University of Mississippi and the University of Southern Mississippi are aboard the boat taking samples and running instruments.

Dr. Joye said the findings about declining oxygen levels were especially worrisome, since oxygen is so slow to move from the surface of the ocean to the bottom. She suspects that oil-eating bacteria are consuming the oxygen at a feverish clip as they work to break down the plumes.

CBS's Sixty Minutes actually put together some excellent in-depth stories about the Deepwater Horizon tragedy and gusher. At least the word is slowly getting out.
[false-color image from a European polar-orbiting satellite on 18MAY2010 showing the large surface oil-slick, the tail-looking appendage is a heavier surface concentration heading for the Loop current, which will soon bring it to Florida, then up and around in the Gulf Stream further north along the US Atlantic Coast. eds]

Here is another demonstration showing us who really runs the US government (as if we really needed it).

BP Withholds Oil Spill Facts — and Government Lets It
by Marisa Taylor and Renee Schoof

WASHINGTON - BP, the company in charge of the rig that exploded last month in the Gulf of Mexico, hasn't publicly divulged the results of tests on the extent of workers' exposure to evaporating oil or from the burning of crude over the gulf, even though researchers say that data is crucial in determining whether the conditions are safe.

Moreover, the company isn't monitoring the extent of the spill and only reluctantly released videos of the spill site that could give scientists a clue to the amount of the oil in gulf.

BP's role as the primary source of information has raised questions about whether the government should intervene to gather such data and to publicize it and whether an adequate cleanup can be accomplished without the details of crude oil spreading across the gulf.

Under pressure from senators, BP released four videos Tuesday, but it hasn't agreed to better monitoring.

The company also hasn't publicly released air sampling for oil spill workers although Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the agency in charge of monitoring compliance with worker safety regulations, is relying on the information and has urged it to do so.

"It is not ours to publish," said Dean Wingo, OSHA's assistant regional administrator who oversees Louisiana. "We are working with (BP) and encouraging them to post the data so that it is publicly available."

Much of the worker exposure data is being collected by contractors hired by BP.

Toby Odone, a BP spokesman, said the company is sharing the data with "legitimate interested parties," which include government agencies and the private companies assisting in the cleanup. When asked whether the information can be released publicly, he responded, "Why would one do it? Any parties with a legitimate interest can have access to it."

Joseph T. Hughes Jr., the director of the worker education training program for the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, said he didn't think "anyone has seen much of that data at all."

"The hard part about it is that in a normal response, when the government is doing this, there might be more transparency on the data," Hughes said. "In this case, when you have BP making the decisions and collecting the data it's harder to have that transparency."

Unlike the response to other past national disasters such as Hurricane Katrina where the government was in charge, BP has been designated as the "responsible party" under federal law and is overseeing much of the response to the spill. The government is acting more as an adviser.

So far, the government has been slow to press BP to release its data and permit others to evaluate the extent of the crisis.

"I think that one of the lessons learned here is whether the federal government should have more of a role in the response and not leave that decision-making in the hands of the responsible parties," said Hughes, whose institute was one of the first to raise questions about air quality at the World Trade Center site in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks.

A recent report in the New England Journal of Medicine found that many Sept. 11 rescue workers still suffer from impaired lung function.

The Center for Toxicology and Environmental Health, one of BP's consultants, is collecting air quality samples over the coast and the water.

"It's fair to say that a majority of the air monitoring along the shoreline is being done by our organization," said Glenn Millner, a partner with the CTEH and a principal toxicologist.

Gina Solomon, a medical doctor and a senior scientist with the Natural Resources Defense Council, said her environmental organization has been pressing the government to release the data, after hearing reports of fishermen concerned about exposure.

"The fact that OSHA is saying that it's safe is important because they have access to data that we don't have," she said. "It's sort of awkward to have to take that on face value given the fact that there are fishermen who feel they are getting sick."

The Environmental Protection Agency is releasing shoreline data on its website, but not information about the air quality workers encounter on the water.

OSHA has access to that data and is monitoring it to determine what type of equipment the workers should be issued and other questions related to worker safety. So far, the air quality does not require workers to receive respirators, Wingo said.

Millner said that data as a matter of practice is shared only with the oil clean up worker and the company overseeing the cleanup.



BP also has exercised considerable control over how much is known about the amount of oil gushing into the gulf.

Early on, the government estimated that 210,000 gallons was being released daily. That estimate was based on satellite observations of the water's surface.

The first look at the oil coming out of the pipe on the sea floor was a video clip that BP released last week in response to demands from reporters and others. It caused a stir because some experts who analyzed it estimated that the amount of oil pouring into the gulf was many times the government's official estimate.

Sens. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., and Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., on Monday asked BP on Monday to provide all available video footage.

BP provided clips from several days of the spill on Tuesday.

The clips, however, would still result only in rough estimates because the oil flows at different rates at different times and it's mixed with gas, said BP spokesman Mark Proegler.

The company had no other equipment on the sea floor to monitor the amount of the flow, and no plans to install any.

"We've said from the beginning . . . it's difficult if not impossible to measure from the source of the flow," Proegler said on Tuesday. BP's focus is stopping the flow and keeping the oil away from shore, he said.

Jeff Short, an oil pollution expert and former National Marine Fisheries Service official who now works for the environmental group Oceana, said the estimate based on surface observations was very imprecise, and that looking at the flow rate from the pipe would be better.

"The public has the right to see what harm the environment is exposed to, and knowing the flow rate is fundamental to that," he said.


Judy McDowell, the chair of the biology department and a senior scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts who's studied many oil spills, said that in addition to knowing the amount of oil flowing in, scientists also need to figure out how it's dispersing and breaking down in order to know what effect it would have on living organisms in the water.

Jane Lubchenco, the administrator of NOAA, said in testimony to a Senate committee Tuesday said it was important, but difficult to get a better estimate of the amount of oil. She said that the Coast Guard planned to set up a team to get a better estimate.

Some university researchers have been frustrated by the lack of data and the refusal of federal agencies to press BP to collect detailed measurements from the broken well pipe or fully assess what might be happening underwater.

"We have been screaming from day one for data,'' said Peter Ortner, a fisheries biologist at the University of Miami.

Ortner also said that NOAA had been slow to consider sub-surface effects and didn't deploy the sophisticated gear that might help surveying for submerged oil.


Lubchenco said Monday that the agency had been discussing ideas about more sensing gear on the ocean floor but said "the priority at this point is to stop the flow.''

Meanwhile, an analysis of satellite imagery by the University of Miami's Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, reported Tuesday that the spill has grown to more than 7,500 square miles, or about the size of New Jersey.

(Curtis Morgan of The Miami Herald contributed to this article.)
© McClatchy Newspapers 2010


It's imperative to understand, we must not take any information about the oil gusher, the release rate, the biological effects, etc. at face value from BP. Their livelihood is at stake, and they will do whatever they think they can get away with, not to jeopardise their profits, and existence. They have a proven history of willful disregard for safety in pursuit of profit, all over the World (including here in on the North Slope of Alaska). BP is saying now that they are siphoning off 3000 barrels per day from the gusher, yet we know from scientific estimates, that the release rate is still 10 to 20 times that!  

When people living around the Gulf of Mexico, Florida, and the US Atlantic coast start to see the effects of all this oil as it moves into their areas, they will understand. The collapse of fisheries and tourism, lost jobs and livelihoods, destruction of ecosystems, and human health effects. And hopefully realise, how and why this all happened. Remember, hurricane season is just about upon us. Think about what will happen if/when an area of heavy oil concentration is pushed onshore by a storm surge. 

                                           OUR NEW BACKYARD 

In just two days hence, the staff and materiel of the Alaska Progressive Review will be relocating to the balmy latitude of 61.15 degrees N., adjacent to the city of Anchorage. Our new facility will be the Chugach Front Research Centre. Negotiations are currently underway for the acquisition of a suitable facility, right at the base of the Chugach Mountains, about 10 KM east of downtown Anchorage. We say in Alaska, that Anchorage, because it is a big city, with all of the resulting characteristics that entails, is not really Alaska, but you can see it from there. In fact, the Chugach Front Research Centre, will only be two blocks from Alaska! 

We will be able to quickly pack/run/ski/bike, from the Research Centre, right onto trails that connect with all the Anchorage area ones, and those that go right into the heart of the Chugach Range. A very special and desirable characteristic, necessary for our well-being. So we will have the best of both worlds, true wilderness for our backyard, and the social benefits of being in a larger community. We'll be able to interact and work with more progressive people and groups as well, in our quest for a more sane and just society, in this, and other countries. 

We'll have to be more careful though. Your assistant editor, Mattie, is literally fearless. She will chase, or at least investigate, any large animal present. Moose, Caribou, etc.. She has not come across any bears yet. South-Central Alaska has a much higher black and brown bear concentration than the Interior. Because there is more food available, fish in the rivers/streams, and berries on land, along with a milder, slightly maritime-influenced climate. So we'll have to keep an eye on her. Homer of course is much calmer and wiser, in his advanced age of 14 years, so we are not worried about him. 

Avalanche danger is very high on the steeper slopes of the Chugach Range in winter and spring, these mountains receive tremendous volumes of snow, and are heavily glaciated above 1500 metres, since they are close to the Gulf of Alaska, and wring out moisture moving over them from storms in it. Combine that with strong winds, from different directions, and very hazardous conditions occur, from wind-loading of these heavy snowfalls.  Something we here at the Alaska Progressive Review are aware of, have studied, and will always be cognisant of as we traverse these mountains through the year on foot, ski, bike, or snowshoe. Cheers.

Monday, May 10, 2010

AN AMERICAN CHERNOBYL? [and] NATIONALISE THEM!

AN AMERICAN CHERNOBYL?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernobyl_disaster

The Chernobyl nuclear power station explosion, north of Kiev, Ukraine, Soviet Union, in April, 1986 caused many fatalities directly within the first few weeks and months of it's occurrence. And forced the evacuation of a wide area around the city of Pripyat, where the nuclear reactors were located; 336,000 people were forced out, and to this day, the area remains barred from human inhabitation, for safety reasons.


And, even now, the long-term effects of this disaster, which spread radiation around the entire Northern Hemisphere, are coming to light. A new study, by the New York Academy of Sciences, now estimates up to a million people were killed by radiation exposure, around the World, from Chernobyl. In the words of the report's authors:

"This is far and above previous official estimates, all of which chose to ignore though, findings from Soviet/Russian, and Eastern European sources. In the words of the authors of this study:
The New York Academy of Sciences says not enough attention has been paid to Eastern European research studies on the effects of Chernobyl at a time when corporations in several nations, including the United States, are attempting to build more nuclear reactors and to extend the years of operation of aging reactors.

The academy said in a statement, "Official discussions from the International Atomic Energy Agency and associated United Nations' agencies (e.g. the Chernobyl Forum reports) have largely downplayed or ignored many of the findings reported in the Eastern European scientific literature and consequently have erred by not including these assessments."

We don't find this surprising, at the Alaska Progressive Review. Powerful vested interests, not just corporations that manufacture and run nuclear energy and materials supply firms, but governments of many "first-world" nations like the U.S., France, Germany, the U.K., etc.., do not want this information to be widely disseminated. Because all these countries have dozens of nuclear power stations.

It is thought that this disaster, and the Soviet Union's initially inept response, and lid of coverage over it, was partially responsible for it's downfall. That this empowered then-premiere Mikhail Gorbachev and his followers in their efforts of "perestroika" (re-structuring), and "glasnost" (open-ness), of the corrupt, Stalinist-bureaucracy-dominated Communist government.

20 APRIL, 2010
An explosion on the Deepwater Horizon, an offshore oil platform in the Gulf of Mexico, 100 KM south of Louisiana, kills 11 workers, and leads to it's destruction. The entire platform was eventually engulfed in flames, and it sank to the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, several days later. Run by the large energy corporation, British Petroleum (BP), http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BP,  it is proving to be a great disaster, for them, and soon, the entire Gulf of Mexico, and Florida.

This platform was constructed to enable drilling to occur for oil in deep waters, at very deep depths underground. Truly amazing to contemplate these numbers. The drill pipes and infrastructure first had to be set up on the seafloor at 1524 metres (5000 feet) depth, up to the platform. This giant platform, while this operation began, and proceeded, was held on-station by large diesel turbine engines. Then, drilling proceeded to a depth of nearly 6100 metres (20,000 feet)! The explosion occurred just 20 hours after all the drilling and setup operations were complete, and oil was beginning to flow. It is thought that a methane bubble, from the pressurised gas that exists at these great depths underwater and underground, raced up the pipes, and caused the explosion. The 11 dead crewmembers, of 124 total in place at the time, have never been found.

At first media focus and attention was on the terrible explosion and fatalities, truly a heart-wrenching disaster, for those involved in this exceedingly dangerous business. But it soon became apparent that oil, under pressure from methane gas deposits located within it, was uncontrollably gushing out from the wellhead, 1500 metres under the Gulf of Mexico. Initially estimates of the rate of oil gushing out were well below the lastest current "official" one of 800,000 litres (210,000 gallons) per day. With an estimated 13,300,000 litres (3.5 million gallons) having been released, of as 10MAY2010, into the Gulf of Mexico, a several-thousand square KM-sized slick has been created, parts of which are now washing up onshore from Louisiana, east to Alabama.

British Petroleum is undergoing major damage-control operations, to try and minimise this tragedy, and evade any U.S. governmental penalties and sanctions which may result from it. And, our corporate media is also, as usual, helping along their comrade, in their coverage process. Because, what is not being said, in the official BP-released information, since they are so-far, running the operation to try and stop the undersea gusher, is that this is a unique, and potentially catastrophic event. One that will have far-reaching effects, in both size, and duration. An uncontrolled rupture and release of oil/gas has never occurred this far underwater, from such a deep, pressurised well.

Latest attempts to stop the gusher have been unsuccessful. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8673815.stm.

Think about the logistics involved, with any attempt. At a depth of 1500 metres, only small, manned submersible craft, or remote-controlled submersibles can operate, in the crushing pressure, cold, and dark. Oil and methane gas are stirring up, and clouding the area. The longer it keeps going, the weaker the containment structures and seafloor around the undersea well are becoming, because of the highly pressurised oil/gas mixture shooting out. In fact, it is estimated now, by non-BP oil industry sources that the leak RATE may become 12 times worse, if it remains uncapped for several weeks, to months longer (which now seems likely) . The deposit from which this oil/gas emanates is estimated to contain many billion barrels (one barrel contains 160 litres) of oil, and equally vast amounts of methane. Even if it remains at the current rate of 800,000 litres per day (which seems unlikely, it will likely increase much higher), in 90 days, 72,000,000 litres (18,950,000) gallons will have been released into Gulf of Mexico waters. This will far exceed what happened in Prince William Sound, Alaska in 1989, when the Exxon Valdez tanker ran into Bligh Reef and disgorged it's contents into that pristine environment. But again, this is a very low estimate, it will likely be much higher, possibly by an order of magnitude, or larger.

Vast areas of the Gulf of Mexico coastline in the US and Mexico will have their highly productive fisheries operations destroyed, possibly for decades. Tourism of course, will also suffer. There are currently 400 other deep-water oil-production platforms operating in the Gulf. All of these will need to be shut down and inspected, to limit the potential for additional incidents of this nature. The oil slicks will be carried by currents through the Florida Keys, fouling the waters there, then northward along the Florida, Georgia, and Carolina coasts, by the Gulf Stream. There is also the complication of the coming hurricane season. Any size tropical storm or hurricane will delay and jeopardise mitigation craft and response efforts/personnel, but could, if it were strong enough, and with the proper trajectory, push a monstrous oil-laden storm surge onshore, anywhere along the Gulf Coast. Think about what that would do.

Adding up all the costs from destroyed fisheries, tourism, and costs to try and clean up coast-lines and save oil-soaked and ravaged wildlife, will be astronomical. Billions and billions. Think BP will be forced to pay that? That's even if this gusher can be tamed, if it proves to keep expanding, and billions of barrels are released, the entire Gulf of Mexico would be poisoned, which would then spread through the Atlantic. Truly a frightening thought! Some engineers have speculated that if all else fails, and the US military has to get involved, by bombing or torpedoing the gusher, to try and collapse the seafloor around it, and plug it up, that this would actually make it worse. Because the pipe casing would have long since been destroyed in the 6100 metre deep hole, and the rocks around weakened by the pressurised oil/gas shooting out. So that any explosive-type operation could lead to a much larger hole in the seafloor, with a volcano-like oil/gas eruption resulting. All we can do now is hope for the best!

Did this have to happen? Reading the following article, by one of our favourite investigative journalists, Greg Palast, makes us think, probably not:

Slick Operator: The BP I've Known Too Well
Wednesday 05 May 2010

by: Greg Palast, t r u t h o u t
News Analysis

"I've seen this movie before. In 1989, I was a fraud investigator hired to dig into the cause of the Exxon Valdez disaster. Despite Exxon's name on that boat, I found the party most to blame for the destruction was ... British Petroleum (BP).

That's important to know, because the way BP caused devastation in Alaska is exactly the way BP is now sliming the entire Gulf Coast.

Tankers run aground, wells blow out, pipes burst. It shouldn't happen, but it does. And when it does, the name of the game is containment. Both in Alaska, when the Exxon Valdez grounded, and in the Gulf last week, when the Deepwater Horizon platform blew, it was British Petroleum that was charged with carrying out the Oil Spill Response Plans (OSRP), which the company itself drafted and filed with the government.

What's so insane, when I look over that sickening slick moving toward the Delta, is that containing spilled oil is really quite simple and easy. And from my investigation, BP has figured out a very low-cost way to prepare for this task: BP lies. BP prevaricates, BP fabricates and BP obfuscates.

That's because responding to a spill may be easy and simple, but not at all cheap. And BP is cheap. Deadly cheap.

To contain a spill, the main thing you need is a lot of rubber, long skirts of it called a "boom." Quickly surround a spill, leak or burst, then pump it out into skimmers, or disperse it, sink it or burn it. Simple.

But there's one thing about the rubber skirts: you've got to have lots of them at the ready, with crews on standby in helicopters and on containment barges ready to roll. They have to be in place round the clock, all the time, just like a fire department, even when all is operating A-O.K. Because rapid response is the key. In Alaska, that was BP's job, as principal owner of the pipeline consortium Alyeska. It is, as well, BP's job in the Gulf, as principal lessee of the deepwater oil concession.

Before the Exxon Valdez grounding, BP's Alyeska group claimed it had these full-time, oil spill response crews. Alyeska had hired Alaskan natives, trained them to drop from helicopters into the freezing water and set booms in case of emergency. Alyeska also certified in writing that a containment barge with equipment was within five hours sailing of any point in the Prince William Sound. Alyeska also told the state and federal government it had plenty of boom and equipment cached on Bligh Island.

But it was all a lie. On that March night in 1989 when the Exxon Valdez hit Bligh Reef in the Prince William Sound, the BP group had, in fact, not a lick of boom there. And Alyeska had fired the natives who had manned the full-time response teams, replacing them with phantom crews, lists of untrained employees with no idea how to control a spill. And that containment barge at the ready was, in fact, laid up in a drydock in Cordova, locked under ice, 12 hours away.

As a result, the oil from the Exxon Valdez, which could have and should have been contained around the ship, spread out in a sludge tide that wrecked 1,200 miles of shoreline.

And here we go again. Valdez goes Cajun.

BP's CEO Tony Hayward reportedly asked, "What the hell did we do to deserve this?"

It's what you didn't do, Mr. Hayward. Where was BP's containment barge and response crew? Why was the containment boom laid so damn late, too late and too little? Why is it that the US Navy is hauling in 12 miles of rubber boom and fielding seven skimmers, instead of BP?

Last year, CEO Hayward boasted that, despite increased oil production in exotic deep waters, he had cut BP's costs by an extra one billion dollars a year. Now we know how he did it.

As chance would have it, I was meeting last week with Louisiana lawyer Daniel Becnel Jr. when word came in of the platform explosion. Daniel represents oil workers on those platforms; now, he'll represent their bereaved families. The Coast Guard called him. They had found the emergency evacuation capsule floating in the sea and were afraid to open it and disturb the cooked bodies.

I wonder if BP painted the capsule green, like they paint their gas stations.

Becnel, yesterday by phone from his office from the town of Reserve, Louisiana, said the spill response crews were told they weren't needed because the company had already sealed the well. Like everything else from BP mouthpieces, it was a lie.

In the end, this is bigger than BP and its policy of cheaping out and skiving the rules. This is about the anti-regulatory mania, which has infected the American body politic. While the tea baggers are simply its extreme expression, US politicians of all stripes love to attack "the little bureaucrat with the fat rule book." It began with Ronald Reagan and was promoted, most vociferously, by Bill Clinton and the head of Clinton's deregulation committee, one Al Gore.

Americans want government off our backs ... that is, until a folding crib crushes the skull of our baby, Toyota accelerators speed us to our death, banks blow our savings on gambling sprees and crude oil smothers the Mississippi.


Then, suddenly, it's, "Where was hell was the government? Why didn't the government do something to stop it?"

The answer is because government took you at your word they should get out of the way of business, that business could be trusted to police itself. It was only last month that BP, lobbying for new deepwater drilling, testified to Congress that additional equipment and inspection wasn't needed.

You should meet some of these little bureaucrats with the fat rule books. Like Dan Lawn, the inspector from the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation, who warned and warned and warned, before the Exxon Valdez grounding, that BP and Alyeska were courting disaster in their arrogant disregard of the rule book. In 2006, I printed his latest warnings about BP's culture of negligence. When the choice is between Lawn's rule book and a bag of tea, Lawn's my man.

This just in: Becnel tells me that one of the platform workers has informed him that the BP well was apparently deeper than the 18,000 feet depth reported. BP failed to communicate that additional depth to Halliburton crews, who, therefore, poured in too small a cement cap for the additional pressure caused by the extra depth. So, it blew.

Why didn't Halliburton check? "Gross negligence on everyone's part," said Becnel. Negligence driven by penny-pinching, bottom-line squeezing. BP says its worker is lying. Someone's lying here, man on the platform or the company that has practiced prevarication from Alaska to Louisiana."

Then there was this article we presented in our last post, wherein a BP whistleblower presented documents proving that they willingly and knowingly ignored numerous safety regulations and procedures in the construction and operation of an even-larger deepwater platform, Atlantis, which pumps 8.4 million gallons per day, 320 KM south of New Orleans.

I don't think it's an exaggeration to say that most Americans don't trust the oil/energy companies. Their continuing record-profits (for all corporations, ever in history), while also directing US governmental policies in waging immoral, illegal, and aggressive warfare in the Middle East is well-known. And all of the corporate World has been behind the deregulatory push, began aggressively during the Reagan administration, but fully continuing under all subsequent ones, of US capitalism. Which has resulted in a nearly-destroyed economy (by the uncontrolled greed of the big banks), the highest unemployment since the Great Depression, and now this: the potential poisoning of a significant part of the global ecosystem, in the drive for faster, and greater profits. How much longer can the Earth sustain this? Could the Deepwater Horizon tragedy serve as a catalysing agent for positive change (like the Chernobyl tradedy did, for the USSR), forcing people in the US and other countries to see what unregulated capitalism brings? http://www.democracynow.org/2010/5/7/government_exempted_bp_from_environmental_review

And then forcing stronger regulatory policies and procedures to be re-implemented, and strengthened (as well as the realisation that greed is not a healthy and sustainable basis on which to run a society)? We will do our best here at A.P.R. to aid in this process!

NATIONALISE THEM!


What does it mean, when you hear, or read of "nationalised" industries? Simply put, it means some industry, or entire sector of industry, is owned and operated by a national government. Instances abound, in this country, and all the other industrialised nations. For instance, the U.S. Postal Service is one, or the federal energy companies, Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), or Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), which market power from federal dams to industry and households in the Northwest, and Southeast.

Many nations even have nationalised oil and energy industries. Not just supposedly "socialistic" ones like Venesuela, Bolivia, China, etc.., but even Norway, and Mexico. The reason these countries, and others, do this, is because they want to use the vast economic benefits that result from oil and gas production, to help fund their governmental operations and efforts to provide better standards of living for their populaces.

Of course, in the US corporate world, and media, Nationalisation is a dirty, and demonised word. And rarely, if ever mentioned, for it is a threat to the overall structure of deregulated capitalism which is ravaging the planet, and if left unchecked, will kill the host, as any unchecked tumour would.

US and some European nations, pressure by corporate entitities, have a long history of subverting efforts of other countries to nationalise some industrial concerns, and even roll back ones already in place.

We came across this interesting little article in the Democracy Now web-site the other day.

History of BP Includes Role in 1953 Iran Coup After Nationalization of Oil

As tens of thousands of gallons of oil continue to spew into the Gulf of Mexico from the BP oil spill we continue our series on BP. Sixty years ago, BP was called the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. We look at the story of the company’s role in the 1953 CIA coup against Iran’s popular progressive Prime Minister Mohamed Mossadegh.

Guest: Stephen Kinzer, author of “All the Shah’s Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror.” See full interview

AMY GOODMAN: As we wrap-up, as tens of thousands of gallons of oil continue to spew into the Gulf of Mexico from the BP oil spill, we continue our series on BP. Yesterday we looked at their horrendous safety record on the millions of dollars they’ve spent on lobbying congress to prevent regulation. Today, we’re going to look at the history, sixty years ago, BP was called Anglo Iranian Oil Company. In an interview on DEMOCRACY NOW!, Stephen Kinzer, the former New York Times bureau chief, author of “All the Shah’s Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror”, told the story of the Anglo Iranian Oil Company’s role in the 1953 CIA coup against Iran’s popular progressive Prime Minister, Mohammed Mossadegh. Let’s go to a clip of what Steven Kinzer says.

STEVEN KINZER: At the beginning of the 20th century as a result of a corrupt deal with the old dying monarchy, one British company, owned mainly by the British government, had taken control of the entire Iranian oil industry.

AMY GOODMAN: The company?

STEVEN KINZER: This one company had the exclusive rights to extract, refine, ship, and sell Iranian oil. And they paid Iran a very tiny amount, but essentially the entire Iranian oil resource was owned by a company based in England and owned mainly by the British government.

AMY GOODMAN: [Inaudible] British Petroleum?

STEVEN KINZER: Anglo Iranian Petroleum, later to become a British Petroleum and BP. I’m still on my one-man boycott. Like I go to the Shell station, as if Shell is somehow morally superior to BP. But still, in my own mind I feel like I’m redeeming Mossadegh when I pass by one of those BP stations. Anyway, what happened was that Prime Minister Mossadegh, who really was an extraordinary figure in his time, although he’s in somewhat forgotten by history, came to power in 1951 on a wave of nationalism aimed at this one great obsession, we’ve got to take back control of our oil and use the profits for the development of one of the most wretchedly impoverished nations on earth at that time. So the Iranian parliament voted unanimously for a bill to nationalize the Anglo Iranian Petroleum Co. and Mossadegh signed it and he devoted himself, during his term of office, to carrying-out that plan. To nationalize was then Britain’s largest and most profitable holding anywhere in the world. Bear in mind that the oil that fueled England all during the 1920s and 30s and 40s all came from Iran. The standard of living that people in England enjoyed all during that period was due exclusive to Iranian oil. Britain has no oil. Britain has no colonies that have oil. every factory in England, every car, every truck, every taxi, was running on oil from Iran. The Royal Navy, which was projecting British power all over the world, was fueled a hundred percent by oil from Iran. Suddenly Iran arrives and says, ‘Oh, we’re taking back the oil now.’ So this naturally set-off a huge crisis. And that’s the crisis that made Mossadegh really a big World figure around the early 1950s. At the end of 1951 Time magazine chose him as ‘Man of the Year,’ and they chose him over Winston Churchill, Douglas MacArthur, and Dwight Eisenhower; and they made the right choice because at that moment, Mossadegh really was the most important person in the world.

AMY GOODMAN: That was the former New York Times reporter Stephen Kinzer. Wrote “All the Shah’s Men.” Talked extensively about the Anglo Iranian Oil Company which was renamed British Petroleum. That’s BP. That does it for our show.
What followed for Iran after Mossadegh's overthrow, was the 25 year reign by the US-backed Shah of Iran. Who maintained a harshly repressive government. His secret police agency, SAVAK, was trained by the CIA in methods of torture and repression.

Tens of thousands of people were tortured and murdered by them, during the Shah's 25 year rule, for opposing it, or working for any basic human rights issues. It was this harsh rule which led to his violent overthrow in 1978-79, followed by the subsequent, and still in power, Islamic fundamentalist government. We have to wonder, what would have happened, had Mossadegh's government been left intact? Iran could have been a beacon for democracy and just economic and social policies in the Middle East. But it was not to be...

When we look at the history of Iran, and the Middle East, it becomes clear that privately owned fossil fuel corporations are responsible for the deaths, and misery of millions of people, over the past 60 years or more. This is why we at A.P.R., call for all governments to NATIONALISE THEM!. Because then governments would be less likely to subvert others due to greed and political payoffs from these monstrously profitable corporations. And some form of democratic control of the oil industries would be possible, to use the profits from their oil and gas production, for all manner of social benefits. The development of basic infrastructure, schools, hospitals, affordable housing, transportation networks, and alternative energy research and development. But first people in the US and other industrialised nations need to know and understand, that nationalised industries can and will directly benefit them. Which is why we here at A.P.R., are working to do this.

Your lead author worked for one year at the Bonneville Power Administration, in Vancouver, WA, as a meteorologist, in 1994-95. I only spent one year there because I missed living in the smaller city of Missoula, MT, and being in the Rocky Mountains. But I found it to be a truly fulfilling place to work, not just financially, and with good benefits, but because all my colleagues and I knew we were engaged in highly useful and important work, providing energy needed to run our society. And so we worked hard, always giving good and honest effort in what were doing (and I'm sure it's still like that). Contrary to what corporate media would say about state-run operations, that people would be lazy and unproductive, because they couldn't be fired, and would have little oversight. When people are compensated justly, with living wages and benefits, and understand that what they are doing benefits their society, they will always be productive and healthy members of an operation.

So, let's all do our best to educate people about what nationalisation of industry represents, and how beneficial it would be for the oil industry to be so managed. Likewise support and push politicians who understand and would work for this. It won't be easy, but it has to be done, if we are to keep the cancer of unregulated capitalism from destroying it's host, OUR PLANET!

p.s. This just in: http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2010/05/14-2

Gulf Spill Could Be Much Worse Than Believed

by Richard Harris

The amount of oil spilling into the Gulf of Mexico is far greater than official estimates suggest, according to an exclusive NPR analysis.

This image released by BP on May 11 shows the main oil leak (R) of the Deepwater Horizon rig which exploded April 20 and killed 11 workers.

(AFP/BP) At NPR's request, experts analyzed video that BP released Wednesday. Their findings suggest the BP spill is already far larger than the 1989 Exxon Valdez accident in Alaska, which spilled at least 250,000 barrels of oil.

BP has said repeatedly that there is no reliable way to measure the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico by looking at the oil gushing out of the pipe. But scientists say there are actually many proven techniques for doing just that.

Steven Wereley, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at Purdue University, analyzed videotape of the seafloor gusher using a technique called particle image velocimetry.

A computer program simply tracks particles and calculates how fast they are moving. Wereley put the BP video of the gusher into his computer. He made a few simple calculations and came up with an astonishing value for the rate of the oil spill: 70,000 barrels a day -- much higher than the official estimate of 5,000 barrels a day.

The method is accurate to a degree of plus or minus 20 percent.

Given that uncertainty, the amount of material spewing from the pipe could range from 56,000 barrels to 84,000 barrels a day. It is important to note that it's not all oil. The short video BP released starts out with a shot of methane, but at the end it seems to be mostly oil.

"There's potentially some fluctuation back and forth between methane and oil," Wereley said.

But assuming that the lion's share of the material coming out of the pipe is oil, Wereley's calculations show that the official estimates are too low.

"We're talking more than a factor-of-10 difference between what I calculate and the number that's being thrown around," he said.

At least two other calculations support him.

Timothy Crone, an associate research scientist at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, used another well-accepted method to calculate fluid flows. Crone arrived at a similar figure, but he said he'd like better video from BP before drawing a firm conclusion.

Eugene Chiang, a professor of astrophysics at the University of California, Berkeley, also got a similar answer, using just pencil and paper.

Without even having a sense of scale from the BP video, he correctly deduced that the diameter of the pipe was about 20 inches. And though his calculation is less precise than Wereley's, it is in the same ballpark.

"I would peg it at around 20,000 to 100,000 barrels per day," he said.

Chiang called the current estimate of 5,000 barrels a day "almost certainly incorrect."
Given this flow rate, it seems this is a spill of unprecedented proportions in U.S. waters.

"It would just take a few days, at most a week, for it to exceed the Exxon Valdez's record," Chiang said.

BP disputed these figures.

"We've said all along that there's no way to estimate the flow coming out of the pipe accurately," said Bill Salvin, a BP spokesman.

Instead, BP prefers to rely on measurements of oil on the sea surface made by the Coast Guard and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Those are also contentious. Salvin also says these analyses should not assume that the oil is spewing from the 21-inch pipe, called a riser, shown in the video.

"The drill pipe, from which the oil is rising, is actually a 9-inch pipe that rests within the riser," Slavin said.

But Wereley says that fact doesn't skew his calculation. And though scientists say they hope BP will eventually release more video and information so they can refine their estimates, what they have now is good enough.

"It's possible to get a pretty decent number by looking at the video," Wereley said.

This new, much larger number suggests that capturing -- and cleaning up -- this oil may be a much bigger challenge than anyone has let on.

WHO ARE YOU GOING TO BELIEVE, BP OR THESE SCIENTISTS?

So there you have it. This uncontrolled gusher of oil and methane from a 6100 metre deep well, 1500 metres underwater, has already put several Exxon Valdez disasters worth of oil in the Gulf of Mexico now, with no end in sight, and hurricane season starting. Cheers.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

PINNELL ANTLER QUEST [and] OIL WOES

                 PINNELL ANTLER QUEST
There was only time for one more short outdoor trip last weekend in the Interior, before we have to consolidate the A.P.R. research center material for our upcoming move to Anchorage just over three weeks hence.

We decided to look for shed caribou antlers off of the Pinnell Mountain Trail, which is 120 km east of Fairbanks, on the north side of the Steese Highway. This is the 45 km trail your lead author fast-packed in 8/08 in 9.5 hours, followed by a 32 km 2 hour bike ride, back to our vehicle at the start. A great outing in perfect weather. http://akprogressive.blogspot.com/2008/09/pinnell-mountain-fast-pack-friday-82908.html

Last weekend though was quite a bit colder, and with still fairly extensive snow cover, since the start of our quest was at 1000 metres, with higher terrain behind.

At the start it was about -3C with about a 20kph southwest breeze. After a few km of patchy snow cover, we got to more uniform cover, about 300 metres higher, packed hard and into interesting drifts and dunes by the ceaseless winds at these exposed, higher elevations. Tree line here is only around 1000 metres, not because of the harsh winter conditions, but due to the cooler growing season temperatures. Whenever any kind of low pressure system travels through Interior Alaska, temperatures in the lower valleys, like around Fairbanks, may drop to 10-13C, with cool, wet weather. Up here though, temperatures may only be 2-5C, with strong winds, at the same time. Our black and white spruce need a certain number of growing season hours (we forget the exact number) to be over 10C, which doesn't happen above about 1000 metres (though that is changing).

We had to go up and down some quite steep pitches, mainly following the cairn-marked Pinnell Mountain Trail. It was easy to keep a good grip though with my snowshoes on the hard wind-packed snow.

Mattie and Homer, of course, had no problem maintaining their grip, with their four-pawed traction devices.

About 10km in, the snow cover became patchy as we approached Table Mountain (in the far distance, in this photo), a flat-topped summit that rises about 200 metres above the windy exposed saddle at it's base.

I was making very good time with my light 12kg pack with just overnight supplies, my -30C down sleeping bag and 0.8kg ultra-light tent. So much so, that as I approached the base of Table Mountain, I just didn't want to stop and take off my snowshoes, as we walked across the rocky ground, and started up the mountain. Not a good idea. The gripper on my left snowshoe caught on a rock, and I fell right onto another one, striking my fibula bone, right below the knee. It was quite painful, and while I collected myself for a few minutes, Mattie and Homer were licking and nuzzling me, making sure I was alright. Since I was wearing my thick mountaineering pants, I did not receive a big gash, but swelling started immediately. After about five minutes, I started back up the mountain. It only took about 15-20 minutes to reach the top. 
We decided to set up camp here on the flat top of Table Mountain, it was only about 12km, and 3 hours in from our start at 12 Mile Summit. The view up there was very nice, looking out on all sides, down into different drainages, with a very large area to walk around on and set up camp. With some good snow patches for water, as well. It was here that I realised, I could hardly lift up my left leg, from the swelling. After setting up camp though, we decided to keep exploring. As long as I took short steps without too much leg lifting, the pain was manageable. And we wanted to find some antlers!
So we left camp, and kept walking down the Pinnell Trail, and off the sides, looking for likely antler shed sites. The trail after Table Mountain traverses a vast expanse of summits and saddles, for another 35 km, until it intersects the Steese Highway again at Eagle Summit.

We went about another 8km before we decided to turn back to our camp. I didn't want to aggravate my leg injury, the pain was constant, but not intolerable. We never did see any antlers, unfortunately. My anter-expert friend Matthew told me yesterday though, that the best places would have been lower anyway, nearer toward tree-line. As they shed then in February, and the caribou wouldn't want to be up on these higher, windier, harsher areas when that happens. Oh well...

There were still alot of steep ups and downs, on this part of our hike, out from, and then back to camp. It became more painful on the uphills, where I hit my leg, the swelling was definitely noticeable, and I could barely lift it. Even the back of my leg behind the knee was painful.

Getting back to camp was a relief.  After dinner we all had a relaxing time in the nice evening light, sitting out (while I was bundled up in my camp chair) in the -9C 20kph breeze, enjoying the view.

After sitting out for a few hours, reading a good book, I was getting cold, and it was time to get into the tent and my -30C down bag. Sunset now isn't until after 10 pm, and it's not fully dark overnight.

Mattie and Homer were quite content to run around all night in the wind, judging by the sounds I heard outside the tent. I slept well though, in the cosy bag, getting up at 0800 sunday morning. Unfortunately, the 20 kph breeze of yesterday had turned into a 60kph gale overnight, from the east. The temperature was a little warmer though, about -2 or -3C. Unfortunately, I was running an experiment. I brought my lightweight butane-fueled Jetboil stove, to see how well it would work in these conditions. I was told when I bought it, that it would not work well below about minus 15C, so I never used it in those conditions, always used the white-gas fueled Whisper Lite. The Jetboil barely worked sat. evening at -10C, and sunday morning, not at all, even though it was somewhat warmer. Probably because the fuel canister stayed cold all night. What a bummer, no hot breakfast, coffee, and most importantly, extra water! I only had a little left, counting on being able to melt some more with the stove.

This situation, combined with my compromised leg, meant we had to pack up and get out fairly quickly. It was quite a chore packing up the tent in the roaring gale. One of my stuff sacks blew down the mountain, without my knowing it. Mattie came trotting back with it, after running down the mountain. She sure is smart and helpful! I was in more pain on our 12km walk back to the car. I also went slower, to make sure there would be no falls, and took off the snowshoes in the rocky sections. By the time we got back, three hours later, I was very thirsty, and pretty hungry, since breakfast was only two energy bars, totalling about 500 calories. Still, it was a fun outing, in beautiful weather, with nice views, just what we needed, before having to start getting ready for our move. Now that I know more about the Caribou shedding habits, the next quest will be successful.

                          OIL WOES

By now, you have probably read about, or seen on broadcast news the Jamaica-sized oilslick being produced from the blown-out British Petroleum (BP) well, 90 km off the Louisiana coast, which is 1500 metres underwater. http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2010/04/29-3 

This may end up being the worst ecological disaster in US history, and we feel very badly for all the people on the Gulf Coast, who make their livelihoods from the fisheries, and tourism in the area. Because they will surely be affected adversely, as the people around Prince William Sound, here in Alaska were in 1989, by the Exxon Valdez disaster. (and from which Exxon is still trying to evade paying out court-ordered damages, 21 years later!).
As Dave Lindorff's article, here,  http://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/04/28-2, states, opening up more coastal/oceanic areas around the US, especially in the Arctic, to offshore drilling, is courting more disasters, like the current one.

The Beaufort, Chukchi and Bering Seas, where oil exploration is already underway, have extremely treacherous weather. During the half of the year when they are not ice-covered, gale and storm-force winds occur regularly when strong low-pressure systems transit through these areas. And these low pressure systems are becoming stronger, and extending later into the fall months now that the climate is warming. Seas of 5-10 metres build up in these storms. Now imagine some sort of accident similar to the current one occuring, say in late October. By late October, well-below 0C winds can generate heavy freezing spray. Which can jeopardise any vessels, when ice builds up on the superstructure. Sometimes causing them to capsize.. Many ships have been lost over the last few centuries, because of that. The Chukchi Sea and northern and central Bering Sea then start freezing up in November (and still will for at least another 20 to 30 years). The Beaufort sea begins freezing in late October. So an uncapped well would then be trapped under the ice for several months, with no work able to be done. Can you imagine the disaster that would create? And for oil supplies that would barely put a dent in the annual US need. Is it really worth it?

How about mandates to double all automobiles gas mileage (which can easily be done with existing technology), and subsidising focused conservation efforts for residential, commercial, industrial, and government buildings. Just these two factors could halve US oil use in less than a decade (and CO2 emissions). But, as we know, the profits in these kind of initiatives aren't as high, and in a short-enough term, for the right people and corporations, as our sociopathic Capitalist/Corporate system requires. http://akprogressive.blogspot.com/2010/01/legitimised-sociopathy.html

Remember, as our ex-Vice President, Mr.R. Cheney famously said, in 2002: "THE AMERICAN WAY OF LIFE IS NON-NEGOTIABLE."  [although it would take the resources of several Earth's to give the entire planet "the American Way of Life", eds.] Cheers.

p.s. This just in:
http://www.truthout.org/whistlelower-bps-other-offshore-drilling-project-gulf-vulnerable-catastrophe59027

A whistleblower from the energy company British Petroleum http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BP, has documents proving that they willfully and knowingly disregarded numerous safety regulations and procedures in the construction of the giant Atlantis oil platform. 320 KM south of New Orleans, it's been pumping 8.4 million gallons a day since it's completion in 2007!. This was done to save time and money.

An explosion like the one at Deepwater Horizon, which killed 11 workers  (who are still missing-weeks later), would create a spill 30X WORSE than the Deepwater Horizon one.

This is a story with big implications. We'll be sure to keep abreast of it.