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Editorial
See other Editorial Articles

Title: “The oil is creeping towards my home in Alabama as I write this, and it is breaking my heart.”
Source: [None]
URL Source: [None]
Published: May 12, 2010
Author: bh
Post Date: 2010-05-12 20:44:06 by tom007
Keywords: None
Views: 10204
Comments: 85

“The oil is creeping towards my home in Alabama as I write this, and it is breaking my heart.” Published by ash_anderson, May 12th, 2010 Climate Justice , Climate Policy , Climate Science , Climate and Forestry , Corporate Responsibility , Corruption , Dirty Energy , Extraction , Government , Impacted Communities , Oceans , Oil , global warming 1 Comment

Brinkley Hutchings, Greenpeace Student Network activist, at home on the Alabama coast -- directly in the path of the fast-approaching spill.

From Brinkley Hutching’s blog, a post entitled A Local’s Account of the Deepwater Disaster. She filmed an astonishing video from her fathers aircraft, as they flew from their home to the source of the spill and back. See below. She is also the Greenpeace Campus Coordinator at University of North Carolina-Wilmington.

itsgettinghotinhere.files...r-lighter.jpg?w=357&h=382

I grew up in one of the most beautiful places. Montrose, Alabama. My family lives on Mobile Bay, and I spent my childhood exploring the many bays, rivers, streams and creeks near my home. Starting at age 7, I would spend whole days exploring the local waters and shorelines with my little 13 foot boat. What existed naturally in my own backyard was truly utopian. Now, all the beautiful trees, wildlife and pristine waters, all will see the thick black and red oil within these next days. It brings a deeper ache than I can express.

As I flew out to the spill last Friday with my father (he’s a pilot), I wasn’t prepared for what I was going to witness. Here are some notes I took during the flight as we approached the source of this disaster:

“We are starting to smell oil…the pungent smell burns my nostrils and I feel nauseated to the core of my being….oh my God…red streaks of oil are everywhere…thick black near the well…it is crude oil and it stretches as far as I can see…I am sick…I can’t feel my own body or distinguish any of my feelings right now… this is the worst and most saddening situation I have ever seen in my life…The boats are randomly skewn about, and they are so disorganized! The cleanup efforts look completely haphazard and ineffective. It is utter chaos down there! Boats randomly placed, pulling booms that are simply swirling the oil around in circles! I really don’t feel alive right now…this is a horrible dream…why the heck didn’t BP have to have a plan in place for a disaster like this?!”

It was so much worse than I could have ever imagined and not even close to what the media has been portraying. I couldn’t even take it all in. I saw miles and miles of crude oil pouring from the Earth’s core to the ocean’s surface, red as blood, where it then proceeded to move eerily and ominously with the current toward my home. Before I even registered sadness, tears poured down my face. My entire body cried. I felt so helpless looking down at that uncontainable and chaotic mess. I will never be able to clear that picture from my mind.

This disaster could have been prevented, yet it wasn’t due to BP’s own negligence and a weak national energy policy. What’s outrageous is that BP is doing everything they can to avoid assuming responsibility for this spill. How dare they try and sidestep responsibility for the worst disaster in the Gulf’s history?!?!?!

Over 4 million gallons of crude oil are destroying the Gulf coast and innumerable wildlife habitats while also crippling local economies – this is destroying my home.The time of giveaways and loose regulation of the oil industry must end.

I hope with all my heart that this disaster will be a huge wakeup call. Things must change. We must all work to lessen our dependence on fossil fuels and be involved in a clean energy revolution. Congress needs to ban offshore drilling and President Obama needs to provide unwavering support to end offshore drilling.

Please talk to your friends. Talk to your neighbors. Start organizing yourselves. Become involved with these serious issues we are facing. If we continue on our current path of carelessly extracting fossil fuels like oil and coal, rather than harnessing clean, renewable energy like wind power, we will see many more tragedies like the BP oil spill. From the disaster zone,

Brinkley Hutchings

Still photos taken during the flight

Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)

* Oil continues to dump into the Gulf * National Day of Action, Night of Mourning Against Offshore Drilling. Friday… * My Op-Ed on the Offshore Drilling Disaster * Powering Our Future

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 75.

#7. To: tom007 (#0)

They should seal the well closed with a nuke or similar magnitude blast under the sea floor. They should have started working on that immediately as a last resort in case the well wasn't contained by the time the nuke was ready to go off.

Pinguinite  posted on  2010-05-12   21:18:08 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: Pinguinite (#7)

They should seal the well closed with a nuke or similar magnitude blast under the sea floor.

What makes you or anyone think that such an event would "seal" it closed?

buckeroo  posted on  2010-05-12   21:59:04 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#63. To: buckeroo, Pinguinite (#16)

They should seal the well closed with a nuke or similar magnitude blast under the sea floor.

What makes you or anyone think that such an event would "seal" it closed?

To my amazement, a few days ago an apparently serious radio broadcast of the BBC's "World" they interviewed a reporter in Moscow what flat out stated that the USSR used (I remember five) nukes to plug well in similar situations, but not that deep!

I am not saying they did, but that was what was reported by the BBC a day or so ago.

tom007  posted on  2010-05-13   19:29:46 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#64. To: tom007, Pinguinite, all (#63)

You can't seal that with a bomb blast of any magnitude; if such an event would occur, it probably would magnify the flow rate. It must be sealed with a coherent retaining system.

buckeroo  posted on  2010-05-13   19:37:29 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#67. To: buckeroo (#64)

You can't seal that with a bomb blast of any magnitude; if such an event would occur, it probably would magnify the flow rate. It must be sealed with a coherent retaining system.

To me that's not logical. The fact is this oil has been underground for eons and has stayed there in spite of being under pressure, so it's staying there is a stable system. The only reason it's flowing up the well is because there's a steel pipe providing safe, unobstructed passage.

Simply pulling the pipe up will seal the well as the earth will then collapse the well hole under it's own weight. Assuming that's not feasible, Nuking the pipe will also collapse it. and the earth will do the rest.

The oil is 5 miles below the seafloor so even for a large nuke, moving that much earth is not going to happen. And this would need nothing more than a small nuke. Wouldn't even have to be a nuke except that you'd want the explosive device to be small enough to deliver a half mile or so under the floor.

Pinguinite  posted on  2010-05-13   20:32:19 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#74. To: Pinguinite (#67)

The only reason it's flowing up the well is because there's a steel pipe providing safe, unobstructed passage.

What makes you think deploying a thermo-nuclear device would create a coherent and everlasting seal without further catastrophic damage to the environment?

Keep in mind, nuclear explosions have far reaching consequences beyond even a localized project.

buckeroo  posted on  2010-05-14   22:51:49 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#75. To: buckeroo (#74)

What makes you think deploying a thermo-nuclear device would create a coherent and everlasting seal without further catastrophic damage to the environment?

All the nuke is doing is destroying the well pipe. Replace a decent length of that pipe with the same seafloor that used to be there before BP started drilling, and you'll have the same sea floor sealing it that was there before.

As for damage to the environment, if the nuke is sufficiently under the seafloor, (1 mile?) then the radiation will be virtually completely contained and won't seep into the ocean. And if the alternative to not using it is more oil leakage, then you have to weight the risk of radiation pollution with the certainty of oil pollution.

Pinguinite  posted on  2010-05-14   23:04:46 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 75.

#76. To: Pinguinite (#75)

All the nuke is doing is destroying the well pipe.

What guarantee about any bomb blast shall perform that limited function without further issues and potentially exacerbating the existing situation?

buckeroo  posted on  2010-05-14 23:20:22 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#79. To: Pinguinite (#75)

I'd be interested to hear one good reason why they shouldn't nuke it shut.

4th generation micro-nuke. Low radiation, but like you say it would be contained anyway.

The Russians did it lots and it worked for them.

wudidiz  posted on  2010-05-15 00:36:47 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 75.

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