Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Real Coastal Warriors : Environmental Pollution

 
Diplomats from almost 190 nations endorsed a set of measures on global warming, laying the groundwork for a treaty to be adopted in 2015 that would limit pollution by all nations for the first time.
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and other international negotiators confirmed that Iran has reached a deal with six world powers during talks in Geneva on Tehran's nuclear program and the sanctions that have been imposed on the country because of it.
"When we look to the Gulf of Mexico, we see that for shallow water oil drilling, 1 in 272 wells has a spill, while that number increases to 1 in 35 wells for deep sea drilling and to 1 in 19 wells for ultra-deep sea drilling."



The report accuses a long list of corporations of hiring shady investigative firms staffed with former employees of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), National Security Agency (NSA), U.S. military, Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI), Secret Service and local police departments to target nonprofit organizations.

Read the press release:
http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_28783.cfm

Read the report:
http://www.corporatepolicy.org/spookybusiness.pdf
Dolphins Are Dying In Droves

Dolphins are dying all around Florida, and scientists don't know how to stop it. The die-offs of bottlenose dolphins are going on in three different places and appear to be from more than one cause. Although dolphins are not an endangered species, the loss of so many all at once is clearly bad news, scientists say. What makes so many deaths disturbing, he said, is that dolphins are regarded as "sentinels for ocean and human health," not unlike canaries in a coal mine. The first sign of trouble came from the Gulf of Mexico. A month before the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill began, dead dolphins began washing ashore along the Gulf Coast.

http://www.theledger.com/article/20131123/NEWS/131129572/0/search
 

Marylee Orr, executive director of the Louisiana Environmental Action Network, said the number of caverns within the proposed buffer zone is a concern because a problem with just one of them can be catastrophic. She said the state’s proposed rules need to be even tighter and more protective of the public and the environment.“I think we need to be cautious because if there is a problem, it is not a small problem, … you know what I mean?” Orr said. “It is very impactful to the community, and, I believe, to their health.”
 
Real Coastal Warriors shared a link via Truthout.
If Beverly is approved for food stamps, she'll get about $1.50 per meal. David and Charles Koch made enough in one second at the office in 2012 to pay her food bill for an entire year.



The Macondo well incident will be imprinted in our minds for years to come about the dangers of offshore drilling. Not only did it put an emphasis on offshore drillers to be more cognizant of their safety precautions, U.S. government oversight has also stepped up its game. The new director of the government body that oversees offshore drilling -- the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, BSEE for short -- has made it his agency's mission to go further than just oversight, but also look to help prevent spills. How is this possible? And how will it affect offshore drillers going forward? Let's take a look at what the BSEE has in mind.
Real Coastal Warriors shared a link.

This will be J.J. Creppel's last Thanksgiving at his home in Plaquemines Parish, a sliver of marshy land that juts out from the southeast corner of Louisiana and hugs the Mississippi River as it empties into the Gulf of Mexico. But J.J. says after 60 years, he’s finally leaving the Cajun fishing community he loves so dearly. For many like him, life has changed since the BP oil disaster errupted more than three years ago. “The oil spill finished off the shrimp,” he says in a whisper.

Two weeks before the 2010 Gulf oil disaster, BP was responsible for another toxic leak that lasted for forty days. Now, the oil giant is try to weasel out of liability for that event. According to a 2012 lawsuit filed by 48,000 Texas residents, a BP oil refinery in that state released more than 538,000 pounds of toxic chemicals into the air. And, the oil giant didn't tell residents who lived near that plant about the "toxic soup" of chemicals, including benzene and carbon monoxide, that they were exposed to. After finding out about the leak, and the health risks, the group of Texas residents sued BP, asking for $10 billion dollars in damages. Rather than pay for the harm that they caused, or even try to settle the lawsuits, BP is trying to expedite the claims, saying they're simply "clogging up the court." If BP cared about freeing up our court system, they certainly wouldn't be delaying claims related to the Gulf oil disaster, or asking courts to free them from a $9.2 billion dollar settlement in that case. The fact is, the oil giant shouldn't be excused from paying for any of the damages they cause. They have already privatized the gains, and we can't let them socialize the losses.
State officials were in Unalaska on Friday to talk about a proposal pre-authorizing the use of chemical dispersants on oil spills in Alaska waters. Officials from the Alaska Regional Response Team spent four hours at City Hall taking public comment on the proposed changes.




  1. Advances in hydraulic fracturing, also known as fracking, have revolutionized America's energy landscape. However, most Americans are so uninformed about the practice that they don't have an opinion on it according to a new study.
    A Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington report this week reveals that from 2004 to 2012, oil and gas industry contributions to Congressional campaigns climbed 231 percent in fracking states and districts.

     
    On Wednesday, the House passed a bill that will block the Department of the Interior (DOI) from regulating fracking.
    “Despite all the industry rhetoric, I’m here to tell you tonight that shale gas development will really not be good for the economy of New York state,” Barth said. “It will not create a lot of good jobs for New Yorkers, and it will devastate the economy in other ways.”
     
    Real Coastal Warriors shared a link.

  2. Monthly spills do not equal a "safe pipeline." Keystone XL is no different.

    Share if you believe Keystone XL fails on safety.


Congratulations, Ireland! Citizens' opposition to fracking results in a 2-year moratorium, requiring environmental & health impact assessments to be completed.
http://bit.ly/I7wlzW http://bit.ly/17TlH6x

Click to tweet at Governor Andrew Cuomo ! http://clicktotweet.com/tN4C9

“Growing up in south east Louisiana, I learned to love the land, the water, and all that comes with it. The culture here is unique and so are the people. We look out for each other - this is why I am writing you.

Within the past 8 years our community has been hit by multiple hurricanes along with multiple oil spills, each were major events in our area. We refer to them by name - Katrina, Rita, Gustav, Ike, Isaac. Then there are the oil disasters, the largest was the BP disaster in 2010.

For those who haven't yet learned about the health issues caused by the chemical exposure brought on by the BP disaster, some of the families here have had to deal with lingering health issues for the past 3 and a half years. We live so far from any pediatrician our families have to travel multiple times a week to seek help for their children. Some are suffering with repeated skin rashes, breathing problems, bacte-rial and viral infections, just to name a few. Families in our community have had to alter their entire lives around the illnesses their children are suffering from. Mothers have had to quit their jobs in order to keep up with the doctor visits and care of their children, only adding to the financial problems. This has put a huge strain on the family unit itself.

With events like these comes family issues, I have witnessed many families struggle on some level. For some the struggle has put such a strain on the parents, that it has caused divorce, some have turned to alcohol and drug abuse, I have witnessed some become a shell of the person they once were.

With Christmas coming up, I would like to request your assistance for 25 families who need help put-ting together food and toys for the holiday. Any help that you can provide would be greatly appreciat-ed.”

- Kindra Arnesen, Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana

Please send donations of gift cards, toys, or food to:
280 Tangelo Dr., Buras La 70041
 
Real Coastal Warriors shared a link.

This video puts all of the misdeeds of BP into one concise scenario. The use of social media, TV Commercials and lies, non-payment of claims, lies and cover-ups about the true state of the environment and human health, and the fallout of th...See More

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eal Coastal Warriors shared a link.
“It is now on par with the methane being released from the arctic tundra, which is considered to be one of the major sources of methane in the Northern Hemisphere,” Natalia Shakhova, one of the paper’s lead authors and a scientist at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, said in a statement. “Increased methane releases in this area are a possible new climate-change-driven factor that will strengthen over time.”

( Advertising how poorly 'greenhouse gases' are tracked when making 'climate models' )

Real Coastal Warriors shared a link.
U.S. emissions of methane, a potent heat-trapping greenhouse gas, may be 50% higher than federal estimates, reports a team of Harvard and other researchers today.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration weighed in Monday on why the 2013 hurricane season, which officially ends Saturday, had the fewest number of hurricanes since 1982 and was the sixth-least-active since 1950 in terms of storms’ collective strength and duration.
 

For Immediate release:

Climate Ground Zero to deliver toxic blasting dust to the West Virginia State Capitol

When: 1:00

Where: The Liberty Bell Memorial near the back steps of the Capitol Building.

"Blasting mountaintops to mine for coal has been controversial in Appalachia since the 1970's when it was firsts introduced. We believe it has never been legal or regulated. It destroys the streams that are the headwaters for our nations great rivers. The communities that live there have fought in every war since the American Revolution yet they are being displaced and even their cemeteries are being blasted and buried in toxic mining spoils. Most importantly, new studies have shown that breathing the blasting dust can be fatal. Is is past time to end the blasting." said Mike Roselle, director of Climate Ground Zero

"Our next actions will be on the blasting sites if this does not stop, and stop soon. At present, two million pound of explosives are detonated every day except Sunday in Appalachia. No on should have to live under this." Said James McGuinness, one of the protesters with Climate Ground Zero.

We have additional background information at climategroundzero.org

Contact: Mike Roselle
Climate Ground Zero
205 999 8391 (cell( 304 854 7788 (office)
Real Coastal Warriors shared a link.

Nov. 20 marked the 33rd anniversary of the collapse of the salt mine beneath Lake Peigneur in Iberia Parish. The environmental catastrophe resulted from a miscalculation by Texaco while drilling for oil, causing the mine’s ceiling to be pierced by a 14-inch drill bit. The lake drained into the mine, taking with it trees, land and barges, and endangering many lives. Today, residents near the lake are worried that another disaster could befall them, this time because of efforts to store petroleum products within the caverns beneath the lake. In spite of these concerns, oil companies have fought to expand storage in these obviously vulnerable caverns.

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