Gulf Bacteria Quickly Digested Spilled Methane
masterwit writes "From an AAAS news release: 'Bacteria made quick work of the methane released by the Deepwater Horizon blowout, digesting most of the gas within the four months after its release, according to a new study published online at ScienceExpress.' This study, however, did not deal with other chemicals (oil) from the disaster's fallout. A glimpse of good news from the disaster's aftermath."
Reader iamrmani points out a related article suggesting that things may be looking up for BP after the Presidential Commission said blame for the disaster should be shared with service contractors and government regulators.
Yes, quite possibly. The regulators and contractors should be jailed for criminal negligence. That doesn't mean BP shouldn't be sued into oblivion, though. Let them be a lesson for all others and all that.
Too bad it doesn't even have a snowball's chance in hell of happening. Despite being called Beyond now, I'm sure the British government would file them in the "too big to fail" category.
But how about that oil?
vos nescitis quicquam, nec cogitatis quia expedit nobis ut unus moriatur homo pro populo et non tota gens pereat.
"after the Presidential Commission said blame for the disaster should be shared with service contractors and government regulators."
I say "our" because the government represents us all, or should anyways, that's a subject for a different debate. I'm sorry, we don't share in their profits, we should not be responsible for their mistakes. In my opinion, regulation is desired in cases such as this, but not to share blame, only as an additional protective measure. Yes, we may have failed at that (don't get me going on the bullshit that went on previously with the regulators and oil industry, nor the complete lack of review of the plan should a disaster happen, haven't seen any sea lions lately down here in the Gulf area) but the responsibility for safety rests squarely on those that are conducting the drilling and reaping the profits. Well, at least they would have if they had not screwed up so royally.
I feel that we should start rejecting all of these reports. These are always paid and never scientifically based.
There are an incredible amount of schools and student programs who we need to really educate how to do these tests. Let's have the top 10 universities along the gulf all do their own independent studies. Make them all take their own samples, use their own methods. Then we might have at least a somewhat impartial study.
It's nice to know that ScienceExpress is 'express' enough to not bother including any real data along with their story.
Yeah, I read most of the article...of course, if I were the typical slashbot, most=whatever the slashdot summary included (along with the sassy editorial at the end, making it ever so painfully obvious the submitter wants to steer the reader's opinion of the article..I mean, Fox News anchors are better at doing that, and they're horrible!)
It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
Before the spill, BP was trading at $60+/share. Today, they're at $45/share. I can't help but think that since they have already paid out most of the money that will have to and since they have settled most of the claims, and since the well is good and dead, that the stock price has to recover to it's previous levels. If you buy today at $45 and it recovers only to $60 in a year, then that's still a 33% return on investment, which is absolutely terrific, especially in a down economy. Any thoughts?
Maybe the leftovers of that digestion should worry us
Like this?
Almost Soviet in that way.
If its not measured, it does not exist. Feds can keep most of the tame press away. University funding can be shifted.
http://openchannel.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2010/12/27/5717367-is-dispersant-still-being-sprayed-in-the-gulf
Long term studies and samples then become lost in the mix of "persistent but unsubstantiated reports".
Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
I wonder if all those dead birds, fish and stuff that have been turning up ate the bacteria or ate something that ate the bacteria :D
a JP Morgan executive becomes Chief of Staff of the white house.
http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2011/01/07/daley/index.html
Yeah, the Astroturf has reached artistic proportions. Soon they will exhibit it in performance art showings.
Who ate what? "Gulf Bacteria Quickly Digested, Spilled Methane." -- Yum... (poot!)
Anyhow, this isn't really surprising. I hear those Gulf Bacteria will eat anything, Even Flesh!
This makes perfect sense. Natural oil leaks occur quite often. But they are usually less concentrated and in lower volumes at any single point in time and space than an artificial oil leak such as at the gulf. But, nevertheless, nature has mechanisms in place that can deal with oil. Many of them don't work in spills of this magnitude, but many others will, over time, do more than we projected. The other problem that the article doesn't mention, however, is the ecosystem unbalance caused by the increase of the particular chemicals that creatures (usually bacteria) devour in that given area. While I'm sure the food-chain will eventually work its magic and all will be well and good again, it is a startling upset to the balance of nature when predators (fish) suddenly die out at the same time prey (the bacteria) begin to flourish.
Ginga no Rekshiya Mata Each page.
As for lax government oversight, it's a red herring. (Pun intended.) When there was lax oversight of poultry farmers in the midwest and as a result people got sick from bacteria, the farmers couldn't say "You ignored our bad behavior, so we don't have to pay a fine." They go nailed anyway, it just took longer.
Following up on useless oversight MMS (Mineral Management Services). http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/25/us/25mms.html
Note that this is completely separate from the sex and drug scandal at the MMS that came to light in 2008: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/11/washington/11royalty.html
So how did this oversight failure happen? It was a product of the Bush administration's conscious sabotage of regulation when they were in control. They appointed "pro-business" officials who had a policy of letting business get away with everything up to and including murder. Remember that people died on that oil rig.
So far, all that has happened is that MMS people have quit or been fired. There have been lots of investigations but no one has been charged with anything.
The Obama administration seems to be serious about reinstating meaningful regulation, but now with the Republicans in control of the House that might not happen. Congressman Darrell Issa is asking businesses what government regulations they want eliminated (also known as soliciting bribes) http://articles.latimes.com/2011/jan/05/business/la-fi-issa-business-20110105. So if you like getting sick from bad food or big environmental disasters then you may be in luck.
Why is Snark Required?
was the temperature of the water
Hence forth, all major petroleum spills are limited to warm climates
Take that, Canada - no drilling in the Arctic!!!
Been there, done that, paid for the T-shirt
and didn't get it
You should all see this a a life lesson ... Fart In the tub or while swimming, save the earth!
A bead is a small, decorative object that is usually pierced for threading
or stringing. Beads range in size from under 1 millimetre
(0.039 in) to over 1 centimetre (0.39 in) in diameter.Beads can be made of many types of materials.
The earliest beads were made of convenient natural materials; when found, these could be readily
drilled and shaped.
...welcome our new bacteria overlords.
Omnomnomnomnom --bacterial cell#146876135
I work in the environmental field. One of the main ways to clean up gas and oil spills is by bacteria injection into the groundwater. There are a number of bacteria species that are probably having a gourmet feast in the Gulf right now. It won't be a year until 99% of that stuff is gone, just by natural biodegradation.
And seriously, compared to the spills that happen around Africa and the Middle East, the Gulf spill was minor.
So what are those bacteria, Beano?
"[O]xygen drops when bacteria respire methane"
What could go wrong?
a website called scienceexpress?
We end up with 23% instead of 25% O2 in the air?
If it ever gets that bad...
You're only a week late with this old news.
Kriston
Thanks to all these postings I now know that capitalism causes accidents.
I guess the AMAZING safety records of the non-capitalist countries should have been more obvious.
I now know that socialism = green, communism = peace.
Thank you all so very much.
Citation needed? Oh please.
No brain, no pain.
The bacteria were consumed by the plankton, the plankton by fish and crabs, fish and crabs by the birds.. Then the birds fell from the sky and the fish and crabs washed up on shore. Oops.
I Wonder where this information is really coming from, seems to easy to just gulp this down and sort of think, it's ok, it all dissipated. I prefer just thinking of how tragic this was to all the people mexican or us, who live off the fishing industry, can now not provide for their families...then try to tell me how happy i should feel that some plankton ate up the spill.....supposedly...where is the proof, not like i can go into the gulf myself (all patrolled and off limits to reporters and other ships) to get a sample and test see if ok or not.
the Republicans become the strongest supporters of Darwin's evolution theory.
My first thought at reading this was: is this PR from BP? The company that is responsible for the worst oil spill in the history of the world? I'm sure someone else responsible for a major spill and the deaths of innocent people due to negligence and incompetence would have to pay for the duration of their lives, and their families beyond.
It sure sounds like it. Two highly positive notes over a couple week period then a series of news articles all but absolving them directly of the actions.
You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
Here's an article about something scientific, what bacteria are doing, and oh yeah, it's so-and-so's fault. Oh well, forget discussion of the topic, and let's instead point fingers. More and more topics simply cannot be discussed anymore without getting sidetracked by blame. It's sickening.
Actually, this wasn't technically the worst oil spill in the history of the world. It was the worst spill in the history of the US, but there have been far greater world spills. Less than 20 years ago, in Kuwait, around 520 million gallons flowed from multiple wellheads. The slick was 4" deep for ~4000 sq. miles. Envirowonk 10 largest oil spills Also, although it would be nice to be able to hold someone directly responsible for these kind of spills and the traumatic reach that devastates our ecosystems, there is no price in the world that will return things to their natural health. No matter what, we will have to suffer the consequences of the paid off regulators, and the greed of the companies that just want to maximize profits. Trillions of dollars won't put our fragile system back together the way it was. Life on earth is forever changed by this type of catastrophe, while we might not see direct changes right away, each act contributes to the overall decay of life on the planet due to this greed.
The term that we've long used for this process (up to and including, as you say, murder) is "regulatory capture". It's something that the Trade Union movement has been complaining about in Britain since well before the Piper Alpha (which was approximately 15.2 Deepwater Horizons in body count). But the sacked MMS officials don't need to worry. There will be plenty of openings for them in the industry on the basis of their strong personal records in safety management in the industry.
I'd write more, but I'm just back onshore form a completely different shallow water HTHP drilling project, and I'm going to the pub instead.
Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"