Home
Contact Us
Donate
Support Us
Store
Books
Videos
Global Political Awakening and the New World Order
Quotes
Translate
GPA Store: Featured Products
Saturday, April 23, 2011
10 Reasons to Still Be Pissed Off About the BP Disaster
Your guide to the worst oil spill in US history, one year later.
Kate Sheppard
Mother Jones
1.
BP is gunning to get back to drilling in the Gulf of Mexico.
When the Department of Interior
issued its first deepwater permit
since the Deepwater Horizon disaster, it was for a well that BP owns half of. Earlier this month, company officials also announced that they are seeking an agreement with the US government to resume drilling at their 10 deepwater wells in the Gulf this July, arguing that they will follow tougher safety rules, the
New York Times
reported
earlier this month. This comes even as the government is
said to be considering
manslaughter charges against the oil giant for the deaths of 11 workers last year.
2.
People are sick
. Nearly three-quarters of Gulf coast residents that the Louisiana Bucket Brigade, an environmental justice group,
polled this year
reported health concerns that they believe are related to the spill. Of the 954 residents in seven coastal communities, almost half said they had experienced health problems like coughing, skin and eye irritation, or headaches that are consistent with common symptoms of chemical exposure. While the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) is
conducting health monitoring
for spill cleanup workers, residents in the areas closest to the spill are concerned that their own health problems have gone unattended.
3.
Fish and other sea life in the Gulf are still struggling after the disaster
. The death toll for dolphins and whales in the Gulf may have been
50 times higher
than the number of bodies found, according to a recent paper in
Conservation Letters
. Earlier this year, a large number of dead dolphin calves
were found on the coast
, and scientists have
linked many of those deaths
to the oil disaster. Anglers are also reporting dark lesions, rotting fins, and discoloration in the
fish they're catching in the Gulf
, as the
St. Petersburg Times
reported last week.
Read Full Article
Enter your email address to subscribe to our newsletter:
Delivered by
FeedBurner
0 Comments
Disqus
Fb Comments
[Get It]
Comments :
Newer Post
Older Post
Home