Wednesday, July 24, 2013

24 July - The View


News/Media Website · 78,754 likes

July 24, 2013 - RIG FIRE IN GULF MAY BURN FOR 2 MONTHS, OFFICIALS SAY - A drilling rig that caught fire late Tuesday after a natural gas well blew out about 55 miles off the coast of Grand Isle could continue to burn in the Gulf for several weeks while response crews work to permanently shut in the well, an energy expert said Wednesday.

But owing to a variety of factors, officials said the accident does not have the potential to become an environmental disaster of major magnitude. Among those factors: the well was in relatively shallow water; it is spewing natural gas rather than crude oil; and all of the workers on the rig were safely evacuated.

The Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, which regulates the oil and gas industry, and the U.S. Coast Guard are overseeing efforts to secure the well and put out the fire.

The Coast Guard said the fire broke out at about 10:45 p.m. Tuesday. During a fly-over to examine the damage Wednesday, federal regulators said they saw no sheens on the water surface in the area near the well.

The fly-over also revealed that beams supporting the derrick and the rig floor collapsed over the rig structure as the blaze continued. Two firefighting vessels on the scene at the time were relocated. A third vessel, with better fire-fighting capability, was expected to arrive Wednesday.

Walter Oil & Gas Corp., the Houston-based oil and production company that was drilling the well, is moving a jack-up rig to the site with the aim of drilling a relief well, a permanent means of shutting down the well, authorities said Wednesday.

The Coast Guard is enforcing a five-mile safety zone around the rig, officials said.

“At this point, I think it appears to be of no threat to the environment or to human life or to sea life for that matter,” Jefferson Parish President John Young said Wednesday about the burning rig.

One local observer of the oil and gas industry said the company has few options other than drilling a relief well.

“They don’t have any choice right now,” said Eric Smith, an associate director of the Tulane Energy Institute.

Smith believes it could take 30 to 60 days for the relief well to be drilled. During that time, the rig will likely continue to burn as the natural gas from deep below the seabed rises to the surface. He estimates that the rig is “a total loss, and that’s probably a $50 million bill on somebody’s tab.”

The well is in about 154 feet of water. Crews were drilling the well at about 8:45 a.m. Tuesday on an platform in the South Timbalier area of the Gulf, doing completion work to prepare for production, when the well blew out. All 44 workers aboard were safely evacuated, the company said.

The cause of the accident is under investigation.

http://theadvocate.com/news/6596287-123/rig-fire-in-gulf-may
 Quick/alert the warmists to environmental tragedy !
A bizarre highly unusual phenomenon shocked the southern Philippine residents as of this 8:00 am (UTC+08:00) there were confirmed reports that a 3 straight hours of heavy snowfall was reported to certain areas in the Southern region.


What really happened at the Pentagon on 9/11? Barbara Honegger, one of the key researchers into the Iran-Contra affair, and author of The October Surprise, has done it again. The following is a long, but riveting presentation that she recently did on what really happened at the Pentagon on 9/11. She's bold, meticulous and has been working on this for a decade. Check it out... http://youtu.be/4fvJ8nFa5Qk
9/11 Pentagon Attack - Behind the Smoke Curtain - Barbara Honegger
www.youtube.com
Barbara Honegger's presentation titled "Behind the Smoke Curtain" in Seattle's Town Hall Theater,

Staples, a frequent critic of increased military spending, questioned both the logic and morality around turning Canada into a global arms dealer."

“So I think there’s a concern that we could be contributing to destabilizing relationships between countries or that they will even be used against protest movements, indigenous peoples or workers that are involved in labour action.”


http://o.canada.com/2013/07/24/conservative-government-looking-to-bolster-canadas-arms-trade-with-developing-countries/

NEW YORK - RED ALERT!

Got Pipelines? Get ready for one of these dragons! They snort out noxious fumes. They go BANG! in the night. They breathe fire.

There are 33 permitted compressor stations in Susquehanna County PA, and most of these are already built, ~25 or so. There were none. Then 5, now 25. This has happened in just 5 years.

The three largest compressors, all owned by Williams, all connect to big ass interstate transmission lines, all have had explosions in 14 months, and NONE were scoped by FERC.

All of these and many more can be found within about 50 miles of Binghamton.

What kind of a thing grows this fast?

http://williamahuston.blogspot.com/2013/07/plane-ride-7-17-broome-county-ny.html
— with Laurel Anna.
PIPELINE DISASTER
The Alberta tar sands have been leaking into waterways for nine weeks with no signs of stopping. http://bit.ly/164WgjX
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"We should have free access to [that land] as treaty status Indians and we have no access to it and we can't trust what we're being told now," explains Lameman.

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2013/07/23/1225932/-Uncappable-underground-blowout-spills-thousands-of-barrels-of-tar-sands-oil-in-Cold-Lake-Alberta

"The scientist, who asked not to be named for fear of losing their job, said the operation was in chaos.

“Everybody (at the company and in government) is freaking out about this,” said the scientist. “We don’t understand what happened. Nobody really understands how to stop it from leaking, or if they do they haven’t put the measures into place.”"


http://nbharbinger.wordpress.com/2013/07/20/tar-sands-blowouts-in-alberta/

 
http://globalnews.ca/news/734227/alberta-enforcing-fewer-than-one-per-cent-of-oilsands-environmental-violations-report/

globalnews.ca
A new independent research report suggests that the Alberta government is only taking enforcement action on a tiny fraction of environmental incidents in the oilsands.
Last week, Center for Investigative Report broke a horrifying story detailing the continued practice of eugenics in California's women prisons. Since the 1990's an estimated more than 250 people inside women's prisons were illegally sterilized in the inherently coercive prison environment. The testimonies are harrowing.

State-sanctioned sterilization abuse has a long and shameful history in the U.S. that has disproportionately targeted women of color and indigenous women, people living in poverty, and people with disabilities. The abuse is grounded in fundamentally racist, classist, and ableist ideas that say some women have the right to bodily integrity and healthy reproduction and others not.

Too often female prisoners are left out of conversations around reproductive justice, despite the fact that, as this report reveals, they are particularly vulnerable to institutionalized, gendered oppression.
Website · 37,492 likes
Fukushima is No Longer a Japanese Problem. It is a “Global Media Blackout” Problem. It is a West...
beforeitsnews.com
”...a creeping and never ending deadly fog of radiation, invisible to the eye but not to the immune system, continues to blanket the West Coast while its human cost is just beginning to be perceived... And remember Obamaordered

Over the last three years, Cargill has received more than 61 million pounds of KLK palm oil.

Cargill sells this abuse-laden palm oil to the biggest food companies in America—NestlĂ©, General Mills, Kraft Foods, Kellogg's—which in turn sell it to YOU. That's just not right.

It's time for Cargill to answer some serious questions. Do you agree? Give em a call!

Questions for Cargill: http://bit.ly/18A3Bsi
Cargill Customer Service: 877-596-4069

*If you do take this brave action against slave labor today, please let us know Cargill's response in the comments below!
IRT supports Ghana!! Campaigners in Ghana are opposing the US-driven imposition of GM foods.
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GM crops: campaigners in Ghana accuse US of pushing modified food
Afua Hirsch, west Africa correspondent
The Guardian, 24 July 2013

*From farmers to MPs, debate over seed ownership and the role of foreign influences on agriculture is causing divisions in Ghana

The US embassy in Accra held a roundtable on biotechnology this month. The discussion, designed to promote candid dialogue between biotechnology supporters and sceptics, was attended by experts and campaign groups on both sides of the GM foods debate.

But one Ghanaian campaign group refused the invitation. "Our call for a moratorium on GM foods was met with an invitation to a closed-door discussion," said Duke Tagoe, of Food Sovereignty Ghana, which campaigns for greater transparency about GM foods. "We are deeply worried about what seems like an imposition of genetically modified foods on the good people of Ghana without any meaningful public discourse, compounded by attempts to stifle any opposition."

Food Sovereignty Ghana and other domestic organisations accuse the US and other foreign donors of promoting GM foods to west African countries, and tying aid to implementation.

According to a leaked cable, the US government was heavily involved in drafting Ghana's 2011 Biosafety Act, which provided a framework for the introduction of GM foods. The US aid department provided technical assistance and some funding.

The cable said biotech products were being sold in Ghana and GM seeds from neighbouring countries were likely to have migrated over its borders. US companies have begun requesting permission to conduct trials.

The US embassy in Accra declined to respond to a request by the Guardian to comment on its stance on GM food in Ghana, but claims about the arrival of GM are supported by public officials.

"GM foods are used in agriculture. This is something you cannot wish away because it has come and it is in practice," said John Odame Darkwa, acting chief executive officer of Ghana's Food and Drugs Authority (FDA). "We ensure that any food imported into the country is safe."

But campaigners say trials of GM foods, which the FDA admits have been carried out in Ghana, are a violation of the law, which states trials require the written approval of a new body, the National Biosafety Authority. The problem, they say, is that this authority does not exist yet.

"Trials are being conducted, but there isn't any framework in place," said Kweku Dadzie, from Food Sovereignty Ghana. "We are calling for a ban on the importation, cultivation, consumption and sale of genetically modified foods and crops, until the people of Ghana are satisfied that such an important and irrevocable decision is a sound and proper one to make."

Dadzie points to a lack of public debate surrounding the passing of the Biosafety Act. Maxwell Kofi Jumah, MP for Asokwa, recently admitted on local radio that ministers lacked understanding of the issues.

Many opponents of GM crops have pointed to the role of multinational companies that sell GM "hybrid" seeds that do not self-pollinate, compelling farmers to buy new seeds from the same companies each year, as well as their pesticides and herbicides.

Tagoe said: "Farmers in Ghana have had their own way of keeping seeds year after year. If these policies are allowed to manifest, Ghanaian farmers will have to change money into foreign [currency] in order to purchase seeds from overseas firms. The economic impact on the lives of the farmers will be disastrous. The origin of food is seed. Whoever controls the seed controls the entire food chain. These seeds are not owned by any African entity, they are owned by American companies."

However, experts say there are advantages to the technology. The chief executive of CGIAR Consortium on agricultural research, Dr Frank Rijsberman, said: "Private companies could develop self-pollinating seeds that also provide higher yields, but they don't because it's not profitable.

"But at the same time, the quality of seeds that pollinate themselves is often not that great. It can be difficult for farmers to select the best seeds. The job of seed companies is to select seeds that will have a bigger yields. The best hybrid rice, for example, produce about 20% better yields than the best self-pollinating seeds."

Some say that, instead of looking at yield increases through GM, the focus should be on improving access to markets for the crops that are already being grown by greater investment in extension services and low-technology improvements in farming.

"There is huge potential to increase yields using low-cost and existing technologies," said Kanayo Nwanze, president of the International Fund for Agricultural Development, speaking at the Africa Agricultural Science Week in Accra last week. "In Africa, only about 6% of the total cultivated land is irrigated … It is estimated that irrigation alone could increase output by up to 50% in Africa.

"Small increases in fertiliser use in sub-Saharan Africa can produce dramatic improvements in yields. Post-harvest grain losses in sub-Saharan Africa average $4bn every year. This is food that could meet the nutritional needs of around 48 million people."

Rijsberman said farmers needed better seeds, but also required better access to inputs, access to markets, farming systems and livelihood strategies. "These things would go a long way to improving yields and incomes in a country like Ghana," he added.
Institute for Responsible Technology shared a link.
Health/Wellness Website · 19,978 likes

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