Wednesday, April 8, 2015

The $37 Billion oil spill

Recovery is in full swing, and much of the coast in already bouncing back.
Photo: iStock

From Outside by Kim Cross

Five years after the Deepwater Horizon disaster, we wanted to know whether the Gulf had recovered—and how much remains to be done.

Everyone remembers how it started: on April 20, 2010, the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform exploded off the coast of Louisiana, rupturing the Macondo well below it.
Over the next 87 days, as much as four million barrels of oil surged into the Gulf of Mexico—the worst marine spill in history.
Over the ensuing weeks, BP, which operated the rig, launched a massive cleanup campaign: 810,000 barrels of oil were skimmed off the surface or captured from the wellhead, 1.8 million gallons of chemical dispersant were pumped into the waters, 411 surface fires were lit, miles of floating booms were deployed, and tens of thousands of workers cleaned beaches.
Whether you turned on Fox News or the Today show, the Gulf was the story.

This year, what few headlines have appeared have focused on the third and final phase of a federal trial in Louisiana to determine how much BP can be fined under the Clean Water Act.
(A judge ruled that it should fall between $3 billion and $14 billion.)
Combined with previous fines and forthcoming penalties for damage to wildlife, the company will have spent nearly $40 billion in restitution.
“No company has done more to respond to an industrial accident,” says BP spokesman Jason Ryan.
These days you’re more likely to see an ad for Louisiana tourism (paid for, in part, by BP) than any coverage of the lingering recovery effort.
I lived on this coast for years, first on the Florida Panhandle and then in New Orleans.
I’ve swum in its waters and eaten its seafood more times than I can remember.
So last December, I decided to return to the area and check on the progress myself.

What Happened to the Oil?

There’s one thing that almost everyone agrees on: it’s not as bad as it could have been.
In large part, this is due to bacteria that appear to have evolved to feed on the million or so barrels’ worth of oil that naturally seeps from the Gulf floor each year.
When the spill happened, that bacteria quickly consumed many of the alkanes found in the crude.
By 2011, six months after the well was capped, the plume had disappeared.
But other hydrocarbons were left behind.
According to Chris Reddy, a senior scientist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute*, “Oil is a complex mixture; it’s like a buffet. The prime rib is gone, and now the crusted-over coleslaw”—the part the bacteria didn’t consume—“is still there.”

  Photo: Deepwater Horizon Response/Flickr

How much coleslaw depends on who you ask—one of many contentious issues surrounding the event.
In 2010, BP committed $500 million in funding for the Gulf of Mexico Research Institute to examine the leak’s long-term impact.
BP also went on a hiring spree.
The company paid hundreds of scientists to study the spill in preparation for litigation, but they were bound by a gag order.
The first time many of them spoke was when they testified—on BP’s behalf—at the trial in Louisiana.
Today, no one’s really sure how much oil is still out there.
In 2010, the White House released a report claiming that only 26 percent of the spill remained in the Gulf. Scientists torpedoed the findings for not being peer reviewed.
Furthermore, the only known quantity, according to Samantha Joye, a marine scientist at the University of Georgia, was how much oil was skimmed off the surface or captured at the wellhead—every other number is at best an estimate.

This much is certain: there’s still a big mess on the seafloor. Joye saw it first in 2010, when she began studying the effects of the spill, and again in April 2014.
On both occasions, she descended 5,000 feet in a submarine and found a layer of mud mixed with oil near the blowout site.
“The mysterious caramel brown layer that we discovered in 2010 remains,” she noted in 2014.
“It is about the same thickness as it was in 2010 [between five and seven centimeters], and it is widespread—we drove around for over 2.5 km [1.5 miles] and saw the feature everywhere.”
That lines up with Reddy’s October 2014 report that there was a “bathtub ring” of crude the size of Rhode Island on the seafloor.
Perhaps more disconcerting is what we’ve since learned about Corexit, the dispersant pumped into the water.
Corexit was supposed to break down the oil but also made it more edible to fish and plankton, which otherwise don’t consume it.
Even worse, there’s some evidence that the chemical actually hindered degradation, allowing more hydrocarbons to remain in the Gulf.
What Happened to the Fish?

How the oil will affect marine life over time remains to be seen.
In the year following the spill, nearly 7,000 animals were found dead: more than 6,000 birds, 600 sea turtles, and 150 marine mammals, including dolphins and sperm whales.

Photo: Deepwater Horizon Response/Flickr

Since then, however, there have been signs that populations are bouncing back.
During her 2014 dive, Joye observed a multitude of fish, squid, and eels—a marked contrast to 2010, when she saw one crab in seven hours.
A recent study found that brown and white shrimp were more abundant in estuaries heavily affected by the spill.
Shortly after the explosion, 37 percent of the Gulf was closed to fishing, for safety reasons and to allow populations to rebound.
By April 2011, most closures were lifted, though a few areas remained off-limits until 2014.
Today, commercial catches of shrimp, crabs, and yellowfin tuna remain lower than before the explosion in eight of the region’s most significant fisheries (though revenues as a whole have grown by 50 percent).

As populations struggle to recover, the scientific focus has shifted to how toxins work their way up the food chain.
Of particular concern are polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs, the carcinogens associated with charred meat), which comprise between 2 and 10 percent of crude oil.
The livers of vertebrates—fish, birds, humans—filter PAHs readily, but they can build up in the invertebrates, like lobsters and clams, fed on by larger fish.
And because the spill struck during breeding season, the embryos and larvae of many species may have been harmed.

There have been signs that marine-life populations are bouncing back. During a 2014 dive, biologist Samantha Joyce observed a multitude of fish, squid, and eels—a marked contrast to 2010, when she saw one crab in seven hours.">
“Those creatures influence the species they feed on and also the species that feed on them,” says Peter Hodson, an emeritus environmental-studies professor at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario.
“If you knock out those embryos, the effects on fish populations could take years to see.” One species already struggling is oysters, populations of which have plummeted in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama.
“My production is down 93 percent,” says George Barisich, an oyster farmer and shrimper from Louisiana’s St. Bernard Parish.
“They’re not contaminated to where it’ll make you sick, but there are no babies.”

What Happened to the People?

If you visit the Gulf shore today, you’ll see the same Caribbean-blue water and sugar-white sand that have enchanted generations.
“The Gulf is undergoing a robust recovery,” says BP’s Ryan.
“It’s still beautiful,” says Phillip McDonald, executive chef at Bud and Alley’s Pizza Bar in Seaside, Florida. “I just went surfing yesterday. There are nickel-size tar balls here and there, but those were there before the oil spill, occasionally.”
There are, after all, roughly 2,400 oil platforms in the Gulf.
While observers predicted tough times for energy companies after the explosion, those never came to pass.
Production is down 27 percent across the Gulf, but that looks to change as more leases become available on prime real estate.
In 2012, President Obama opened 39 million new acres to drilling; in 2014, he approved offshore fracking.
Big Oil still has it good.
So do the beach towns.
“Since 2011, this area has had some of its best years for tourism,” says Michael Sturdivant, chairman of the Emerald Coast chapter of the Surfrider Foundation, an environmental watchdog group.
But Sturdivant and others are concerned about how much oil remains in the ocean, estuaries, and marshes—and how that might affect residents.
There are “tens of thousands of people in the coastal area” suffering from symptoms associated with oil exposure, according to Wilma Subra, a former EPA adviser who now assists the Louisiana Environmental Action Network.
“We’re seeing a lot of respiratory problems but also cardiovascular issues, memory loss, and degradation of organs.”

  Photo: Deepwater Horizon Response/Flickr


Proving that those symptoms are oil-related requires longitudinal studies that can take years.
Two big ones are under way: The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences is conducting a ten-year study on the health effects of a spill, monitoring 33,000 cleanup workers and coastal residents. (It’s the largest such study in history.)
And a five-year project by a consortium of five universities is measuring PAH levels in subsistence-fishing communities.

Then there are the 115 men and women who survived the explosion itself, many of whom, like Stephen Stone, suffer from post-traumatic stress.
“It’s not over,” his wife, Sara, told me in December.
“These are not incidents that happen and have an ending.”
That’s precisely the trouble with the situation in the Gulf.
BP will someday move on, but scientists are likely to remain busy for decades to come.
How the Gulf will look in 20 years is anyone’s guess.
Over the past few years, I’ve caught glimpses of the achingly beautiful Gulf of my childhood, and I’ve found myself in awe of its resilience.
But I can’t shake the fear that some unseen danger is still out there threatening to upset the balance.
“You can’t put the Gulf in an MRI and find specific problems in an ecosystem this diverse and complex,” says Chris Reddy.
“We’re going to have to live with large uncertainties for a very long time.”

What the Oil Spill Cost BP (So Far)

Initial Response and Cleanup: $14.3 billion
Litigation, Medical and Financial Claims, and Marketing:
Financial and property damage: $11.6 billion
Government advances, claims, and settlements: $769.3 million
Coast Guard cleanup reimbursement: $704.7 million
Tourism promotion: $179 million
Health outreach: $79.7 million
Seafood marketing settlement: $57 million
Realtor compensation program: $54 million
Behavioral health program
: $52 million
Seafood marketing: $48.5 million
Goodwill marketing: $27.1 million
Seafood testing: $25.4 million
Medical claims: $331,600
Criminal Fines:
Science and wildlife foundations: $765 million
Spill liability and wetlands restoration: $750 million
SEC securities fraud penalty: $525 million
Manslaughter and obstruction of Congress fines: $6 million
Environmental Costs:
Natural resources damage assessment funding: $1.2 billion
Early habitat restoration: $629 million
Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative (funding to date): $315 million
Clean Water Act Penalty: $3.5 billion (so far. In January, a Louisiana judge ruled BP grossly negligent, which could push its CWA fines as high as $14 billion.)
Administrative Costs: $1.5 billion
Total: $37.1 billion

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