Thursday, June 3, 2010

A Dinonalysis of the Deepwater Horizon Disaster and Response

Here out west, the whole affair seems almost surreal. The images of birds coated in oil, suffering, fill me with despair. I can only imagine how those who live along the Gulf feel, and how anxious Eastern Seaborders must be since the oil could eventually end up there, too. After the jump, I’ll offer some brief thoughts about how the disaster has been covered and how the Obama Administration could respond more effectively.




First, I think the despair everywhere is palpable, and the source of it is probably an understanding, deep down, that there simply is no fix for what has happened. A cleanup there will be, and a big one, but it will be partial and the damage is closer to permanent than not – it’s a matter of decades, not months. It was opined once that humanity only sets itself tasks it can accomplish, problems it can solve, but times like these challenge that statement and lead us more in the direction of the satirical Dr. Strangelove, where humanity reveals itself to be so utterly feckless and inane as to be scarcely worthy of continued existence. At least I was able to laugh at the craziness and stupidity of General Ripper, Buck Turgidson, the Nazi scientist Merkwurdigliebe (Dr. Strangelove), the devious “Rooskies” with their playboy Premier Dmitry Kissov, and our own fearless leader Mirkin Muffley. I find it impossible to laugh at the present horror, especially, I suppose, because we’ll still be around to see what we have done. In the film, Slim Pickens as Major Kong took care of that little problem for us….

Second, the news coverage of this event has at times been spotty and slow, inconsistent. Part of the problem may be that the responsible parties have a strong interest in minimizing the apparent damage – the less we see and hear, the better it is for them. But another contributing factor to the fitfulness of media concentration on the unfolding catastrophe only speaks to the shortness of the public’s attention span and the news outlets’ understanding of that factor: unless something exciting is happening with the repeated attempts to cap the well, there are long periods of silence in the coverage. In the downtimes, we continue to occupy ourselves with bad baseball calls, silly dealmaking on the part of members of the Obama Administration, and other things, some of which are important but which in no way rise to the level of the Deepwater Horizon debacle. And I suppose partly our fitful attention is a function of our despair.

Third, the Obama Administration’s response to the situation has been honest enough, but too beholden to BP’s promises and actions, and at times it has been agonizingly slow. The prescription here isn’t that Obama should ceremoniously don a deepwater diving suit and then start hopping up and down with rage – that would be childish and ineffectual, though I understand the temptation in this era of “mission accomplished” and flight-suit posturing as opposed to genuine leadership and crisis management. The trouble all along, almost from day one of this 45-day ordeal, has been a matter not of emotion but rather of concentration, or at least the strong demonstration thereof since I don’t mean to imply that there’s really any lack of concern. I think what a lot of people are looking for is the sense that the president understands the depth and gravity of the situation. To that end, I would suggest that he cancel any overseas trips, ceremonial or recreational events, etc., and perhaps even set up something of a second White House along the Gulf at least through the initial stage of the massive cleanup efforts we know will be required. If that takes a month of his time, so be it – there are other important things to deal with, things that cannot be ignored, but there is absolutely NOTHING more important going on right now than this.  To be fair, this is an eventful presidency, and Barack Obama seldom seems to have a moment free of worrying about some big new thing. If I ever forget (in some other lifetime), please remind me never to run for president. I would rather wrestle three large, angry stegosaurs with a big rubber band around my snout and my tail tied into a knot….

With the well capped – which could happen as early as today if luck is with the engineers doing the “cut and cap” procedure – I am hoping that the Obama Administration will immediately (not a month later, after some commission has talked the matter to death) begin implementing an all-out, concentrated, massive cleanup and economic recovery program for the Gulf States. Get the oil people and the fishermen back to work right away trying to stem the oil and clean up whatever can be cleaned up of the gunk that’s already come ashore. Anything that can be done, should be done, and it should be seen being done. Prosecuting any recklessness or wrongdoing discovered on the part of the responsible entities is a second avenue. Yet a third thing to do is to stand up NOW for transitioning us as rapidly as humanly possible towards reliance on cleaner energy sources: the Oil Age, as of Deepwater Horizon, should be declared over.

Fourth, the utter depravity and incoherence of the right wing in this country is, if anything, even more breathtaking than usual in such a crisis. I’m sorry to say that in my term “extreme,” I include many supposedly mainstream Republican politicians and their talking-head and ordinary supporters. They remain hopelessly oblivious to the role that their own deregulatory, insanely pro-corporate and anti-environment stances for several decades running have played in the run-up to this disaster. I accept none of their transparently dishonest and contradictory criticism of the President's handling of this crisis. A party that has consistently claimed the government should barely exist is now screaming that that same government needs to “commandeer” all available resources. They’re also telling us that “Drill, baby, drill” didn’t mean what we thought it meant. Well, of course it didn’t, because after all, who are you going to believe – them or your own two ears? There are always just as many or as few fingers in front of your face as the Grand Old Party needs you to see. Whatever the results of the 2010 elections, I don’t believe we even have a viable two-party system at this point: what we have is one often ineffectual but at least sane party, and another that I can only describe as divided into two main camps: juvenile and outright insane, with both camps vying for supporters based on their willingness to pander to the most outrageous, barbarous sentiments in the American public. This attitude is doing us a grave disservice as we try to fend off at least the worst consequences of human arrogance and stupidity.

9 comments:

  1. Today Haley Barbour compared dolphins and birds covered in oil to people covered in toothpaste. I have to wonder how such a cavalier attitude is playing. I would think the people living down there would be filled with disgust at hearing such callous disregard for their backyard. But I'm wondering how it plays with people elsewhere. Surely anyone who has ever seen a seabird knows that coating it in oil is NOT the same as a person getting coated in toothpaste.

    Surely?

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  2. Bloggingdino, thank you for this post. I find myself so heartbroken over this catastrophe, my emotions range from anger to a sort of fugue state, and I wonder if our president is struggling with the same emotions.

    The implications of the spill are too terrible to contemplate. Over time, the entire Gulf of Mexico will turn into a dead zone; an important food supply will be lost; and the ecosystem will not recover within our lifetime. Eventually, the Gulf Stream will convey this sludge into the North Atlantic, destroying Sargassum (a important fish nursery and source of atmospheric oxygen), plankton, and krill. If you destroy the bottom of the food chain, the entire system will eventually collapse

    If the government is withholding information, it may be for good reason. If the scope of this disaster were fully known, it would demoralize the population, spread fear, even trigger violence.

    Worst of all, there will be no justice, accountability, or change in national energy policy anytime soon. Here’s why:

    Transocean made $270M profit from insurance payout

    Transocean said it would distribute some $1 billion in dividend to shareholders

    In 2009, Big Oil spent a record $168 million lobbying Congress. Here is a list of senators receiving campaign contributions from oil and gas companies (figures for 2010 and the year is not even half over):

    Blanche Lincoln (D-AR) - $249,150
    David Vitter (R-LA) – 179,500
    Lisa Murkowski ((R-AK) – 173,876
    Robert Bennett (R-UT) - $125,650
    John Cornyn (R-TX) - $87,575

    Virginia Governor Robert F. McDonnell continues to lobby aggressively to drill for oil and natural gas

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  3. Nance,

    Yes, I've noticed one hears these insensitive comments from both sides. Every time I see one of those dreadful photos of a bird, my thought is, "did it survive"? Some of them do with proper care, but most of them probably die. The pro-drilling people are just incorrigible -- no amount of destruction to the environment would alter their views one bit, I suspect. They don't care; they have the soul of a stone, evidently.

    Octo,

    Wish I could be more upbeat -- but the figures you cite are good reasons not to be, aren't they! And now that our brilliant SCOTUS has pretty much made it possible for corporations to spend all they want on political campaigns, it's only going to get worse.

    Still, there's the cleanup effort to focus on. I think this cap operation is going to come pretty close to stopping the leak -- it seems straightforward enough. Now they need to get the booms and other equipment in place in a big way.

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  4. Sorry, I meant SoBe, not Nance!

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  5. Yes it's a catastrophe. Yes big oil is craven, greedy and callous beyond belief. Yes much of congress is beholden to big oil.

    Nothing new about any of this.

    At the end of the day though how many of us still insist on maintaining our preposterous, selfish and toxic way of life?A society in thrall to the 'mobility' and 'freedom' built on the unimpeded use of the automobile?

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  6. Yes, toothpaste -- right. someone like that should have her mouth washed out with light, sweet crude.

    I'm learning to embrace the horror. Worse things have happened on Earth; the Permian extinction, for instance. It took millions and millions of years for live to flourish again so this is a drop in the bucket as far as old Mom is concerned.

    It's a small consolation that Limbaugh's beautiful beach may get lubricated, but it's true, people don't give a damn about birds or trees as long as the mall is open and gas stays under three bucks. we're so far removed from nature that we not only take it for granted, we don't even like it.

    The thing about birds is that they can get out of there. They survived the Cretaceous extinction and they'll survive this, but the bottom of the food chain is being destroyed by the oil and dispersants and it will be a very ling time before it's restored and may well be different than it once was and for who knows how long.

    But as I said, I'm embracing the horror and I can be grateful that at least I had a glimpse of the world as it was.

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  7. I found your blog through my Deepwater Horizon Google alert and I'm glad I clicked over. It's heartening to read such a thoughtful and moderate post. Sometimes we (in New Orleans & The Gulf) wonder if anyone in the rest of the country realize how this spill will affect us ALL and, yes, we worry about the spill being the flava of the moment.
    It's very difficult living with this every day - here it's all that's on the news, all that we talk about - much like post-Katrina.
    One suggestion: if you're interested in hearing more about the spill, how it's affecting the wildlife and the lives of people who make their living from the ocean, check out the hashtags #oilspill #gulfcoast #bp #deepwaterhorizon #nola on Twitter. We often hear updates there before they hit the news. Just read with a grain of salt and check out the links before retweeting.

    Thanks for letting me run my mouth.
    SOLIDARITY FOR THE GULF!

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  8. Charlotte,

    Thanks for stopping by and commenting and for the tweet tips. We will certainly keep our eyes on the disaster -- I've heard that the cap procedure may be working at least somewhat. Here's hoping it stops the leak, or nearly so, so that the cleanup can get the main focus now.

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  9. SoBe, Haley B. is -- what's the technical term? -- a flipping idiot, with his head so deep in the... pockets of the oil industry that all brown goo oozing there smells like fresh mint and cinnamon to him.

    Dino, there is a report stating that Obama has known how awful this disaster would be since April.

    There is not much he -- or the government -- can do. That's what happens when you steadily weaken the government, and privatize and outsource its many important functions.

    But I confess to being irritated by the sights of Obama talking tough in La., only to be spotted shortly afterwards attending basketball games, or social occasions, or singing Michelle Ma Belle with Sir Paul in the WH. No, no diving suit necessary, but, for heaven's sake, convey, believably, some sense of urgency.

    BTW, the Gulf catastrophe, as horrific as it is, pales in comparison with what is going on in Niger (courtesy of our oil companies):

    That disaster, which claimed the lives of 11 rig workers, has made headlines round the world. By contrast, little information has emerged about the damage inflicted on the Niger delta. Yet the destruction there provides us with a far more accurate picture of the price we have to pay for drilling oil today.

    On 1 May this year a ruptured ExxonMobil pipeline in the state of Akwa Ibom spilled more than a million gallons into the delta over seven days before the leak was stopped. Local people demonstrated against the company but say they were attacked by security guards. Community leaders are now demanding $1bn in compensation for the illness and loss of livelihood they suffered. Few expect they will succeed. In the meantime, thick balls of tar are being washed up along the coast.

    Within days of the Ibeno spill, thousands of barrels of oil were spilled when the nearby Shell Trans Niger pipeline was attacked by rebels. A few days after that, a large oil slick was found floating on Lake Adibawa in Bayelsa state and another in Ogoniland. "We are faced with incessant oil spills from rusty pipes, some of which are 40 years old," said Bonny Otavie, a Bayelsa MP.

    This point was backed by Williams Mkpa, a community leader in Ibeno: "Oil companies do not value our life; they want us to all die. In the past two years, we have experienced 10 oil spills and fishermen can no longer sustain their families. It is not tolerable."

    With 606 oilfields, the Niger delta supplies 40% of all the crude the United States imports and is the world capital of oil pollution. Life expectancy in its rural communities, half of which have no access to clean water, has fallen to little more than 40 years over the past two generations. Locals blame the oil that pollutes their land and can scarcely believe the contrast with the steps taken by BP and the US government to try to stop the Gulf oil leak and to protect the Louisiana shoreline from pollution.

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