Why Is the Gulf Cleanup So Slow?

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Denny Crane

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http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100...50877298556.html?mod=WSJ_hpp_sections_opinion

Why Is the Gulf Cleanup So Slow?
There are obvious actions to speed things up, but the government oddly resists taking them.

By PAUL H. RUBIN

Destin, Fla.

As the oil spill continues and the cleanup lags, we must begin to ask difficult and uncomfortable questions. There does not seem to be much that anyone can do to stop the spill except dig a relief well, not due until August. But the cleanup is a different story. The press and Internet are full of straightforward suggestions for easy ways of improving the cleanup, but the federal government is resisting these remedies.

First, the Environmental Protection Agency can relax restrictions on the amount of oil in discharged water, currently limited to 15 parts per million. In normal times, this rule sensibly controls the amount of pollution that can be added to relatively clean ocean water. But this is not a normal time.

Various skimmers and tankers (some of them very large) are available that could eliminate most of the oil from seawater, discharging the mostly clean water while storing the oil onboard. While this would clean vast amounts of water efficiently, the EPA is unwilling to grant a temporary waiver of its regulations.

Next, the Obama administration can waive the Jones Act, which restricts foreign ships from operating in U.S. coastal waters. Many foreign countries (such as the Netherlands and Belgium) have ships and technologies that would greatly advance the cleanup. So far, the U.S. has refused to waive the restrictions of this law and allow these ships to participate in the effort.

The combination of these two regulations is delaying and may even prevent the world's largest skimmer, the Taiwanese owned "A Whale," from deploying. This 10-story high ship can remove almost as much oil in a day as has been removed in total—roughly 500,000 barrels of oily water per day. The tanker is steaming towards the Gulf, hoping it will receive Coast Guard and EPA approval before it arrives.

In addition, the federal government can free American-based skimmers. Of the 2,000 skimmers in the U.S. (not subject to the Jones Act or other restrictions), only 400 have been sent to the Gulf. Federal barriers have kept the others on stations elsewhere in case of other oil spills, despite the magnitude of the current crisis. The Coast Guard and the EPA issued a joint temporary rule suspending the regulation on June 29—more than 70 days after the spill.

The Obama administration can also permit more state and local initiatives. The media endlessly report stories of county and state officials applying federal permits to perform various actions, such as building sand berms around the Louisiana coast. In some cases, they were forbidden from acting. In others there have been extensive delays in obtaining permission.

As the government fails to implement such simple and straightforward remedies, one must ask why.

One possibility is sheer incompetence. Many critics of the president are fond of pointing out that he had no administrative or executive experience before taking office. But the government is full of competent people, and the military and Coast Guard can accomplish an assigned mission. In any case, several remedies require nothing more than getting out of the way.

Another possibility is that the administration places a higher priority on interests other than the fate of the Gulf, such as placating organized labor, which vigorously defends the Jones Act.

Finally there is the most pessimistic explanation—that the oil spill may be viewed as an opportunity, the way White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel said back in February 2009, "You never want a serious crisis to go to waste." Many administration supporters are opposed to offshore oil drilling and are already employing the spill as a tool for achieving other goals. The websites of the Sierra Club, Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace, for example, all feature the oil spill as an argument for forbidding any further offshore drilling or for any use of fossil fuels at all. None mention the Jones Act.

To these organizations and perhaps to some in the administration, the oil spill may be a strategic justification in a larger battle. President Obama has already tried to severely limit drilling in the Gulf, using his Oval Office address on June 16 to demand that we "embrace a clean energy future." In the meantime, how about a cleaner Gulf?

Mr. Rubin, a professor of economics at Emory University, held several senior positions in the federal government in the 1980s. Since 1991 he has spent his summers on the Gulf.
 
Regulations. Gotta love 'em.

Rubin presents actual ideas that seem plausible but are untried because the govt. won't get out of the way.

I really am wondering if there isn't some agenda going on here, to milk this "disaster" for all it's worth. Never let a crisis go to waste and all that.
 
I've heard that Joe Biden was on the oil rig hours before it blew. There's no question but what this is the government's doing, just like the WTC attacks, and fluoride in the water. The administration has a secret plan to let the oil spill until Obama's approval ratings have fallen below those of congress.

barfo
 
Do tell, barfo....

Why isn't the govt. doing all it can to control the damage caused by the spill?
 
Do tell, barfo....

Why isn't the govt. doing all it can to control the damage caused by the spill?

Maybe it is. The claims made in this article (which seem to be copied from another one you posted a week or so ago?) may or may not have any validity.
If it isn't doing all it can, it is probably due to incompetence and bad luck, not some crazy-ass conspiracy theory.

barfo
 
Maybe it is. The claims made in this article (which seem to be copied from another one you posted a week or so ago?) may or may not have any validity.
If it isn't doing all it can, it is probably due to incompetence and bad luck, not some crazy-ass conspiracy theory.

barfo

I never posted this article before. It was in yesterday's WSJ.

I think the author suggests incompetence.

"One possibility is sheer incompetence. Many critics of the president are fond of pointing out that he had no administrative or executive experience before taking office. But the government is full of competent people, and the military and Coast Guard can accomplish an assigned mission. In any case, several remedies require nothing more than getting out of the way."

I disagree with him that the government is full of competent people.
 
Seems like the EPA is extremely dense, along with the administration.
 
It seems slow because of the nonstop coverage. The South controls the nation.

If this had happened off of Oregon, CNN and Fox would be covering some missing baby in Timbuktu. When spills happened off of Alaska, we heard cleanup news oh, every 6 months, if it was a slow news day.
 
^^^ that is bad. I don't know why they aren't hiring more out of work fishermen to do this work.
 
^^^ that is bad. I don't know why they aren't hiring more out of work fishermen to do this work.

Maybe because hooks and nets aren't the best tools for gathering oil.
 
The cleanup is slow because that's the nature of the beast.

Oil spills in water are for the most part a permanent disaster. Crude oil tends to sink, not float. With cleanup efforts still continuing today on the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill, over 80% of the oil still remains in the ocean, most of it in sludge piles on the ocean floor. While skimmers give the surface appearance of effective cleanup, they are fairly useless in retrieving the bulk of the pollutant. Massive dredges of the US Army Corps of Engineers and Russia are still the most effective tools in this situation, as they can vacuum the sludge off the ocean floor and have extensive experience from their work on the Exxon Spill.

Offshore oil drilling is irresponsible at best. Insane is a better description.
 
Drop a nuke there, it'll fix all the problems. And then jail all the top BP officials, sack Obama and his officials and lets have new elections to form a new govt that is not corrupt and doesn't give billions of dollars away to waste.



i know, not going to happen, but we can dream right? ;)
 

Ah yes, Brent Bozell's Cybercast News Service, created hoping that mainstream media will slip up and use some of its articles. Looking to the right, in more ways than one, we find links to articles titled

More Americans Say They Want BP ‘in Charge of’ Cleaning Up Oil Spill Rather Than Obama’s Federal Government

Obama Speech Sounds Just Like Carter at His Worst

Commentary: Obama’s Speech Raises Question: Where Does He Get the Authority to ‘Inform’ a Private Company That It Must Surrender Its Money?

How about equal time, maxiep, for articles from the Workers Violent Revolution Party?
 
Ah yes, Brent Bozell's Cybercast News Service, created hoping that mainstream media will slip up and use some of its articles. Looking to the right, in more ways than one, we find links to articles titled

More Americans Say They Want BP ‘in Charge of’ Cleaning Up Oil Spill Rather Than Obama’s Federal Government

Obama Speech Sounds Just Like Carter at His Worst

Commentary: Obama’s Speech Raises Question: Where Does He Get the Authority to ‘Inform’ a Private Company That It Must Surrender Its Money?

How about equal time, maxiep, for articles from the Workers Violent Revolution Party?

Nice try. Attack the messenger, not the message.
 
In the future, someone will do a study on organizational decision making as it relates to this oil spill. These kinds of studies are always illustrative, be they about the Eisenhower Administration's decision about Dien Bien Phu or about how the Kennedy Administration kept us from WWIII during the Cuban Missle Crisis.

Given enough time and perfect information, pretty much anyone can arrive at the optimal decision. Of course, time and the quality of information you're receiving are always the two largest constraints on any decision making in a crisis. I think we've seen what happens when academics and theoriticians are put in positions of power and are faced with having to come up with rapid decisions--paralysis. That's the difference between someone who is intellectually intelligent and someone who has common sense. Effective managers utilize common sense. Bobby Jindal, in this case, utilzed both. He saw the big picture (keeping oil out of the marshes) and combined it with real world (i.e., imperfect) solutions. Might sand barriers do some ecological damage? Certainly. Is that damage preferable to oil infecting the wetlands of Louisiana? Certainly.
 

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