Cleaning oil-soaked wetlands may be impossible

  • Thread starter Thread starter Joe_Cool
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Of course, and in international spotlight and the fact they are losing countless millions a day, they want to fix this entire situation faster than anyone else.

It is asinine to think they want to do nothing about it.

The average american and poster on OT is a fucking moron.
 
this goes all the way down to owners of dry cleaners, gas stations, car washes, mechanic shops. these little places may not ruin a large area like the bp problem, but over 5-25 years (low average) those places can do tons a damage to water systems that we USE or will have to use.



people are polluting our groundwater systems left and right... they are everywhere yet you won't hear shit about it. hell at least BP ruined unusable (to humans i.e. for drinking, irrigation for crops, etc) water.
 
I've never supported offshore drilling. I'm all for finding alternative fuel sources, I myself do what I can to buy natural cleaning products, drive as little as possible, recycle, keep my electricity consumption and water consumption down. I do my best. so I sort of have a leg to stand on when I say I'm opposed to it.
 
You can's assume people are dense if they never hear about it. That's why I asked for a link. Apparently the spill wasn't as bad as this one because they responded in a timely fashion from what you're saying.
 
Shell is now the most environmentally friendly oil company. That's scary to me. I know that these companies can do small things to make their exploration more safe, but they just don't shell out the cash to do so.
 
Yeah, I know. It was not fun trying to run through jobs on a boat that costs almost 7 figures a day to operate and oil is flopping around at 20 bucks a barrel.
 
What makes me angry is that they basically bought some time with that stupid dome failure so that they could get a ship into position to siphon off as much oil as possible. Rather than just working to stop the leak, those greedy fucks wanted to get as much as possible to sell back in order to pay for it.

And I heard on NPR that damages are limited to 75 million dollars, which I also noticed that BP has already payed out in different increments to different states. That'll be a nice big legal battle coming up, assuming that the bill passes through Congress to raise that cap to a 10 billion (I think that's the number).
 
This isn't a republican/dem thing. Both parties are fully in the pockets of these oil companies.
 
Maybe this will mutate the local wildlife into some crazy oil spitting demon monsters that eat black people.
 
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