Saturday, June 19, 2010

Offshore Drilling - U.S. approves drilling plans without study

Report: At least five new underwater drilling projects have been approved, according to a McClatchy review, which activists say could lead to future flawed wells.

Friday, June 18, 2010

Health effects of gulf oil spill are unclear

Health effects of gulf oil spill are unclear

Oil and Gas Health Effects

Oil and Gas Health Effects

How to File a Claim

Website

Health impacts of the oil spill studied

Health impacts of the oil spill studied

"Scientists say that the long-term effects of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill on the Gulf of Mexico ecosystem are difficult to determine. Perhaps even more difficult to determine are the long-term effects of the disaster on the health of those exposed....."

BP's Gulf-spill liabilities could reach $40 billion

http://e.thedailybeast.com/a/tBMG2mmB7SwhTB8Lr67DQPo$C5s/dail2">BP's U.S. Empire on the Brink

It could get a lot worse for BP. The company's Gulf-spill liabilities could reach $40 billion, Bloomberg News said. The oil giant has already spent about $1.6 billion toward cleaning up the spill and set aside another $20 billion. Meanwhile, BP's poor safety record could justify banning the oil giant from doing business in the U.S., Representative Bart Stupak said Thursday, citing a five-year string of accidents and deadly disasters at BP-operated facilities. Analysts and lawmakers say they believe the company could lose control over oil fields, refineries, and pipelines all over the United States, costing it upwards of one-third of its sales. "Setting up the fund was a nice pro-active approach by BP," one oil industry analyst said, "but in reality it's going to take a decade for them to recover and regain public trust in this country." Particularly after BP CEO Tony Hayward's performance before Congress Thursday, when he was accused of stonewalling. At the opposite end of the corporate ladder, there seems to be no reprieve for some people on the Gulf Coast. Due to the moratorium on deepwater drilling, more than 50,000 oil rig workers' jobs are at risk - especially if the ban goes into 2011.

Read it at Bloomberg:
http://e.thedailybeast.com/a/tBMG2mmB7SwhTB8Lr67DQPo$C5s/dail2