Re: Deepwater Horizon well could become unchecked gusher
I am from Louisiana and have spent over 30 years in the oil and gas industry hence the screen name roughneck. I paid my way through college working off shore. It was and is a very dangerous business especially at the depths they are drilling these days. I knew one of the people killed in the explosion. The reason this will be a game changer I believe is because of two things. First the president(though half heartedly and with an alternate agenda) had proposed expanding drilling along the coast. Now the environmental folks will have all the ammunition they need to prevent this from happening or delaying it long enough that we will get in a serious bind down the road for resources. It could be the event that tips the scales towards alternative and very expensive forms of energy. The other reason I am saying this is because of the location of the leak. The marsh in Louisiana has been declining for years and this could deal a devastating blow to the ecosystem there. If the marsh grass dies you will see rapid loss of land due to erosion.In Alaska you had rock beaches you could wash and collect the oil. In the Marsh it will be hard if not impossible to clean up the mess. There have been other leaks and spills but none of this magnitude in such a sensitive location.
I am from Louisiana and have spent over 30 years in the oil and gas industry hence the screen name roughneck. I paid my way through college working off shore. It was and is a very dangerous business especially at the depths they are drilling these days. I knew one of the people killed in the explosion. The reason this will be a game changer I believe is because of two things. First the president(though half heartedly and with an alternate agenda) had proposed expanding drilling along the coast. Now the environmental folks will have all the ammunition they need to prevent this from happening or delaying it long enough that we will get in a serious bind down the road for resources. It could be the event that tips the scales towards alternative and very expensive forms of energy. The other reason I am saying this is because of the location of the leak. The marsh in Louisiana has been declining for years and this could deal a devastating blow to the ecosystem there. If the marsh grass dies you will see rapid loss of land due to erosion.In Alaska you had rock beaches you could wash and collect the oil. In the Marsh it will be hard if not impossible to clean up the mess. There have been other leaks and spills but none of this magnitude in such a sensitive location.
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