Space Travel News  
WATER WORLD
Forgotten: Gulf of Mexico fishermen fear the future

by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 18, 2010
Six months after the largest maritime oil spill, Gulf of Mexico fishing communities fear for their very future while critics say response efforts have evaporated faster than the toxic crude.

US President Barack Obama called it America's worst ever environmental disaster and promised to keep the boot on BP until it had compensated claimants and cleaned up every last drop of oil.

But with the media focus now elsewhere and not so much visible damage, the clean-up has been dramatically scaled back and fishermen still desperately wait for checks as they peer into an uncertain future.

The jury is still out on how much damage the 4.9 million barrels of oil that spewed out of the Macondo well did to the Gulf's fragile marshland ecology, but the human suffering is clear as the economic pain deepens.

"I'm very disappointed by where we're at six months on," Byron Encalade, president of the Louisiana Oysterman Association and of a fisheries cooperative in Plaquemines parish, told AFP.

"When you look at the fishing communities down here, they had 100 percent mortality on most of their oyster beds, so the community basically is out of business."

BP pledged to honor claims and has set up a 20-billion-dollar compensation fund, but in Encalade's small fishing village of some 300 people he reckons one in five are still to receive payment.

"That's far too many. It affects everything because it affects the whole economy," he said. "You have to have money circulating in the local economy for these communities to sustain themselves."

Obama lifted a moratorium on deepwater drilling last week, six weeks early, to breathe new life into the local economy, which was hit by simultaneous strikes on its three main industries: oil, tourism and fishing.

But Jonathan Henderson of the Gulf Restoration Network, which has been working to protect and restore the natural resources of the Gulf of Mexico since 1994, told AFP this was premature.

"There needs to be equipment in place, there needs to be training in place, there needs to be a strategic, thoughtful analysis of how to combat the next massive blowout like the Deepwater Horizon disaster in the most effective way possible, and that has not happened yet."

Eleven workers were killed on April 20 when BP's Deepwater Horizon rig exploded off Louisiana. The environmental damage began two days later when the giant structure sank to the bottom of the Gulf, rupturing the main pipe.

Initially there were no reports of a major leak, but that soon changed and a massive response effort swung into gear as a slick the size of a small country developed on the surface.

A response team that numbered almost 50,000 at the height of the disaster has been scaled back to almost 13,000 since the well was capped in July.

Hundreds of local fishing boats once employed by BP in its Vessels of Opportunity clean-up program now lie idle in the harbor, but Henderson said he was still astonished at the amount of oil out there on his regular flyovers.

"The oil was by and large dispersed but it didn't disappear, it's still on the ocean floor and it's still washing up every single day on our beaches, in our wetlands from Louisiana to Florida.

"This disaster is definitely still going on. Time will tell, time will make people realize. What I am fearful will happen is that there will be an impact on species, on fishery populations, that could be completely devastating."

Lieutenant Ana Thorsson of the US Coast Guard, which is leading the federal response, admitted operations had been scaled back but vowed they would be there until the clean-up was finished.

"We are still seeing some tar balls and things like that and we continue to clean the marshes and the shore," she told AFP.

Seventy percent of the waters once closed to fishing remain off limits, and though some now get a decent catch, Encalade said an urgent drive was required to convince the American public it was safe to eat.

"I know they are testing and everything but they are going to have to have an aggressive outreach to publicize this information. Smelling seafood and looking at seafood is just not going to get it done."

Louisiana's fishing industry has been valued at up to three billion dollars and the stricken state is the source of one third of the seafood consumed in the United States.

BP, meanwhile, appears to have steered its way out of big financial trouble, although that could change if it is found guilty of gross negligence at a massive civil trial penciled in to start next June.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


WATER WORLD
US oil spill hit a key tuna spawning site: agency
Paris (AFP) Oct 18, 2010
Numbers of juvenile Atlantic tuna at a major spawning site in the Gulf of Mexico probably fell by at least a fifth this year as a result of the BP oil spill, the European Space Agency (ESA) said Monday. The assessment comes from satellite images and data of the Gulf from April 20 to August 29, it said in a press release. The Atlantic tuna is a valuable commercial species that is in alarm ... read more







WATER WORLD
ILS Proton Successfully Launches XM-5 Satellite

Ariane Moves Into Final Phase Of Globalstar Soyuz 2 Launch Campaign

Arianespace Hosts Meeting Of Launch System Manufacturers

Political Obstacles For Sea Launch Overcome

WATER WORLD
Emerging Underground Aquifers Formed Martian Lakes

Revealing More About The Atmosphere Of Mars

Rover Nears 15 Miles Of Driving On Mars

Long-Lived Mars Odyssey Gets New Project Manager

WATER WORLD
NASA Awards Contracts For Innovative Lunar Demonstrations Data

NASA Thruster Test Aids Future Robotic Lander's Ability To Land Safely

NASA official: Moon still matters

China Scouts Moon Landing Sites

WATER WORLD
Reaching The Mid-Mission Milestone On The Way To Pluto

New Horizons Student Dust Counter Instrument Breaks Distance Record

Nitrogen Methane Dominate Icy Surface Of Eris

The Longest Space Mission

WATER WORLD
How To Weigh A Star Using A Moon

Doubt Cast On Existence Of Habitable Alien World

Time to find a second Earth, WWF says

Backward Orbit In A Binary System

WATER WORLD
DLR Launches 'STERN' Rocket Programme For Students

U.K. predicts 'spaceplane' in 10 years

Successful Static Testing Of L 110 Liquid Core Stage Of GSLV 3

Danish rocketeers abort launch attempt

WATER WORLD
International Crews for Shenzhou

China Eyes Extended Mission Beyond Moon

China's second lunar probe enters moon's orbit: state media

Lunar Probe And Space Exploration Is China's Duty To Mankind

WATER WORLD
Raining Halley

NASA Spacecraft Hurtles Toward Active Comet Hartley 2

Asteroid Collision Forensics

Comet watchers waiting for show


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement