Mile-Long Oil Sheen Reported from Today’s Offshore Explosion

According to the Coast Guard, a mile-long oil sheen has spread from the Vermillion platform in the Gulf of Mexico off Lousiana. Petty Officer Bill Coklough says the sheen is around 100 feet wide. There are currently 4 firefighting vessels dispatched to stop the fire.

From the Center for Biological Diversity

Latest Gulf of Mexico Explosion Again Illustrates Danger of Offshore Drilling, Urgent Need for Moratorium on All Operations

TUCSON, Ariz.— Today’s explosion in the Gulf of Mexico serves as another tragic reminder of the inherent danger of offshore drilling and the urgent need for a large-scale moratorium on all offshore oil and gas drilling operations until human safety and protection of the environment can be ensured. The explosion — which injured at least one of the 13 people who were forced to escape into the ocean — comes less than five months after BP’s Deepwater Horizon disaster and as the Obama administration considers lifting a moratorium on deepwater drilling. That moratorium covered only a small fraction of the more than 3,600 oil and gas production operations in the Gulf. “Sadly, today’s news comes as no surprise. Offshore drilling in the Gulf of Mexico is like playing Russian roulette. It’s not a matter of if something will go wrong, it’s a matter of when,” said Kierán Suckling, executive director of the Center for Biological Diversity. “It’s time the government put all offshore oil and gas operations — whether they’re exploratory wells or production operations — on hold until we know they’re safe. The price we’ve already paid for BP’s Deepwater Horizon is too high. We cannot risk any more disasters.” Today’s explosion was at a platform owned by Mariner Energy in about 340 feet of water. It’s about 100 miles off Louisiana’s coast and 200 miles west of where the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded April 20, leading to the spill of some 200 million gallons of oil in the Gulf. The Obama administration has been under intense political pressure to lift the moratorium put in place after the spill began. “Clearly, this is not the time to let this industry return to business as usual. BP’s catastrophe certainly made the case for that, and this morning’s explosion only drives the point home,” said Suckling. The Center will be updating this breaking story on its website — get the latest here: www.biologicaldiversity.org

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One Comment

  1. I agree with an offshore oil and gas drilling moratorium as long as we spread the moratoriums around to destroy other industries as well. I have worked in the oil and gas industry for 36 years. I would support a moratorium on transportation. This is a primary cause of many injuries, deaths, and much harm to the environment. If we prohibit cars, trucks, trains, boats, ships, and planes, we would have very little need for petroleum products. We should also establish a moratorium on heating and air conditioning, too. That would reduce our energy needs so that we would not need the coal that we could no longer ship due to the moratorium on transportation. No air conditioning might be intolerable in Arizona though. We should also have a moratorium on housing and building construction. that destroys the earth.

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