Invest in Oil Cleanup Technologies

David Pettit is a senior attorney at the Southern California office of the Natural Resources Defense Council.

If it seems BP is making up its cleanup plans as it goes along — it is.

Offshore oil drilling has come a long way in the past 20 years. Oil spill cleanup, unfortunately, has not.

Oil companies can now search for oil in the open ocean, drilling down thousands of feet beneath the ocean floor. But when there is a spill — and spills are inevitable — those companies still use cleanup techniques no more sophisticated than the bales of hay used to sop up oil on the Santa Barbara beaches in 1969.

When the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded on April 20, while tapping into an oil reservoir 18,000 feet below the seabed, it left a damaged wellhead spewing more than 200,000 gallons of oil each day into the Gulf of Mexico.

As with the many oil spills before this, attempts to assess and contain the oil have revealed the woefully inadequate investment made in cleanup technologies over the past 25 years. BP’s current improvised cleanup efforts are not much advanced beyond those used in California in 1969 and in Prince William Sound in 1989.

Booming, dispersants and burning are still the basic — and the only tested — tools for dealing with open-water oil spills. But because BP and other oil companies had convinced U.S. agencies that there was no substantial risk of a large crude-oil spill in the Gulf, BP was not required to have even those resources on hand.

So when the Deepwater Horizon sank, BP did not have a spill containment response plan that was worth the paper it was printed on.

Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0510/36978.html
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