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May 16, 2010

BP dispersants threaten seafloor life

Oxygen waters on the seafloor around the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe have already fallen by 30 percent and will fall more.

This is bad. Really bad. How bad?
"It could take years, possibly decades, for the system to recover from an infusion of this quantity of oil and gas," (University of Georgia professor Samantha) Joye said. "We've never seen anything like this before. It's impossible to fathom the impact."
Meanwhile, there are oil and gas plumes from just below the surface to 4,000 feet deep.
Researchers Vernon Asper and Arne Dierks said in Web posts that the plumes were "perhaps due to the deep injection of dispersants which BP has stated that they are conducting."
In other words, the dispersants may be contributing to the oil-caused deoxygenation.

That's why BP's "backup" plan to use dispersants in deepwater for the first time, without testing, is so criminal.
The decision (to allow this) by the Environmental Protection Agency angered state officials and fishermen, who complained that regulators ignored their concerns about the effects on the environment and fish.

"The EPA is conducting a giant experiment with our most productive fisheries by approving the use of these powerful chemicals on a massive, unprecedented scale," John Williams, executive director of the Southern Shrimp Alliance, said in a news release.
BP. Blatantly Polluting.

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