Just in from the Gulf Restoration Network:
Ask President Obama to demand a larger response and reconsider increased oil drilling
Dear Houston,
Just two days before Earth Day, a few weeks after President Obama's call to increase drilling in off-shore areas, an oil rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico, 45 miles off of Louisiana's coast, near the Breton and Delta National Wildlife Refuges.
Tragically, it appears that 11 missing crewmembers have been killed. In addition to the human tragedy, the environmental crisis is unfolding as I type this.
The massive oil slick has grown to over 2,000 square miles. It hasn't come aground in sensitive coastal areas yet, but it is only a matter of time. The marine impacts could be enormous due to the massive volume of the leak, currently estimated at 42,000 gallons a day.
The area of the spill is important habitat for endangered sperm whales, many species of threatened and endangered sea turtles, the Gulf's mysterious whale shark population, and is close to blue fin tuna spawning grounds. This is an environmental disaster of epic proportions.
Oil giant BP holds the drilling lease, and is funding the clean-up. Unfortunately, we believe the response has been inadequate. We flew over the accident site Sunday and Monday, and didn't see any active skimming or oil boom deployment. Now, BP and federal officials are using an experimental controlled burn technique that has never been attempted in similar circumstances. For the marine impacts to be quantified and minimized, we need all hands on deck and on the water.
This catastrophe makes it clear that companies like BP and government officials don't have a safe and effective plan for dealing with the consequences of more and more offshore drilling. Help us urge the Obama administration to demand more of a response at the spill site, and ask him to reconsider opening more coastal areas up for these types of catastrophes.
United for a healthy Gulf,
Aaron Viles
Campaign Director
The Gulf Restoration Network is a diverse network of local, regional, and national groups and individuals dedicated to protecting and restoring the natural resources of the Gulf of Mexico. GRN plays a critical role in strategic collaboration across the Gulf Coast on a broad array of environmental issues. The GRN has members in the five Gulf states of Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida.