Wednesday, April 20, 2011

One Year After the 2010 Gulf Oil Spill - Broken Promises

Today marks the one year anniversary of the 2010 BP - Gulf Oil Spill. I think we need a new naming convention. I prefer the (year) (responsible party) - (relative location) (type of disaster) format myself. I don't like the media's preference for calling it the "Deepwater Horizon" oil spill because it let's BRITISH PETROLEUM aka BP deflect responsibility away from itself.

As I often mention, I spent 6 years in the U.S. Coast Guard. I've seen first hand what a spill does to the environment. I know what crude oil looks like, smells like, and feels like. The first time I got some on my hands I thought it would never come off. It is nasty stuff, and we're not talking about cooking oil. The spills that I did witness were relatively small when compared to the 1989 Exxon Valdez - Prince William Sound and the 2010 British Petroleum - Gulf Oil Spills. But even the small spills I saw were devastating, so I can only imagine what these disasters must have looked like.

I know this though - crude oil in the water does NOT simply "dissipate" overnight or get gobbled up by their chemicals or bacteria. A great deal of it washes ashore where it either becomes a part of the environment or it is mopped up as much as possible by humans and then it is all disposed of in a landfill somewhere, still becoming a part of the environment, just not as obviously.

I believe the majority of it ends up on the sea bottom, and that's what I was telling people when the spill was still happening, but the amount washing ashore was not as bad as expected. Now scientists are discovering what I have already been saying. I have seen far too many images of dead ocean floors, with marine life smothered to death in a blanket of oil. Ever notice how vinegar and oil will separate into layers, with the heaviest going to the bottom?

BP promised to compensate the people who lost their livelihoods, businesses who could no longer do business, and everyone adversely affected by the oil spill. They promised to repair the damage and "make things right again." The U.S. Government made their promises too, including a promise to hold BP accountable. From everything I have read or seen in the news, BP still owes money to a lot of people and businesses; they were far too eager to call the job done and now appear to have abandoned clean up efforts entirely. They are off patting themselves on the back, figuring out how to work their taxes to best advantage. Meanwhile, the government hasn't done much of anything except make more empty promises.

A year later, and once again it is the struggling American that is paying the price for corporate greed and and our government's incompetence. Sadly, I would bet money that another major oil spill is not that far in our future. How long will it be before we are telling kids about the days when a person could actually go into the water and play?

Photo credit: Charlie Riedel/AP

3 comments:

  1. Nice to read a real point of view on this issue and the attributes it has now come to such a tiny endeavor it seems as the media and government stop applying pressure for these issues that are long term possible dangerous outcomes into the future to be fixed today and not tomorrow, because tomorrow may never come. What are they doing to clean the bottom of the ocean, nothing probably, it is no surprise knowing billion dollar companies would rather cut off their heads for more %profits made or less %profits lost, if there is a way to join the head back on enabling for further use, with just a little scar they can try to hide. To be honest the smallest communities and largest of world communities needs more "ethical graphic designers" that take "ethical considerations and responsibility for their actions" whether that be donating your free time and resources for a non-profit organization that pays you no money or the task of saying "no" to designing or working for dirty industries such as many oil, gas and coal industries, within reason. In war, large scale industry and politics people and the environment are just numbers. Graphic designers have so much power but most of them are just slaves to their jobs unable to contribute great design tasks to the world because money follows a designer's life thus a designer's life follows money. Once one designer brake this pathetic cycle they will in my point of view discover the truth about graphic design possibilities, with rewards far greater than money or fame. There is always room for older aged people in the graphic design business as long as they have proven skills.

    I'm from Australia and only 20 years old; it was great inspiration to read this and your blog, may peace follow your every moment.

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  2. Thanks for the comments! You have a good idea there. Maybe I will devote the rest of my life's art to illustrating the injustice in the world.

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  3. Try it out, an artist life can be very interesting as slow or as fast paced as the aritist desires. Wild gallery exhibition parties and more.

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