Sunday, May 30, 2010

When Will We Ever Learn?

The oil from the Deepwater Horizon rig disaster that occurred on April 20th in the Gulf of Mexico continues to flow from five thousand feet below the surface of the Gulf at a rate of somewhere "between 12,000 and 19,000 barrels" (@ 42 US Gallons per barrel, FYI) per day. It is now day 43 since the explosion and fire that sank the drilling rig and began this disaster.

As it has been mentioned elsewhere - The Rachel Maddow Show, on MSNBC for one - the technology to drill at ever deeper depths has vastly exceeded the capacity to deal with a "potential catastrophe". The fact is that when the permits were issued for these deep water drilling leases the regulation and permit issuance agencies were totally at the mercy of the oil companies to "guarantee" that the disaster we see happening right now in the Gulf of Mexico wasn't supposed to be possible. It appears that we, the American people and the American Government, may not have been told the entire truth about the risks and the preparedness of the oil companies for those risks. Here is the 'dirty-little-secret', this isn't the first time this has happened.

On June 3, 1979 the oil rig Ixtoc I suffered a failure of it's blowout preventer and caused an oil spill that dumped over 3 million barrels of oil into the Bay of Campeche off the coast of the southern tip of Mexico. If you want to know how that spill was eventually resolved (it took nine months to finally stop the oil flowing) see the Deepwater Horizon story unfolding daily. The same methods were tried and they failed to work in 1979 just as they have failed today. The only sure fix then is the same only sure fix today, a relief well drilled to intersect the blown well head so it can be capped.

How is it possible that we have been so blind as allow this to be the case? It makes me wonder, as I have for quite some time now, what happened to the greatest minds of my generation? When there was a war that the American people felt was wrong, when there was discrimination that denied rights to a group of Americans, when there was corruption in government brought to light there were demonstrations in the streets to stop the war, there were civil protests and marches to promote civil rights. What happened? Where did we go? What will it take to generate the kind of civilian uprising that took place in the 1960's and '70's? Will we see anything like the demonstrations that lead to the end of the Vietnam war?

It seems like we are in a long, deep slumber. Almost rousing briefly from time to time, as if to get comfortable and drift back off to sleep, never waking to the reality that has been unfolding around us for over 40 years now. Can the great sleeping giant that was roused after Pearl Harbor in 1941 be awakened? Why wasn't 9/11 enough? Did we get lulled back into our comfortable oblivion by false impressions of security with little or no sacrifice on our part? How much liberty have we surrendered in the name of security? Benjamin Franklin has been famously quoted, "They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." Do we still believe in the cause of liberty? Are we willing to give up more of our essential liberty for the feeling of false security and painless prosperity?

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

What Happened?

It is the 30th anniversary of the eruption of Mount St. Helens in Washington state. It has been a busy couple of years for 30th & 40th anniversaries of events that have shaped our world and are now recognized as pivotal in US and world history.

Tet Offensive, 1968
Assassinations of Dr. King & Robert Kennedy
Race & Anti-War demonstrations
1968 Democratic National Convention riots in Chicago
The "Chappaquiddick" car accident that ended Teddy's chances at ever being president
Apollo 11
Woodstock
Altamont
Kent State

This is just a short list of the events to which I am referring and is not meant to be a thorough timeline.

In 1973-74 I was getting ready to obtain my first drivers license and was taking "Driver's Ed" through the high school I was attending. The OPEC oil embargo was going on during this period as well and just as I was getting my license to drive, the price of gasoline more than doubled. Gas prices went from 28-30 cents per gallon to 60-65 cents per gallon in only a few weeks. I remember having to get up really early in the morning, like 4am early, so I could go with my mom or dad to the local gas station to line up to buy as much fuel as the station would allow. Many times there was a limit of 10 gallons per customer. This was over and above the fact that there was a restriction on buying gas based on your license plate number, "even/odd" days and no gas sold on Sundays at all.

The oil disaster in the Gulf of Texaco brought this to mind as I was thinking how it might have been different if we'd have learned the lessons would have ended our dependence on foreign energy sources, if not completely ended our fossil fuel consumption at least in the US. Could we have done it? Had we, as a nation, determined that we would never let such a thing happen again and if we had spend the 35 years since developing what we call today the "alternative" energy sources of wind, solar, hydroelectric, bio-diesel, etc. it is my firm belief that the US would be 100% energy independent today.