Showing posts with label offshore oil drilling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label offshore oil drilling. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

To err is human, unless drilling for oil off Florida's coast?




On Nov. 3, the West Atlas oil rig burns about 150 miles off Australia's northwest coast. Environmental concerns about the industry deepened last year after the fire burned unchecked for more than 2 months while millions of barrels of oil spilled into the sea.

Could oil-spill disaster happen in Florida? Aussie rig debacle offers lessons (includes reader poll)
By Kevin Spear
Orlando Sentinel
March 28, 2010

As the nation's top regulator of offshore drilling, Elmer "Bud" Danenberger was nearing retirement last year when he began to get word of a major rig accident halfway around the world.

An Australian oil well blew out at dawn Aug. 21, gushing yellow-green crude into the Timor Sea along the country's northern coast. And it wasn't letting up.

Though 10,000 miles away, the spill would quickly play into Florida's emotional debate over whether drilling rigs similar to the fated one down under should be permitted within sight of the Sunshine State's sugar-sand beaches.

And for good reason: The Aussie debacle lasted more than 10 weeks, spewing millions of gallons of oil into the ocean. As a result, it is giving Floridians a raw and apt look at the scenario they fear most about offshore drilling, thanks in part to an Australian investigation providing an astonishingly detailed chronology of the disaster.

Florida environmental advocates crowed, "I told you so," about the risks of drilling even with the newest rigs available. U.S. petroleum interests, wanting to avoid a black eye for a spill in foreign waters, shot back that the accident was the result of inferior standards and regulations and could not happen in the Gulf of Mexico.

Florida lawmakers were warned two weeks ago, by the author of a Florida think tank's drilling report, that the Australian "rig that was being used appears to be within the class of technologies of the rigs that are being considered for Florida waters."

Last summer, Danenberger grew ever angrier as phone calls and e-mails poured into his Reston, Va., office, about the worsening environmental crisis off the Australian coast. To him and many others, what happened in the Montara offshore oil field was a failure that shook the industry worldwide.

He and others suspect that operations on the rig, named West Atlas, departed from basic international guidelines and that the blowout resulted from a series of bad and avoidable human decisions -- the bane of many complex industrial systems that operate correctly only with a multitude of overlapping safeguards.

A rig worker in his youth, Danenberger had sought for 38 years to eliminate drilling catastrophes in U.S. waters. But when he left his job in January as chief of offshore regulatory programs for the U.S. Minerals Management Service, he knew that the human error involved in the West Atlas accident remains a challenge along any coastline.

"I think people are doing everything they can to prevent that," Danenberger said. "However, nobody can rule out this type of horrible incident."

Drill-ban repeal near

Before it adjourns its regular session at the end of April, the Florida Legislature is likely to consider, in the face of furious opposition, repealing a ban on drilling in the 10.36-mile-wide strip of state-controlled waters in the Gulf of Mexico.

April is also when the Montara Commission of Inquiry is to issue its findings in what could turn out to be Australia's worst offshore-oil spill.

Drilling of the doomed "H1" well began in January 2009, when the then-2-year-old West Atlas rig, owned by a Norwegian company, set up shop in 260 feet of water about 400 miles west of Darwin, capital city of Australia's Northern Territory.

By last May, the "jackup" machine -- distinguished by the three massive legs it stands on while drilling -- was floated away to a new job elsewhere. It left behind a partly completed H1, which had penetrated a high-pressure reservoir of oil and natural gas.

At that point, Danenberger is all but certain, pivotal errors already had been made.

Before the West Atlas jackup departed, its crew had followed the standard procedure of pumping a large slug of concrete to the bottom of the well pipe to prevent escape of natural gas and oil. Several aspects of the "cementing job" most likely were botched, according to testimony in the Montara inquiry.

That doesn't surprise Danenberger, who considers well cementing as much art as science -- and in need of better standards, even in the U.S.

"Cementing problems are a leading cause of well-control incidents," he said in his submission to the Australian inquiry, which included several case studies from the Gulf of Mexico.


Then another blunder occurred: A redundant plug should have been inserted deep into the well, according to U.S. and international drilling standards, consisting of another slug of concrete or a powerful mechanical device.

The standards followed by the oil company drilling the well -- Thailand-based PTTEP Australasia -- called for such a secondary plug. But the company decided at the last minute -- with hastily given government permission -- to use a pair of screw-on caps at the top of the well instead.

That was inexcusable, according to Danenberger and U.S. drilling engineers, because such devices are best used to prevent corrosion, and not as barriers to control a half-finished well.

"The well design is not one that we would have approved," a top Minerals Management Service official told Congress late last year.

To make matter worse, the crew on the West Atlas jackup somehow neglected to install one of the two caps.

Crisis, then disaster

When the West Atlas crew returned to the H1 well Aug. 19 to complete its plumbing chores, rig workers discovered the missing cap. The screw threads where it should have been attached were badly corroded, but to clean those threads and finish their work on the well, the workers had to remove the second cap.

From there, an emergency began to unfold.

At 5:36 a.m. Aug. 21, H1 burped up as much as 2,500 gallons of oil -- a dangerous occurrence with any oil well -- so West Atlas' 69-member crew prepared to abandon the rig. But then the flow subsided to "bubbles" in the well pipe, so the crew instead scrambled to insert a mechanical plug -- until, at 7:23 a.m., a fountain of oil and natural gas enveloped West Atlas.

Crew members shut off the rig's lights and motors, to prevent them from igniting the flammable spray, and escaped in three lifeboats.

The rig's misfortune continued as efforts were made to choke off an oil flow that might have exceeded 80,000 gallons a day. Well-control experts were barred from boarding West Atlas because of the danger of fire, so the only option was the time-consuming task of drilling a second well, at an angle, to pierce the side of H1's pipe -- a kind of oil-patch Hail Mary.

A second rig went to work 1.2 miles away but failed in four attempts to hit the 10-inch-diameter H1 well pipe at a point more than 8,000 feet underground. It punctured H1 on the fifth try, and workers had begun pumping heavy fluid into the runaway well -- when an unexplained ignition engulfed West Atlas in an enormous blaze.

The blowout and fire were not extinguished until Nov. 3; by then the pipe had spilled, according to some of the widely varying estimates, about half as much oil as the 11 million gallons that gushed from the stricken Exxon Valdez tanker off Alaska in 1989.

Many species in area

Australia's beaches were spared damage thanks to currents that pushed the well's many separate oil slicks out across the Timor Sea. But the spill contaminated a marine wilderness that includes coral and sponge reefs; a rich variety of dolphins, sea snakes, fish and birds; as well as one of the world's largest populations of humpback whales.

SkyTruth, a nonprofit organization in West Virginia that analyzes satellite images to document oil spills, measured the spread of H1 crude at 22,000 square miles -- an area 55 times larger than Tampa Bay.

"These big runaway incidents are thankfully very rare," SkyTruth President John Amos said, "but they always catch people by surprise, and the exact chain of events that causes them are always unique."

Human error?

With the West Atlas jackup, the chain of events wasn't triggered by a failure of advanced technology or an act of nature, such as the hurricanes that devastated Gulf of Mexico rigs in 2004 and 2005. Instead, the Australian inquiry is zeroing in on human error.

During testimony 10 days ago, an Australian government lawyer asked the senior oil-company supervisor on West Atlas about the botched cementing job.

"You were operating at very outer reaches of your knowledge and experience?" the lawyer asked.

"I wasn't out of my depth," the supervisor said. "I just made the mistakes."

Danenberger said drilling rigs have multiple safeguards, so it often takes more than a single mistake to cause injuries or a spill.

"Bad companies can be lucky and never have a thing go wrong, because it usually takes a series of screw-ups that lead to a disaster," he said. "So you get away with it."

"Everybody who works in the industry should study the big disasters," he added: " Santa Barbara, Bay Marchand, Main Pass 41, Piper Alpha, Alexander Kielland, Montara, Ocean Ranger."

Those are among the world's worst offshore-rig accidents, accounting for spectacular explosions, hundreds dead, environments wrecked and, subsequently, more stringent standards.

"We need to study those things all the time," Danenberger said. "I don't know that that's being done."


Cumulative oil slick "footprint" resulting from the 10-week Montara oil platform blowout and spill that occurred in the Timor Sea off Western Australia in 2009; superimposed on the Gulf coast of Florida for scale. More info here.



Oil and gas platforms and pipelines in the Gulf of Mexico. Is Florida next?


Progress Florida’s Resolved Against Drilling map showing at least 55 cities, counties, chambers of commerce and other local agencies around the state have passed resolutions against opening Florida’s coast to offshore oil drilling.

TAKE ACTION NOW

Write Your State Senator: Big Oil's Promises Are "Empty"
Big Oil and their hired hands in Tallahassee have sworn that drilling Florida’s coast would be “invisible” – that there would be no unsightly rigs just a few miles off our coast. We know different – and a recent eye opening story in the Sarasota Herald-Tribune has proven Big Oil’s promises completely “empty.” Click the picture above – keeping the pressure on by letting our State Senators know people like you are paying attention is how we’ll beat Big Oil.

MORE ONLINE ACTIONS
Pass a Resolution To Protect Florida's Beaches Now, via Audubon of Florida.
Urge President Obama’s Ocean Policy Task Force to recommend against offshore drilling within any previously protected coastal waters, via Defenders of Wildlife.
Tell Obama: Offshore Drilling is NOT the Answer to Energy Crisis, via Oceana.
Help Drill for Solutions Not for Oil, via Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.
Let us decide! Petition to Governor Charlie Crist, Senate President Jeff Atwater, and House Speaker Larry Cretul, via Civic Concern.
Contact Your Officials About New Drilling Off Florida's Coasts, via Civic Concern.
Ask your state legislators to keep the rigs out, via Save the Manatee Club.
Write a letter to the editor, via Audubon of Florida.
Write your state legislators, via Audubon of Florida.
Urge Senate President Jeff Atwater to oppose offshore oil drilling, via Progress Florida.
Tell Sen. Atwater Not To Allow Oil Drilling In Special Session, via Audubon of Florida.
Sign the petition against oil drilling, via Protect Florida’s Beaches.
Tell Salazar: No drilling off Florida's Coast, via Environment Florida.
Tell new Senator LeMieux to Repower America, via Environment Florida.
Related action: Don't go drill crazy in the Everglades, via Center for Biological Diversity.
Related action: Keep oil drilling out of climate change legislation, via Oceana.

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES OF NOTE
Hands Across The Sand website; their Twitter page is here.
Protect Florida’s Beaches, recently launched coalition website.
Protect Florida’s Beaches on Facebook.
Think, Baby, Think blog via Protect Florida’s Beaches.
Don’t Drill Florida website.
Don’t Drill Florida Facebook page.
Save Our Shores Florida website; their Twitter page is here.
Floridians Against Big Oil social network.
Save Our Shores Florida Facebook page.
Florida Coastal and Ocean Coalition website.
Environment Florida offshore drilling page.
Southern Alliance for Clean Energy offshore drilling page.
Skytruth blog, an excellent source of info.
Not the Answer blog, courtesy Surfrider Foundation.
Eye-opening map of oil and gas leases and infrastructure in Gulf of Mexico, via MMS.
EnergyFLA.com, online hub of drilling proponents; their Twitter page is here.




Wildwood Preservation Society is a non-profit 501(c)(4) project of the Advocacy Consortium for the Common Good. Click here to learn more.

"it's all connected"



Friday, September 11, 2009

Florida environmental and wildlife news for the week ending 9-11-09


FEATURED STORIES

Huge oil spill off Australia cited by opponents of drilling off Florida
By Craig Pittman
St. Petersburg Times
Related editorial: Don't let this come to Florida's shores
On Aug. 21, oil began bubbling out from an offshore rig about 90 miles from Australia's coast.

More anti-drilling editorials from Florida’s major daily newspapers:
Palm Beach Post: Advice for special session: Don't take up drilling...
Florida Today: Stop the stampede
Sarasota Herald-Tribune: Stop the oil rush
Gainesville Sun: The rush job


Montara (West Atlas) Blowout and Oil Spill, Western Australia, August 2009 (note: Florida Energy Associates has touted Australia's drilling technology in their efforts to open Florida's coast).

Senate President doubts special session for oil drilling
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
Related: Associated Industries wants oil drilling on special session agenda
Senate President Jeff Atwater today said a special session of the Legislature in October is highly unlikely and he raised doubts about whether it should include consideration of lifting Florida's ban on offshore oil drilling.

Slow the rush to drill near Florida's beaches
By Eric Draper
Tallahassee Democrat
Gov. Charlie Crist recently set off speculation about adding oil drilling to the agenda for the upcoming special session of the Legislature. It was an unfortunate change of position, but not surprising for this governor who is campaigning for the U.S. Senate and appears to be leaving his own high-minded climate and energy agenda undone.

The mystery push for offshore oil
By David Guest
Tampa Tribune
News that "a secretive group of powerful legislators, business groups and Texas oil companies has been laying the groundwork" to open Florida's shores to oil and gas drilling should make all of us sit up and pay attention.

Not here and not now: the case against drilling
By Eric Ernst
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
A local environmental organization, ManaSota-88, has just released a position paper called "10 Reasons Not to Drill for Oil Offshore of Florida."

Former Florida Gov. Bob Graham tries to chill state GOP's ardor for oil
By Adam C. Smith
St. Petersburg Times
Former Florida Gov. and U.S. Sen. Bob Graham has watched the politics of offshore drilling flip 180 degrees in recent years.


Digitally mapped simulation of what the oil spill happening right now off Australia’s coast would look like if it happened from a drilling platform 80 miles from Florida’s coastline in the Gulf of Mexico.

MORE GREEN NEWS

Endangered Florida panthers feel the squeeze
By Alex Halperin
Christian Science Monitor
Related AP story: Another Fla. panther found dead on interstate
As southwest Florida struggles through the recession, the highly endangered Florida panther, which has lost much of its habitat to strip malls and gated communities, might have been expected to benefit from tough times.

Florida wildlife leaders consider using federal standards for imperiled species
By Kevin Spear
Orlando Sentinel
Related: Lightning-rod list of Florida's vanishing wildlife
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission will outline the details today of a third major overhaul in less two decades of the agency's troubled efforts to list species on the brink of extinction.

Rare whales' safety pits U.S. Navy against environmentalists
By Curtis Morgan
Miami Herald
Florida isn't known for whale watching, but every winter the coastline offers a haven for endangered North Atlantic right whales.

Saving the shark that bit me
By Debbie Salamone
Bradenton Herald
Sharks rarely attack people. The odds of a shark bite are roughly one in every 11.5 million times a person visits a beach, according to the International Shark Attack File.

Miami Beach’s Sea Turtles Threatened by Its People
By Carmen Gentile
New York Times
Under the cloak of nightfall, dozens of freshly hatched sea turtles beat tiny flippers against the wet sands of Miami Beach, inching their way toward the ocean and a life aquatic.

Gopher tortoise could get protection under Endangered Species Act
By Eric Staats
Naples News
Gopher tortoises that crawl around dry scrubby habitat in Southwest Florida could be making a move under the Endangered Species Act.

Builders wary of more gopher tortoise protection
By Steve Patterson
Florida Times-Union
A federal agency is taking a fresh look at whether gopher tortoises need new protections that could have big impacts on development in Florida and Georgia.

State leaders clash over growth plans
By Charlie Whitehead
Naples News
With all the controversial changes in Florida growth management regulations in the past few years, the sharpest disagreement during a recent seminar in Fort Myers was over a change that hasn’t been made.

Trees or homes? Miami Corp. land use hinges on Volusia, Brevard OK
By Ludmilla Lelis
Orlando Sentinel
During the next 50 years, a new city of residential villages and business districts could be carved out of remote timberland in central Volusia and northern Brevard counties where Florida black bears and panthers still roam.

Catching On To Florida's Economic 'Ponzi Scheme'
By Diane Roberts
NPR
For the first time since World War II, Florida is losing population.

Mine expansion plan worries Everglades restorers
By Paul Quinlan
Palm Beach Post
South Florida water managers are raising concerns about a proposal to expand a rock mine that borders future Everglades restoration land.

Costs grow for Everglades reservoir left unfinished by sugar deal
By Andy Reid
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Tack on another $12 million to the taxpayers' tab for the cost of a massive, unfinished reservoir rendered obsolete by a proposed half-billion-dollar Everglades-restoration land deal with U.S. Sugar Corp.

Florida's waterways must be a priority
By Joe Murphy, Gulf Restoration Network
St. Petersburg Times
Few things unite Floridians like water. We swim in it, fish in it, paddle over it, and rely on it for our very survival.

Filmmaker not content to watch Orange Lake wetlands die
By Jared Leone
St. Petersburg Times
Some make movies for the glitz and glamor of Hollywood. Terry Neal made his movie to save Orange Lake.

A contract with nature
By Tom Bayles
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
It has been nearly 60 years since the start of the great Florida building boom where those involved were more focused on the millions they were making rather than any damage they were doing to ecosystems.

Progress, FP&L argue for nuke cost recovery
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
Witnesses for an environmental group and utilities wanting to build nuclear power plants sparred Tuesday before the Public Service Commission over the predicted costs of construction and how to pay for them.

Progress Energy, FPL nuclear costs face double challenge
By Kevin Spear
Orlando Sentinel
Environmental activists and the state advocate for utility customers plan to challenge Florida's two biggest power companies this week when the companies urge state regulators to let them continue charging for the early costs of nuclear plants not yet under construction.

2 Fla. PSC staffers resign as nuke plant weighed
By Bill Kaczor
The Associated Press
Two top Public Service Commission staffers resigned Tuesday and two others went on administrative leave as alleged ethics lapses again overshadowed a hearing on proposed rate increases - this time to pay for new nuclear power plants.

A toxic, exotic mess in the Everglades
Editorial
St. Petersburg Times
With the environmental focus on global warming and greenhouse gases, it's easy to forget that other pollutants continue to need regulatory attention.


Critically endangered Florida panther.

Wildwood Preservation Society is a non-profit 501(c)(4) project of the Advocacy Consortium for the Common Good. Click here to learn more.

"it's all connected"

Friday, June 26, 2009

Florida environmental and wildlife news for the week ending 6-26-09

Ed. Note: This post contains material from the past two weeks. We’ll return to our regular posting schedule next week.

FEATURED STORIES

Hometown Democracy Proposal Goes to Voters
By Michael Peltier
The News Service of Florida via FloridaEnvironments.com
Related AP report: Fla. planning amendment makes 2010 ballot
Related story: Fla. Supreme Court grants "Hometown Democracy" motion
Take action: Support Florida Hometown Democracy.
Ballot casters going to the polls in November 2010 will be asked whether changes to local comprehensive plans must be approved by local voters, state election officials announced Monday.

Drilling backers see rare occasion
By Joe Follick
Gainesville Sun
Related Tallahassee Democrat story: Sen. Nelson hints at filibuster over bill on offshore drilling
Take action: Sign on to the Progress Florida letter to Sen. Nelson
Drilling for oil and natural gas within 10 miles of Florida's coast has suddenly become one of the chief objectives for Republican legislative leaders and industry backers, who see a rare convergence of political opportunity and public sentiment.

92-year-old crusader's latest cause is saving the St. Johns River
By Kevin Spear
Orlando Sentinel
Take action: Support St. Johns Riverkeeper.
Take action: Support The Stetson Kennedy Foundation.
Stetson Kennedy, legendary champion of civil rights and cultural preservation, has begun a legal battle at age 92 to keep thirsty Central Florida from draining the St. Johns River.

Officials defend eco-passage
By Bill Cotterell
Tallahassee Democrat
Related: Tax protesters plan 'tea party' over eco-passage
Related Palm Beach Post column: More to Florida turtle crossing than Oklahoma Sen. Coburn claims
Related Pensacola News Journal editorial: Wildlife corridors needed
Laugh if you will, but state transportation officials and wildlife researchers said Wednesday a $3.4 million pair of tunnels under a busy North Florida highway is a serious safety project - for people, too.



Florida manatee: Lessons to be learned from gentle giants
By John Christopher Fine
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Related: Support Save The Manatee Club.
"They flipped us off and cursed us." The woman was distraught. An injured West Indian manatee was in distress near the Boynton Beach Municipal Boat Ramp.

Panel explores Corps of Engineers, wetlands loss
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
Related reading: Paving Paradise: Florida's Vanishing Wetlands and the Failure of No Net Loss
Enigma. Paralyzed. Decentralized. Schizophrenic.

Frightful Florida global warming forecast for 2099: Will your grandkids be under water?
By Tony Doris
Palm Beach Post
More drought, more flooding.

All eyes are on sweeping water measure in governor's hands
By Kevin Spear
Orlando Sentinel
Environmentalists hold as one of their main strengths the ability to rally grass-roots supporters and raise a formidable protest at public hearings.


Editorial cartoon by Andy Marlette, Pensacola News Journal

MORE GREEN NEWS

Navy training zone expands off coast of Jacksonville
By Timothy J. Gibbons, Steve Patterson
Florida Times-Union
The Navy plans to ramp up training in a 66,000-square-mile swath of ocean off the coast of Jacksonville, bringing in more aircraft and ships to practice things like detecting mines and stopping smugglers.

Group warns it will sue over Panama City airport
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
The Clean Water Network today announced it will sue the Panama City-Bay County Airport Authority for alleged stormwater permit violations in April at its new airport.

State removes falcon from endangered list
Staff report
Gainesville Sun
The world's fastest bird has flown off Florida's list of endangered species.

The South's deepening climate crisis
By Sue Sturgis
Facing South
A new federal report describes the impacts that man-made climate change is already having on the various regions of the United States, and it warns of dramatic disruptions on the way if we fail to reduce carbon pollution significantly and soon.

Crist: No position yet on federal drilling legislation
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
Gov. Charlie Crist said this morning he hasn't taken a position on a federal energy bill that Sen. Bill Nelson says would allow drilling within 10 miles of Florida's Gulf of Mexico coastline.

Bradenton Man Works on Petition to Enable Drilling
By Dale White
Lakeland Ledger
Congressional and Florida legislative action are not the only attempts to open Florida's Gulf coast to oil drilling.

Offshore drilling: A current danger
By William E. Gibson
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
While Congress considers opening the eastern Gulf of Mexico to oil and gas drilling, experts on ocean currents warn of a potential environmental nightmare that could reach the coast of South Florida.

Report: Energy plans won't harm Florida economy
By John Dorschner
Miami Herald
A new economic report, commissioned by the Environmental Defense Fund, says the latest federal proposal to curtail greenhouse gases will have ''very modest or even negligible'' costs for the Florida economy over the next 15 years.

One year later, Everglades land deal shrinks to stay alive
By Andy Reid
South Florida Sun Sentinel
One year ago, Gov. Charlie Crist surprised the state with a blockbuster land deal aimed at restoring the Everglades' "missing link" through sugar cane country.

Federal, Florida dispute holds up Everglades money
By Curtis Morgan
Miami Herald
The Obama administration has pledged to spend nearly half a billion dollars on Everglades restoration over the next two years, a record amount, including $103 million set aside for stimulus projects picked because they are ``shovel-ready.''

Unwise pro-growth laws make Florida Hometown Democracy more likely to pass in 2010
By Howard Troxler
St. Petersburg Times
Our state is divided into two camps.

Growth law is stirring concern
By Dale White
Sarasota Herald Tribune
A new growth management law -- pushed by a Bradenton lawmaker -- is causing "great uncertainty and confusion," the head of Florida's planning agency said Friday.

Growth groups ready for fight
By Jim Saunders
Daytona Beach News-Journal
Gov. Charlie Crist sided with business groups and angered environmentalists when he signed a bill this month to revamp the state's growth management laws.

The unreality of Gary Schraut's push for Senate Bill 360
By Dan DeWitt
St. Petersburg Times
Sometimes, when I talk to Gary Schraut, I wonder if there's some sort of reality-bending tint on the windows of his SUV.

U.S. interior secretary wants to proceed with Everglades restoration
By William E. Gibson
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
After a decade of foot-dragging, it's time to get moving on Everglades restoration, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said today.

Study: Apalachicola River flow could affect Gulf fisheries
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
Reduced water flowing from Georgia and Alabama in the Apalachicola River in Florida could have wider effects than have been traditionally studied, according to Florida State University researchers.

The Majesty of Corkscrew
YouTube Video
Audubon of Florida blog
If this doesn’t make you want to go to Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary, I don’t know what else would.

Hometown Democracy: The Eve of Destruction?
By Mike Thomas
Orlando Sentinel
St. Pete Beach is a throwback to Florida's pre-Disney beachfront tourism era.

High court goes with voters
Editorial
Palm Beach Post
The Florida Supreme Court ruled in favor of democracy last week by rejecting a state law designed to undercut petition drives for state constitutional amendments.

Drilling redux
Staff Editorial
Gainesville Sun
A Senate committee has approved a plan to open millions of acres of the eastern Gulf of Mexico to oil and gas drilling.

Blowing smoke at Obama plan
Editorial
Daytona Beach News-Journal
It started encouragingly: A federal energy bill that would require 20 percent greenhouse-gas emission reductions from 2005 levels by 2020, and 80 percent by 2050.

Playing The Same Old Tune
Editorial
Lakeland Ledger
It's sad, really. While most Americans are excited by the prospects of renewable energy and better fuel efficiency, many in Congress continue to be drawn to the oil companies' same old tune.

Drilling off Florida is a false promise
Staff Editorial
Tampa Tribune
The "drill, baby drill" crowd is at it again.

Plastic grocery bags get trashed, for good reason
Editorial
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
They're everywhere -- blowing in the wind, floating in the sea, piling up in your kitchen and in landfills.


Snowy egret chicks nesting in Fred George Basin, Leon County, Spring 2009. Photo Courtesy Richard Leighton, Florida Nature Photography.

Wildwood Preservation Society is a non-profit 501(c)(4) project of the Advocacy Consortium for the Common Good. Click here to learn more.

"it's all connected"

Friday, April 10, 2009

Florida environmental and wildlife news for the week ending 4-10-09

FEATURED STORIES

U.S. Sugar Corp. tells Florida negotiators: Take land deal or leave it
By Andy Reid
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Lingering cost concerns about the state's scaled-down $533 million Everglades land deal prompted a take-it-or-leave-it message Thursday from U.S. Sugar Corp.

Florida's worsening drought sparks water fights
By Curtis Morgan
Miami Herald
Everglades marshes and Big Cypress swamps are drying up. Estuaries at the mouths of the St. Lucie and Caloosahatchee rivers are turning too salty.

U.S. reps ask administration for more Florida panther protection
By Craig Pittman
St. Pete Times
Although the Florida panther has been on the endangered species list for 40 years, the government has never officially designated what its "critical habitat" would be.

Rally urges support for Florida Forever
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
With budget cuts threatening to end the nation's largest land conservation program, environmental groups on Monday released poll results they said showed support for the state's Florida Forever land-buying program.

A Solar-Powered Solution to Florida Sprawl
By Michael Grunwald
Time Magazine
An NFL lineman turned visionary developer today is unveiling startlingly ambitious plans for a solar-powered city of tomorrow in southwest Florida's outback, featuring the world's largest photovoltaic solar plant, a truly smart power grid, recharging stations for electric vehicles and a variety of other green innovations.

The hidden costs of nuclear power
By PlentyMag.com
Mother Nature News
As one of Florida’s largest utilities prepared to unveil details about its nuclear plans in March 2008, its executives showed a noticeable wariness about one detail in particular: the price.

Young want a green future
By Lyndsey Scofield
Tampa Tribune
The next generation is ready. Will our leaders lead us?


Editorial Cartoon by Jim Morin, Miami Herald


MORE GREEN NEWS

Manatee deaths on the rise
By PlentyMag.com
Mother Nature Network
More than 100 newborn manatees were found dead in 2008, up from 59 in 2007, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Research Institute

Budget cuts end program to track endangered Florida panther
By Associated Press
TC Palm
Budget woes are forcing state wildlife officials to cut a program that tracks endangered Florida panthers with GPS-equipped collars.

Protect Florida panther habitat from development
By Andrew McElwaine
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
The Florida panther is one of the most endangered animals on Earth, with only 80 to 100 remaining.

Fish and Wildlife to review 13 Florida endangered species
Staff Report
Orlando Sentinel
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will conduct status reviews of 13 plants on Florida's endangered species list.

Proposal would protect Florida springs
By Jim Saunders and Dinah Voyles Pulver
Daytona Beach News-Journal
State Sen. Lee Constantine describes springs as "one of the last and most-unique treasures" of Florida.

Proposed cuts to petroleum cleanup raise civic concerns
By Jim Ash
Tallahassee Democrat
Engineers and environmentalists warned Monday about proposed budget cuts to a $151.7 million program that pays for some 5,000 active cleanup projects where plumes of gasoline and other petroleum products threaten drinking-water supplies.

Ethanol producers, once riding high in Fla. and elsewhere, now struggle
By David Adams
St. Pete Times
A year ago, the ethanol industry was riding high on spiraling gas prices that made corn-based biofuel a highly attractive home-grown supplement to costly gasoline.

McKeel: Lift Moratorium On Offshore Oil Drilling
By Bill Rufty
Lakeland Ledger
Legislation by Rep. Seth McKeel, R-Lakeland, requesting Congress withdraw a moratorium barring drilling for oil and gas in the eastern Gulf of Mexico is one step away from being voted on by the Florida House.

Look for a change in Florida's growth law
By Howard Troxler
St. Pete Times
It's always risky to predict what the Legislature will do.

Relaxing growth rules could open floodgates to more sprawl
By Anthony Westbury
TC Palm
So, how did Florida get into such a bottomless financial pit?

Florida Forever: Keep it going
Editorial
Florida Times-Union
It would be a shame if the state's landmark Florida Forever environmental land-buying program does not last beyond this year.

Florida Forever
Editorial
Gainesville Sun
Alachua County residents have twice voted with their pocketbooks in favor of land preservation; once several years ago in creating Alachua County Forever, and again last year to provide a new funding source for it.

Developers, politicians reach deal on bear habitat, but nature loses
Editorial
St. Pete Times
Who looks out for Florida's wildlife in Aripeka?

No drilling in the Gulf
Editorial
Gainesville Sun
It isn't hard to be a voice of reason against a chorus chanting, "Drill, baby, drill." But credit goes to Ken Salazar, the new Interior Secretary, who is undertaking a serious review of U.S. energy policy.


Critically endangered Florida panther

Wildwood Preservation Society is a non-profit 501(c)(4) project of the Advocacy Consortium for the Common Good. Click here to learn more.

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