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Oil Spill Hysteria (The Gulf suffered remarkably little damage. Why do so many believe otherwise?)
Weekly Standard ^ | 12/18/2010 | Robert Nelson

Posted on 12/18/2010 11:11:53 AM PST by SeekAndFind

The day after the midterm elections in November, panelists at the University of Maryland School of Public Policy discussed the various factors that had contributed to the Democrats’ losses—most surprisingly, the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. One speaker with excellent Democratic connections in Washington noted that top White House staff were consumed by the spill and its political fallout for much of the spring of 2010. As staffers now lamented privately, this had diverted attention from other pressing issues—above all, the sputtering economy.

The political fortunes of the Democratic party were not the only collateral damage from the spill. Gulf coast tourism plummeted, even in areas untouched by oil. Seafood restaurants in New York and Chicago proudly advertised that they did not serve Gulf fish. And many oyster beds were devastated when they were flushed with fresh water from the Mississippi River as a “preventive” measure. Most recently, on December 1, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar cancelled previous plans for much expanded offshore oil and gas drilling, killing thousands of jobs and forgoing an opportunity to reduce the nation’s enormous foreign energy bill.

Oddly enough, however, the ecosystem of the Gulf itself turns out to have suffered remarkably little damage from the continuous gushing of oil into the water from April 20 till July 15, when the leaking well was capped. One group of scientists rated the health of the Gulf’s ecology at 71 on a scale of 100 before the spill and 65 in October. By mid-August, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) was having trouble finding spilled oil. This squared with the finding of researchers from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California that the half-life of much of the leaking oil was about three days. At that rate, more than 90 percent would have disappeared in 12 days.

NOAA explained one reason for this in a report in August: “It is well known that bacteria that break down the dispersed and weathered surface oil are abundant in the Gulf of Mexico in large part because of the warm water, the favorable nutrient and oxygen levels, and the fact that oil regularly enters the Gulf of Mexico through natural seeps.” In other words, the organisms that normally live off the Gulf’s large natural seepage of oil into the water multiplied extremely rapidly and went on a feeding frenzy. Another 25 percent of the spilled oil—the lightest and most toxic part—simply evaporated at the surface or dissolved quickly.

Damage to wildlife, too, was relatively sparse. As of November 2, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reported that 2,263 oil-soiled bird remains had been collected in the Gulf, far fewer than the 225,000 birds killed by the Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska in 1989. Despite fears for turtles, only 18 dead oil-soiled turtles had been found. No other reptile deaths were recorded. While more than 1,000 sea otters alone had died in the Alaska spill, only 4 oil-soiled mammals (including dolphins) had been found dead in the Gulf region. These are very small numbers relative to the base populations. Similarly, government agencies were unable to find any evidence of dead fish. Fish can simply swim away from trouble. Nor was evidence found of contamination of live fish. In one government test, 2,768 chemical analyses uncovered no signs of contamination.

In the latest irony, marine biologists this fall have actually been seeing surprising increases in some fish populations. It seems that the closure of large areas of the Gulf to fishing amounted to an unplanned experiment in fisheries management. According to Sean Powers, a University of South Alabama marine biologist, “It’s just been amazing how many more sharks we are seeing this year. I didn’t believe it at first.” He attributed the change to the “incredible reduction in fishing pressure,” and added, “What’s interesting to me [is that] we are seeing it across the whole range, from the shrimp and small croaker all the way up to the large sharks.”

Some oil from the spill did reach beaches, and it did so in a seemingly random pattern. The Texas coast was little affected, and as of late July, only 6 of 25 Alabama beaches being monitored had had oil spill-related advisories. Even where oil did reach beaches, human cleanup and natural processes typically removed most of it quickly. By early November, a federal spokesman found a continuing presence of “heavy oil” on 30 miles of the total 580 miles of Gulf beaches where oil had come ashore.

After all the predictions of ecological disaster in the spring, government officials have been searching hard for more evidence of harm. In early November, a Penn State marine biologist announced that he had finally found a “smoking gun”: dead and dying coral reefs in 4,500 feet of water not far from the spill site. Coral in shallower waters and farther from the site was unaffected.

The search for damage to the Gulf, it seems, is a bit like the search for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. An armada of ships was assembled to respond to the leak caused by an explosion at the Deepwater Horizon well, and a virtual war was declared on it (and on the well’s owner, BP). It is—or should be—embarrassing that the predicted disaster failed to materialize.

In the end, 4.9 million barrels of oil flowed into the Gulf, almost 20 times the Exxon Valdez spill and the largest by far in U.S. history. But there are reasons the ecological consequences were so small in comparison with those of the Exxon Valdez. Start with the fact that the Gulf spill occurred in 5,000 feet of water, while most spills come from tankers at the surface. It took time for the oil to get to the surface, giving the oil-eating “bugs” of the Gulf opportunity to do their work.

A second important factor was that the spill occurred 50 miles from the coast. This left more time for responders to apply chemical dispersants and for wave action and other natural forces to decompose large amounts of oil. What oil did reach the beaches often took the form of tar balls that were less environmentally harmful than actual slicks. Cleanup workers could simply pick them up.

By contrast, the Exxon Valdez spill immediately spread over the surface of the ocean, where many birds and other creatures came into contact with it. Prince William Sound, where the spill began, is an enclosed body of water, and the spilled oil—some of it in the most toxic forms—quickly reached the shore. In addition, the sound has no significant natural oil seepage and so lacks the associated oil-eating organisms. The water is much colder and less conducive to such natural activity. The mammal populations in Prince William Sound and the other affected areas were larger, too.

All of this, to be sure, was well known to students of oil spills. Indeed, the greatest significance of the Gulf spill lies not in its ecological effects, but rather in the outbreak of social hysteria that it occasioned. The episode should be studied as such. As terrorists know all too well, mass hysteria can do more damage than the precipitating event.

Eruptions of social hysteria have occurred throughout history. Among the better known instances are events in Christian Europe associated with fear of the devil. Over several centuries, many thousands of people deemed to be witches were killed. We now have secular equivalents to the devil that evoke their own mass anxieties and destructive overreactions.

In the case of the Gulf spill, the widely distributed pictures of oil gushing into the sea had this effect for many people. Environmentalists are not alone in thinking that human beings may have overstepped our bounds in seeking to transform the natural world for our own selfish purposes. Many fear that we are “playing God” in the world, wantonly destroying plant and animal life, and that God will punish us.

Oil and other fossil sources of energy, moreover, have greatly enhanced humans’ power to transform Creation. It might thus seem appropriate that God’s punishment would take the form of a devastating oil spill. As Ted Turner told CNN in May, the Gulf spill “could be” God’s work. “He’s sending us a message” to curb our destruction of the earth.

Fortunately, episodes of social hysteria eventually run their course, and cooler heads prevail. But a great deal of damage can be done in the meantime. It is important to review why it took so long in the Gulf for reason to prevail.

The largest blame lies with the media. Hysterical overreaction, frankly, sells newspapers and magazines, which is one reason the media have a long history of hyping Communist spying, cancer epidemics, terrorist attacks, and now oil spills. In the case of the Gulf, it was the national media, despite their greater investigative resources, that led the charge. On May 6, using language it employed throughout the spring and early summer, the Washington Post updated its readers on the “catastrophic oil spill unfolding in the Gulf.”

Nine days later the Post reported, “The oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico has not yet caused coastal damage on the scale of the Exxon Valdez disaster. But scientists say it is becoming something different and potentially much more troubling: the first massive U.S. oil spill whose effects so far are largely hidden under water.” The headline “The ‘invisible monster’ ” evoked a virtual horror movie of terrors lurking in the deep. Throughout the spring and early summer, the Post’s reporters routinely attributed doomsday predictions for the Gulf to unnamed “scientists.” The effect was to suggest that a scientific consensus existed so strong that it was not necessary even to identify any particular scientific authority.

Time magazine on May 17 featured its own cover story on the “catastrophe” in the Gulf. Time offered readers horrifying images of “an uncontrolled gusher with economic, political and social consequences as far as the eye can see. The slick—a morphing mass of at least 2,000 sq. mi. (5,200 sq km) as of May 3, and changing every day,” the story continued, “threatens to kill wildlife and wreck the fishing industry along nearly 1,300 miles (2,100 km) of coastline.” Once again, unnamed “scientists worry that ocean currents could carry the oil around the tip of Florida to the beaches of the East Coast,” potentially devastating the Keys and the Everglades.

The media actually relied less on marine biologists and oil spill experts for their information and more on environmental groups. The Gulf “disaster” offered multiple potential benefits to these groups, including the possibility of desired policy changes. The executive director of the Sierra Club declared, “This will kill any plan to expand offshore drilling for the next decade.” Lisa Margonelli of the New America Foundation saw the spill as a powerful message that “we need to address the underlying issue, and that’s our dependence on oil” and other fossil fuels, with their greenhouse emissions and other environmental harms.

America’s political leadership also contributed to the mass anxiety. President Obama came to office with close personal knowledge of matters such as inner city schools but less of the environment. Ill-served by his advisers, the president on June 15 declared the spill “the worst environmental disaster America has ever faced.” He compared it to “an earthquake or a hurricane” such as San Francisco or Katrina but said it could be even worse because “it’s not a single event that does its damage in a matter of minutes or days. The millions of gallons of oil that have spilled into the Gulf of Mexico are more like an epidemic, one that we will be fighting for months and even years.”

Could the Gulf region simply have been extra-ordinarily lucky? No doubt there was an element of luck. The marine organisms consumed the oil faster than was generally expected. Even so, a scientifically accurate and honest assessment on May 1 would have read something like this:

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"The oil spill sparked by the explosion at the Deepwater Horizon rig on April 20 is occurring in circumstances never experienced before, particularly the great depth of the water. It is impossible to predict what ecological damage there will be. While unlikely to be catastrophic, the damage could range from significant to minimal. The experience of most oil spills has been that the long-term damage proves less than initially feared. Public impressions to the contrary notwithstanding, oil is a natural substance, including in the ocean, and nature has its ways of dealing with it. The natural conditions in the Gulf of Mexico are considerably more favorable than in Alaska, but even there the effects of the Exxon Valdez spill were rapidly disappearing within five years and today are largely gone."

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Instead, America treated the Gulf spill almost as a religious catharsis. The message was that we have sinned against nature, and God is justly punishing us. Whatever the facts, such messages can resonate powerfully. America is unusually religious for a modern nation, and some of its religions, such as environmentalism, are secular. As always, there are many people—the Elmer Gantrys of our time—who are happy to feed the public’s fears.

-- Robert H. Nelson is a professor of environmental policy at the University of Maryland, a senior fellow with the Independent Institute in Oakland, California, and the author, most recently, of The New Holy Wars: Economic Religion vs. Environmental Religion in Contemporary America.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: energy; gulfofmexico; hysteria; offshore; oil; oilspill
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1 posted on 12/18/2010 11:11:55 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Everyone was guilty even most on this site. The world’s coming to an end....lol.


2 posted on 12/18/2010 11:15:25 AM PST by napscoordinator
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To: SeekAndFind
(...Why do so many believe otherwise?)

because it makes them feel like what they think and say matters.

3 posted on 12/18/2010 11:16:24 AM PST by the invisib1e hand (oy.)
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To: napscoordinator

Wait. You mean the world did not end? We are still here? What??!


4 posted on 12/18/2010 11:16:27 AM PST by brytlea (Jesus loves me, this I know.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Most of the real damage was caused by Obama shutting off all oil in the Gulf and refusal to allow the spill to be cleaned up immediately by foreign and domestic vessels. Then minor problems like the Coast Guard (under cleanup operations) not letting cleanup boats on the water without verifying everyone has a properly fitted life vest.

The entire thing was a government fiasco more than an environmental disaster.


5 posted on 12/18/2010 11:18:35 AM PST by Domandred (Fdisk, format, and reinstall the entire .gov system.)
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To: SeekAndFind

My reaction is- where will the billions of dollars in “aid” wind up? I suspect much of it will take a clever path into Obama’s re-election war chest.


6 posted on 12/18/2010 11:22:27 AM PST by getitright (If you call this HOPE, can we give despair a shot?)
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To: SeekAndFind

The Left, and some here, will be tossing around the Gulf’s “hidden monster” argument for the next few decades. They will never believe that the oil spill did next to nothing.

Can you imagine what would happen to the eco-nazis if they were ever able to wrap their brains around the fact that the largest oil spill in US history did very little damage and that “Global Warming” was a sham? There would be millions of little Liberal heads exploding all over the world.


7 posted on 12/18/2010 11:22:49 AM PST by VeniVidiVici (Barack Obama = The Captain Norman Dike of presidents)
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To: SeekAndFind
"Why do so many believe otherwise?"

For the same reasons so many believe that we lost the war in Vietnam.

8 posted on 12/18/2010 11:23:43 AM PST by Buffalo Head (Illigitimi non carborundum)
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To: SeekAndFind

Still like to know who ordered the use of salt water rather than drilling mud which caused this “accident”. The only person who made out on this spill was George $oro$, what a coincidence?

Merry Christmas


9 posted on 12/18/2010 11:27:51 AM PST by bray (Sarah Palin will destroy the Repub Party, hopefully!)
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To: SeekAndFind

Because life is so much more exciting when we believe we’re privy to some great secret.


10 posted on 12/18/2010 11:28:15 AM PST by cripplecreek (Remember the River Raisin! (look it up))
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To: SeekAndFind

Another example of Limbaugh saying something outrageous that brings him scorn, and later vindication; just like the “I hope he fails” comment. Wonder what David Frum had to say when the spill first started.


11 posted on 12/18/2010 11:30:40 AM PST by Minn
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To: SeekAndFind

Does this mean that zero will give back the $20 bil he extorted from B.P.?


12 posted on 12/18/2010 11:30:56 AM PST by Graybeard58
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To: napscoordinator

I have always asserted that oil spills are like forest fires, lots of immediate damage, then quick natural environmental restoration often better than what existed before. Oil is like second hand smoke, there is a LOT of hysteria surrounding it created by leftists but often adopted by those on the right.


13 posted on 12/18/2010 11:32:43 AM PST by HerrBlucher (Defund, repeal, investigate, impeach, convict, jail, celebrate.)
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To: SeekAndFind

It’s hard to resist pop hysteria when it comes at us 24/7.


14 posted on 12/18/2010 11:34:41 AM PST by pallis
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To: SeekAndFind

Only God and our Republic know how devastating the spill will eventually turn out to be. Obama has already stopped drilling off the east coast. How many jobs have already been lost? How much will we pay for energy for cars and homes before Obama is gone? Don’t minimize the damage long term.


15 posted on 12/18/2010 11:34:51 AM PST by charlie72
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To: napscoordinator; Ernest_at_the_Beach
Yeah---there were quite a few who were jumping on board with the "Evil Oil Company" mantra. Also a great many who jumped aboard the imminent threat from tapping into a monster formation----incapable of being reined in--- the we're all gonna die adherents.

Ernest, pinged hereinabove, was steady "sanity" poster.

16 posted on 12/18/2010 11:39:33 AM PST by BOBTHENAILER (EPA will RUIN America)
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To: SeekAndFind

This shows that the democrat mainstream media still controls the U.S.A. Even all on this site believed that the BP oil disaster was a disaster. I knew otherwise because I know all the media does is lie.


17 posted on 12/18/2010 12:06:46 PM PST by Democrat_media (Why is no government creating a product we can hold in our hands like a cell phone..?)
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To: SeekAndFind
Question: Oil Spill Hysteria (The Gulf suffered remarkably little damage. Why do so many believe otherwise?)

Answer: Two weeks of media treatment and the truth is recognized by all. In short, in spite of what some think the left is in firm control of this country and the mind set of its population.

18 posted on 12/18/2010 12:12:12 PM PST by AEMILIUS PAULUS (It is a shame that when these people give a riot)
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To: Buffalo Head

Scary how 99.9% of Freepers believe the MSM/Hollywood/Academia monopoly is weaker than ever.


19 posted on 12/18/2010 12:16:21 PM PST by roses of sharon (I can do all things through Him who strengthens me. Philippians 4:13)
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To: SeekAndFind
In the days shortly after the spill, I remember hearing a local radio talk show host (KFI's Tim Conway, Jr., who has a GREAT show) predicting that the damage from this oil spill would spoil the Gulf for generations of Americans -- that our great-grandchildren would still be seeing signs of the damage!

I could only shake my head and laugh, and think to myself, "In about two years, the Gulf will be back to normal and the spill will be a distant memory." I remember the bad old days when the water in San Pedro (Los Angeles) was so poluted it was literally the color of Orange Crush soda pop. I was a kid who grew up "a child of nature" playing outdoors on a prisine, scenic, and unspoiled coastline with no pollution, and I was horrified at San Pedro. I was used to hanging around the boat docks and watching the little fish and other critters that always congregated or grew on the pilings and undersides (the parts in the water) of the docks. In San Pedro, the water was dead, dead, dead. It was orange, for crying out loud! I was only about 11 or 12 and I was deeply shaken by it. It looked SO permanent and so hopeless.

My dad, a commercial fisherman, was philosophical; he told me that the ocean was pretty tough and resiliant and besides, they'd just made some new laws to get the ships to dump their pollution into some kind of waste management place instead of directly into the water.

I guess it was two or three years later that I found myself back at San Pedro ... and was blown off my feet by what I saw. The water was blue. There were some fish and anemonies and all those little critters, and I even saw a seal broach and snort a big breath of air, then continue lollygagging his lazy way in the channel.

We are but a fleeting pimple on the earth. We don't call the shots here -- nature does. For all we know, in the next three months we could suddenly face a drop in temperature that would bring snow to the California coastline for the next 200 years. It could happen that fast. Without the use of fossil energy to keep ourselves going along with some major nimble shifts in agriculture (the free market would make it happen), we'd die in masses. We adapt to nature -- it doesn't adapt to us!

Environmentalism is a new age dark age.

20 posted on 12/18/2010 12:20:06 PM PST by Finny ("Raise hell. Vote smart." -- Ted Nugent)
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