Gulf Seafood Gets Intense Safety Testing NPR by AP Enlarge AP Research chemist Daryle Boyd holds seafood samples from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill region as tests are conducted on seafood at the NOAA … Local Expert Discusses Gulf Seafood SafetyPatch Oil well capped, but Gulf Coast fisheries still reeling from scared consumersNaples Daily News
Gulf seafood gets intense safety testing The Associated Press And while the dispersant that was dumped into the massive oil spill has consumers nervous, health regulators contend there's no evidence it builds up in … BP well capped, but not forgottenSan Francisco Chronicle Ecosystem in the surf imperiled by oil spillPensacola News Journal GUEST COLUMN: The Deepwater spill and your seafood menuAttleboro Sun Chronicle Patch –Dayton Daily News –Worcester Telegram all 436 news articles »
Oil spill claims fund gets first deposit from BP al.com (blog) asked Gulf Shores Mayor Robert Craft, whose beach city has long been on the front lines of the oil spill. "The survival of the small business down here … BP Billion Oil–Spill Compensation Fund Agreement Completed With U.S.Bloomberg BP Oil Spill Recovery Effort Seen Through Billion DepositExecte News Questions remain about Gulf Victims FundWWL Gulfstream News (blog) –Daily Mail –World Socialist Web Site all 24 news articles »
Plug for oil leak gets cautious optimism in Fla. BusinessWeek BP PLC said Wednesday that crude was being pushed back down to its source on the seafloor for the first time since the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded off … If Oil Comes Here, It Could Be CostlyWJXT Jacksonville Florida Plans For Post BP Oil Spill TourismGov Monitor The Shifting Politics of Oil: Gov. Charlie CristWUSF 89.7 News Sarasota Herald-Tribune –PR Newswire (press release) –Destin Log all 79 news articles »
Navy Secretary Gets Earful on Oil Spill WUSF 89.7 News And unlike in his past trips to the Gulf, Mabus heard more about concerns with the chemical dispersants used by BP rather than the oil itself. … Navy Secretary hears oil spill concerns in FloridaMiamiHerald.com Obama's point man on oil spill recovery hears concerns, ideas in St. PeteTampabay.com U.S. Navy secretary wants to hear from you on the oil spill10 Connects Creative Loafing Tampa (blog) –WJHG-TV –al.com (blog) all 78 news articles »
Mitsui Gets 0 Million Bill From BP for Oil Spill in Gulf, Won't Pay Yet Bloomberg s subsidiary MOEX Offshore 2007 LLC, which holds a stake in BP Plc's crippled Gulf of Mexico oil well, hasn't paid 0 million in bills from BP for … BP Bills Mitsui 0 MillionWall Street Journal Earnings Preview: Anadarko PetroleumBusinessWeek Mitsui Withholding Payment For BP Oil Spill: CFONIKKEI.com Japan Today –Reuters –ABC News all 57 news articles »
BP Gets US Approval to Keep Gulf Oil Well Capped Bloomberg BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill National Incident Commander Retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen answers reporters' questions … U.S. says oil spill cap expected to hold in stormMarketWatch Stafford Act Doesn't Apply to BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Cleanup Efforts …Fire Chief (blog) New Gulf Oil Seeps Tied to Another WellNational Geographic Newsweek –Huffington Post Investigative Fund (blog) –New York Times all 4,082 news articles »
President Barack Obama emerged from his meeting with BP executives with a major victory. British Petroleum (BP) will put billion into an account ( B per year over 4 years) to pay for the effects of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill dirtying the water of the Gulf of Mexico and the shores of the Gulf Coast states. The story: www.reuters.com BP exec in hot water over “small people” comment: www.youtube.com Join The Daily Conversation on Facebook tinyurl.com Follow our Tweets for new videos twitter.com Background image can be found here: www.flickr.com Used with permission under creative commons license: creativecommons.org Video Rating: 5 / 5
Rep. DeGette gets firsthand look at ‘massive environmental disaster’
U.S. Rep. Diane DeGette, D-Denver, said the sight of miles of Louisiana marshes coated in oil and the dank smell of crude in the humid air might pale next to the human cost of the disaster. Read more on Denver Post