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Obama calls for Gulf restoration plan within year – KLFY 0

Posted on October 06, 2010 by bp complaints

NOLA.com

Obama calls for Gulf restoration plan within year
KLFY
Gulf Coast restoration is expected to be funded in large part with the billions of dollars BP is expected to pay in fines for the devastating oil spill.
Gulf restoration plan should be home-grown, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson saysNOLA.com
Obama creates Gulf cleanup task forceThe Daily Advertiser
Obama signs gulf restoration orderUPI.com
CNN International –Pensacola News Journal –Science AAAS
all 36 news articles »

gulf oil spill updates – Google News

Obama signs gulf restoration order – UPI.com 0

Posted on October 06, 2010 by bp complaints

NOLA.com

Obama signs gulf restoration order
UPI.com
The task force, which will oversee US efforts to restore the Gulf of Mexico following the 200 million gallon BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill,
Gulf restoration plan should be home-grown, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson saysNOLA.com
Obama orders Gulf restoration task forceCNN International
Oil spill: President appoints recovery task forcePensacola News Journal
Science AAAS –Bizjournals.com –Press-Register – al.com (blog)
all 23 news articles »

gulf oil spill updates – Google News

Obama orders Gulf restoration task force – CNN International 0

Posted on October 05, 2010 by bp complaints

NOLA.com

Obama orders Gulf restoration task force
CNN International
Ecosystem Restoration Task Force would include federal, state and local representatives to help "effectively address the damage" from the oil spill.
Oil spill: President appoints recovery task forcePensacola News Journal
Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Task Force Chairman Lisa Jackson meets with NOLA.com
Gulf Coast Restoration Task Force Gets Under WayScience AAAS
Bizjournals.com –NASDAQ –U.S. EPA.gov (press release)
all 20 news articles »

gulf oil spill updates – Google News

Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Task Force Chairman Lisa Jackson meets with … – NOLA.com 0

Posted on October 05, 2010 by bp complaints

Kansas City Star

Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Task Force Chairman Lisa Jackson meets with
NOLA.com
Ray Mabus last week in his own report to Obama on how to move from responding to the oil spill to recovery of the coast's ecology and economy.
NOAA administrator notes good science's role oil spill response in gulfOil & Gas Journal
Transcript: NOAA Administrator's Keynote Address on NOAA Science and the Gulf NOAA
The Talon: Oil Spill in the Gulf: Meltdown in D.Cmy.hsj.org
Pensacola News Journal –NASDAQ –Wall Street Journal (blog)
all 290 news articles »

gulf oil spill updates – Google News

Resource Restoration Planning Process Begins for BP/Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill 0

Posted on September 29, 2010 by bp complaints

Key contact numbers

  • Report oiled shoreline or request volunteer information: (866) 448-5816
  • Submit alternative response technology, services or products: (281) 366-5511 
  • Submit a claim for damages: (800) 916-4893
  • Report oiled wildlife: (866) 557-1401

Deepwater Horizon Incident
Joint Information Center

Phone: (713) 323-1670
(713) 323-1671

Contact:   Kendra Barkoff, DOI 202-208-6416                                                                                     FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

                 Ben Sherman, NOAA 301-713-3066                                                                                   Sept. 29, 2010 

Resource Restoration Planning Process Begins for BP/Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill

WASHINGTON — The Department of the Interior, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and the co-trustees for natural resources affected by the BP/Deepwater Horizon oil spill announced today they have started the injury assessment and restoration planning phase of the Natural Resource Damage Assessment, a legal process to determine the type and amount of restoration needed to compensate the public for harm to natural resources and their human uses as a result of the spill.

This is the second phase of the NRDA process. Much of the initial “preassessment” phase has already occurred—and trustees have already received million in payments from responsible parties to conduct important preassessment activities including the collection of time-critical data in the field. During that phase, trustees collected time-sensitive data, reviewed scientific literature about the oil and its impact on coastal resources, and made initial determinations that resources have been injured and that those injuries can be addressed by appropriate restoration actions. During the injury assessment and restoration planning phase, trustees will assess the nature and amount of injuries and develop a restoration plan. Consistent with OPA, the trustees’ goals are to recover from responsible parties damages equal to what is necessary to return the environment to the conditions that would have existed if the oil spill had not occurred (known as “baseline conditions”) and to recover compensation on behalf of the public for the diminished value of the injured resources from the time of the injury until restoration is achieved. By regulation, these two phases will be followed by a “restoration” phase, during which the trustees will work with the public to implement, and monitor restoration projects.          

The second phase of NRDA began with a Notice of Intent to Conduct Restoration Planning indicates that the trustees, representing three federal Departments and the five affected states, have begun to formally identify and document impacts to the gulf’s natural resources, and the public’s loss of use and enjoyment of these resources, as the first stage under the regulations for developing a restoration strategy. Pre-assessment data collected, analyzed and quality-checked, are available to the public on the NOAA oil spill science missions and data website and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service oil spill response website.

“Our early analysis has documented clear detrimental effects to animals and habitats in the Gulf ecosystem,” said Jane Lubchenco, Ph.D., under secretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and NOAA administrator. “While we will continue collecting and analyzing samples, the trustees also will begin crafting an equally comprehensive restoration strategy. Our goal is to forge a restoration plan that is steeped in science, sharpened by public input and strongly rooted in the public good. The citizens of the Gulf Coast deserve nothing less.”

“The restoration of the Gulf of Mexico is a high priority for the entire Obama administration and we will be diligent and vigilant to ensure that the damages are fully assessed and a full and scientifically sound restoration strategy is both developed and implemented,” said Tom Strickland, Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Fish and Wildlife and Parks.

Under the Natural Resource Damage Assessment process outlined by the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, the trustees have authority to identify potential restoration projects and will solicit public comment on these projects before finalizing the restoration plan. The public may also have opportunities to provide hands-on assistance in selected restoration projects.

Federal regulations, under the Oil Pollution Act, require that the responsible parties be invited to participate in the NRDA process. The trustees will seek damages to implement the final restoration plan from the parties identified as being responsible for the spill.

According to the trustees, the full extent of potential injuries is currently unknown and may not be known for some time. However, according to the Notice of Intent, as of August 19, the trustees had documented oil on more than 950 miles of shoreline, including salt marshes, sandy beaches, mudflats and mangroves. As of June 29, the trustees had captured more than 1,900 live oiled birds and 400 live oiled sea turtles. They had also collected more than 1,850 visibly oiled dead birds, 17 visibly oiled dead sea turtles and five visibly oiled dead marine mammals. These numbers represent only a portion of the wildlife that have been impacted by the spill and the restoration planning process will further refine the total impact of this spill on the habitats and animals in the gulf.

The three federal trustees are the Department of the Interior (acting on behalf of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Indian Affairs, National Park Service and Bureau of Land Management), NOAA (on behalf of the Department of Commerce) and the Department of Defense. State trustees for Alabama are the Geological Survey of Alabama and the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. The Florida state trustee is the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. Louisiana State trustees are the Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority, the Louisiana Oil Spill Coordinator’s Office, the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality, the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, and the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources. The State trustee for Mississippi is the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality. Lastly, the Texas State trustees are the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, and the Texas General Land Office. 

On the Web:

Notice of intent: http://www.darrp.noaa.gov

BP Deepwater Horizon damage assessment site: http://www.darrp.noaa.gov/southeast/deepwater_horizon

Damage Assessment Fact Sheets: http://response.restoration.noaa.gov/dwh.php?entry_id=812#assessmentrestoration

NOAA oil spill science missions and data: http://www.noaa.gov/sciencemissions/bpoilspill.html

Weekly Bird Impact Data and Consolidated Wildlife Reports:

http://www.fws.gov/home/dhoilspill/collectionreports.html#wildlifetable

 


Recent Updates for Unified Command for the Deepwater BP Oil Spill | Deepwater Horizon Response

Resource Restoration Planning Process Begins for BP/Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill 0

Posted on September 29, 2010 by bp complaints

Key contact numbers

  • Report oiled shoreline or request volunteer information: (866) 448-5816
  • Submit alternative response technology, services or products: (281) 366-5511 
  • Submit a claim for damages: (800) 916-4893
  • Report oiled wildlife: (866) 557-1401

Deepwater Horizon Incident
Joint Information Center

Phone: (713) 323-1670
(713) 323-1671

Contact:   Kendra Barkoff, DOI 202-208-6416                                                                                     FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

                 Ben Sherman, NOAA 301-713-3066                                                                                   Sept. 29, 2010 

Resource Restoration Planning Process Begins for BP/Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill

WASHINGTON — The Department of the Interior, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and the co-trustees for natural resources affected by the BP/Deepwater Horizon oil spill announced today they have started the injury assessment and restoration planning phase of the Natural Resource Damage Assessment, a legal process to determine the type and amount of restoration needed to compensate the public for harm to natural resources and their human uses as a result of the spill.

This is the second phase of the NRDA process. Much of the initial “preassessment” phase has already occurred—and trustees have already received million in payments from responsible parties to conduct important preassessment activities including the collection of time-critical data in the field. During that phase, trustees collected time-sensitive data, reviewed scientific literature about the oil and its impact on coastal resources, and made initial determinations that resources have been injured and that those injuries can be addressed by appropriate restoration actions. During the injury assessment and restoration planning phase, trustees will assess the nature and amount of injuries and develop a restoration plan. Consistent with OPA, the trustees’ goals are to recover from responsible parties damages equal to what is necessary to return the environment to the conditions that would have existed if the oil spill had not occurred (known as “baseline conditions”) and to recover compensation on behalf of the public for the diminished value of the injured resources from the time of the injury until restoration is achieved. By regulation, these two phases will be followed by a “restoration” phase, during which the trustees will work with the public to implement, and monitor restoration projects.          

The second phase of NRDA began with a Notice of Intent to Conduct Restoration Planning indicates that the trustees, representing three federal Departments and the five affected states, have begun to formally identify and document impacts to the gulf’s natural resources, and the public’s loss of use and enjoyment of these resources, as the first stage under the regulations for developing a restoration strategy. Pre-assessment data collected, analyzed and quality-checked, are available to the public on the NOAA oil spill science missions and data website and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service oil spill response website.

“Our early analysis has documented clear detrimental effects to animals and habitats in the Gulf ecosystem,” said Jane Lubchenco, Ph.D., under secretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and NOAA administrator. “While we will continue collecting and analyzing samples, the trustees also will begin crafting an equally comprehensive restoration strategy. Our goal is to forge a restoration plan that is steeped in science, sharpened by public input and strongly rooted in the public good. The citizens of the Gulf Coast deserve nothing less.”

“The restoration of the Gulf of Mexico is a high priority for the entire Obama administration and we will be diligent and vigilant to ensure that the damages are fully assessed and a full and scientifically sound restoration strategy is both developed and implemented,” said Tom Strickland, Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Fish and Wildlife and Parks.

Under the Natural Resource Damage Assessment process outlined by the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, the trustees have authority to identify potential restoration projects and will solicit public comment on these projects before finalizing the restoration plan. The public may also have opportunities to provide hands-on assistance in selected restoration projects.

Federal regulations, under the Oil Pollution Act, require that the responsible parties be invited to participate in the NRDA process. The trustees will seek damages to implement the final restoration plan from the parties identified as being responsible for the spill.

According to the trustees, the full extent of potential injuries is currently unknown and may not be known for some time. However, according to the Notice of Intent, as of August 19, the trustees had documented oil on more than 950 miles of shoreline, including salt marshes, sandy beaches, mudflats and mangroves. As of June 29, the trustees had captured more than 1,900 live oiled birds and 400 live oiled sea turtles. They had also collected more than 1,850 visibly oiled dead birds, 17 visibly oiled dead sea turtles and five visibly oiled dead marine mammals. These numbers represent only a portion of the wildlife that have been impacted by the spill and the restoration planning process will further refine the total impact of this spill on the habitats and animals in the gulf.

The three federal trustees are the Department of the Interior (acting on behalf of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Indian Affairs, National Park Service and Bureau of Land Management), NOAA (on behalf of the Department of Commerce) and the Department of Defense. State trustees for Alabama are the Geological Survey of Alabama and the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. The Florida state trustee is the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. Louisiana State trustees are the Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority, the Louisiana Oil Spill Coordinator’s Office, the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality, the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, and the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources. The State trustee for Mississippi is the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality. Lastly, the Texas State trustees are the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, and the Texas General Land Office. 

On the Web:

Notice of intent: http://www.darrp.noaa.gov

BP Deepwater Horizon damage assessment site: http://www.darrp.noaa.gov/southeast/deepwater_horizon

Damage Assessment Fact Sheets: http://response.restoration.noaa.gov/dwh.php?entry_id=812#assessmentrestoration

NOAA oil spill science missions and data: http://www.noaa.gov/sciencemissions/bpoilspill.html

Weekly Bird Impact Data and Consolidated Wildlife Reports:

http://www.fws.gov/home/dhoilspill/collectionreports.html#wildlifetable

 


Recent Updates for Unified Command for the Deepwater BP Oil Spill | Deepwater Horizon Response

Oil Spill Update: Poll Shows Environmental Restoration High Priority in Gulf … – Audubon Magazine (blog) 0

Posted on September 29, 2010 by bp complaints

Reuters UK

Oil Spill Update: Poll Shows Environmental Restoration High Priority in Gulf
Audubon Magazine (blog)
other experts to weigh in on what they think are the most important next steps to conserve wildlife and habitat in the Gulf after the BP oil spill.
3 Mexican states sue BP over Gulf oil spillMiamiHerald.com
States tally oil spill toll to send BP their billsUSA Today
Senate Gridlock Hampers BP Oil Spill InvestigationAOL News
Reuters –Houston Chronicle –Los Angeles Times
all 2,937 news articles »

gulf oil spill updates – Google News

Panel Wants BP Fines to Pay for Gulf Restoration – New York Times 0

Posted on September 28, 2010 by bp complaints

The Guardian

Panel Wants BP Fines to Pay for Gulf Restoration
New York Times
WASHINGTON — A large share of the penalties collected from BP for its Gulf of Mexico oil spill should be dedicated to repairing the
Barack Obama under fire for grossly underestimating Gulf oil spillThe Guardian
Gulf Oil Spill Point Man Calls for Changes to Law for Future ResponseVoice of America
Oil spill response chief calls for third party to manage future disastersLos Angeles Times
Tbo.com –Washington Post –CNN International
all 1,623 news articles »

gulf oil spill updates – Google News

The Wicked Well is Dead, Complete Gulf Restoration Pledged – Environment News Service 0

Posted on September 21, 2010 by bp complaints

The Guardian

The Wicked Well is Dead, Complete Gulf Restoration Pledged
Environment News Service
WASHINGTON, DC, September 20, 2010 (ENS) – BP and federal officials confirmed Sunday that well kill operations on the Deepwater Horizon well in the Gulf of
Oil CEOs Must All Be Chief Safety OfficersForbes
BP Kills Macondo, But It's Legacy Lives OnWall Street Journal (blog)
Deepwater Horizon Response Leadership Consolidated to Reflect Ongoing eNews Park Forest
ToTheCenter.com –Examiner.com –Wikinews
all 2,671 news articles »

deepwater horizon – Google News

Fulfilling President Obama’s Gulf Coast Restoration Pledge – Huffington Post (blog) 0

Posted on August 28, 2010 by bp complaints

People’s World

Fulfilling President Obama's Gulf Coast Restoration Pledge
Huffington Post (blog)
In Louisiana — the Gulf state hardest-hit by the BP oil spill — the massive spread of oil and chemical dispersants is likely to accelerate the loss of
Panel: Hurricane on heels of the BP oil spill could create chaosGovExec.com
Gulf Needs Immediate Supervision And Funding, Report SaysNational Journal (blog)
The Empire Shall Fall Create Oil Spill Relief T-ShirtNoisecreep (blog)
SU The Daily Orange (subscription) –People’s World
all 11 news articles »

gulf oil spill updates – Google News



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