I hate saying it, but i'm not very optimistic it's going to work...
the whole situation makes me want to
friZZak wrote:Best thing ever to come out of this (comedy wise) is the fake BP twitter account...Last update was..."you know, I think this spill is working out...dressing in black sure does make the gulf look thinner.."
Matt Stroika wrote:Did you hear about the new car that gets 30 mpg running on water?
Only problem is that you need to get that water from the gulf coast.
Seriously though, this could be the largest man made disaster we have ever seen. The impact on the environment will last for generations.
A. wrote:What about hay in regards to the mammoth clean up operation....I think these common farmers are onto something here:
http://www.wimp.com/solutionoil/
and there's certainly no shortage of hay
A. wrote:What about hay in regards to the mammoth clean up operation....I think these common farmers are onto something here:
http://www.wimp.com/solutionoil/
and there's certainly no shortage of hay
Karl wrote:OK, keep that concept under your hat until I buy a LOT of stock in the company that makes that stuff!
Karl wrote:Just a question out of the blue...
What the @#$%&* are you going to do with 817 bazillion tons of wet, oily hay?
Read: The cost of harvesting the hay, tranportation of it to the gulf, "laying it out", gathering it in (when it now weights a stupid amount of weight), and then transporting it somewhere to do something with it (god knows what) is NOT an easy [and maybe not even a viable] solution. And that only the oil we can see! There will be ridiculous amounts that we may never see (sub-surface) that won't just go away because we want it to. We will be "dealing with this" literally until we die. Pitiful.
This isn't a case of sprinkling Quik-Dri on your garage floor....
Karl
I do work in the environmental field dealing mostly with compliance permitting and monitoring....something that in this particular case seems to have been extremely lacking when the permits were first issued...just sickening really.
A. wrote: What's the cost of the oil clean up once it inundates coastal marshes and wetlands?...talk about a logistical nightmare
Kovo wrote:A. wrote: What's the cost of the oil clean up once it inundates coastal marshes and wetlands?...talk about a logistical nightmare
It's happening now...LA, and AL are covered.
Tar balls on Pensacola beach in FLA today...