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Crowdsourcing the Oil Spill

Oil spill pictures suggest a cover-up on Grande Isle – sand being used to cover up the oil.

Grande Isle, Louisiana – July 2, 2010 – Karen Dalton Beninato, writing at NewOrleans.com, asks the question, “Are Grand Isle’s oiled beaches being covered up with sand?” An oil spill picture she took Monday appears to show a dump truck dumping sand on the beach at Grande Isle. She wasn’t actually allowed to go onto the beach: access to the beach depended upon being taken there by an escort, and the escort happened to be “too busy.” That’s a shame, because Monday was the last day for civilians to walk the beach for a while without fear of being arrested, charged with a felony, and fined $40,000.

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Oil Spill Pictures and the Media Blackout

Something is seriously wrong in our country. British Petroleum has thrown  a media blackout over the Gulf Coast, with the apparent complicity of some in our federal and local governments. We are now 51 days into the oil spill disaster, and BP still has such a stranglehold on access to the Gulf that only a few pictures have trickled out of the area. We’ve posted a few pictures of animals in the oil spill, but there haven’t been many of those pictures available for people to see. And the lack of photographs is the direct result of BP’s shutdown of the media. [click to continue…]

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BP Oil Spill Suggestion Box

May 31, 2010 – British Petroleum (BP) has finally opened a telephone hotline to take oil spill suggestions from the public. Whether the suggestions will be seriously considered by BP remains to be seen, but I am happy to report that I had a satisfactory experience when I checked out the Oil Spill Suggestion Hotline. When I called (281)-366-5511, the phone was actually answered by a live person (in my case, after only 2 rings) who was polite and actually seemed to be putting my information into a computer. The operator took my name, city and state of residence, zip code, telephone number, and email address. She then asked for my suggestion, and requested that I speak slowly so she could write it all down. In my case, it was easy to do because I was able to tell her that there were between 300-400 suggestions already written down here at BPOilNews.com. She asked me to repeat the web address twice, and thanked me for the information. I have to say that I was pleasantly surprised by the way the call was handled. I’m not ready to announce that BP is going to using public suggestions, because it may all be a PR ploy, but I am willing to suggest that anyone who has a good suggestion should call the hotline in addition to posting it here. The phone number for the BP Oil Spill Suggestion Hotline is (281)-366-5511.

Oil Spill Claims Update

Update 8-31-2010. Much of the news coverage has turned to the issue of oil spill claims. For current information about oil spill claims, check out our oil spill claims posts.

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Oil Spill Suggestions

Here at BP Oil News we’ve gotten almost two thousand suggestions for ways to plug the Gulf oil leak or mitigate the damage from the Gulf oil spill. Here’s a link to some of your oil spill suggestions. And here’s a link to a page with many more oil spill suggestions. Many of the suggestions are contained in comments, but some oil spill suggestions were sent in using our contact form. Because of the volume of suggestions, we would like to request that future suggestions be submitted via comments to this post. And if you have suggestions about how the President should deal with the oil spill, please post your comments under the article “We need a New Deal for the Gulf Coast.

Here are some oil spill suggestions we’ve already received via the contact form: [click to continue…]

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BP Oil Spill Suggestions Continue to Arrive

We’ve had several more suggestions to fix the oil leak or limit the damage from the BP oil spill. If you want to join in the conversation, the quickest way is to post a comment. You may also send your suggestion to us using the Contact Form on this page.

Laura writes:

Hi – I had a thought while doing the dishes… I had an oil mass in the water of my sink and added the dish soap. Immediatly after, the oil moved away from the soap. I know they are using the boui system to keep the oil from getting to the coastline…. would it be possible to add soap to that containment barrier and it would then deter it from coming in?

Additionally, if there was a way to do this, maybe the boui and soap could be dragged around oil spill area(s) to get the oil more contained and use a water suction process to get the oil up? I’m sure there are alot of ideas coming in… maybe this could work? [click to continue…]

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We’ve had a number of responses to our request for suggestions to deal with the Gulf oil spill. Some were added in comments, and others were submitted via the Contact Form. Here are some of the submissions we received from people using the Contact Form: [click to continue…]

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UPDATED (see last paragraph and new link) – A reader named Bart wrote and said BP should consider using a proven method utilizing ground bagasse (a byproduct of sugar production from cane) infiltrated with ammonia to broadcast over sensitive wildlife areas where oil is washing ashore. According to Bart, the bagasse preferentially absorbs the oil and within a matter of weeks the hydrocarbons, with the aid of natural microbes and the nitrogen source, break down, eliminating the problem. Bart says it seems as though BP should welcome solutions such as this one. Bart tells us that CNN broadcast it on the news today, and says BP appears to be ignoring attempts to alert them to this additional remediation method. Finally, Bart said BP should be reminded by everyone possible to employ all available methodologies.

Thanks Bart. As I’ve said before, I’m a lawyer and don’t know enough about oil spill remediation to know a good idea when I see one. But we have readers who do know the subject matter. If anyone else has an idea that’s not being used, please send it along to us.

UPDATE: Bart sent us an email with an article discussing the use of bagasse to clean up oil. Here’s Bart’s email:

“Check this article describing the usefulness of bagasse (not to mention the huge quantities produced as a byproduct of sugar production) in clinging to oil while repelling water (hydrophobic quality).  A CNN spot was even a further modification of the bagasse- it had ammonium and microbial agents also embedded in it to speed up the conversion to small-chain hydrocarbons and eventually organic mulch, just what we will need in the sensitive ecotypes of coastal Louisiana and Mississippi.

What do you think of the feasibility of finding some organization to try this preemptively in a test area to prove to the corporate types that they should be purchasing all of this treated bagasse they can get their hands on and hiring crop dusting planes to be at the ready for the moment any of these oil slicks hit the bayous?  Would that be too proactive for our society? (Link to bagasse article).

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One thing that surprised me when I started this blog was that you, members of the public, have ideas about how to help solve the oil spill disaster and BP doesn’t want to hear about them. We’ve now gotten five unsolicited contact forms containing suggestions for stopping or preventing damage from the spill, and one person making the suggestion appears to have a good idea but says BP won’t talk with him. I’m a lawyer, not an engineer, so it may be that none of the ideas have merit, but I’m going to post the suggestions here and send links to some people who are involved in the cleanup effort. If you have an idea you think is worth considering, use our Contact Form and send it along. Social media is already helping pinpoint the damage and provide contact information for people who see injured birds and other things that need reporting. It would be nice if social media could give one member of the public a way to contribute one brilliant idea. I’m calling it “Crowdsourcing the Oil Spill.”

Here, contact information with those who have given permission, are your suggestions. If any agency or company working to stop the gusher or cleanup the oil wants to contact any of these people, I will be happy to provide their contact information.

1.  Mark Badger writes: “We have a way to contain the oil coming up from the seabed and we manufacture a boom system that far, far exceeds anything you have ever seen. 600 miles of it can be produced and deployed in under 30 days with current available materials.

Our boom sits a full three feet at water level and extends 8 feet under water and can be used as a containment system for animals as well in shallow waters like the Florida Keys. What are you going to do when dead manatees start washing up?

Our containment system for the well can be manufactured and deployed for complete containment in about 21 days. It is very simple to build, it will work in heavy seas, very simple to deploy and maintain. This system would allow the capture of ALL of the oil coming out of the well. It will even work in 50 foot seas and will withstand a hurricane.

We have tried to move our ideas forward to BP but we get no return calls or contact.

I can be called at 954-591-4298.”

2.  Ed M. writes: “Why not run tubing string inside recovery casing and inject steam. Haven’t done math but should be able to get effect of line heater.”

3.  Larry S. writes: “A suggestion to consider for preventing ice crystals.

1. Raise the dome.
2. Place a puncturable membrane on the bottom. (8 mil Visqueen)
3. Lower the dome 90 percent in the water.
4. Fill with automotive antifreeze.
5. Lower the dome back into position.

Hopefully, the majority of the antifreeze would remain in the dome during the descent.”

4.  Clive W. writes: “Isn’t it possible to use tankers equipped with oil /water separators to literally vacuum up oil on the surface of the water, extract the oil and pump filtered water back into the ocean ? The oil would then be stored in the hold and taken back to storage containers on land. The technology to do this already exists it’s just a matter of putting it all together.

It just might work as a temporary solution.

Just trying to help.”

5.  David C. writes: “Directors at British Petroleum , Honorable,Prudent,Beloved,Faithful. I have been a metal worker for many years. I have an idea to stop the oil but if you use it the idea you pay for my dentist bill 100% what ever I need. So my idea is to drill small holes, horizontal holes, in the existing well head pipe say, 1/4″ or3/8″. Then push steel rods into the holes like fingers. Keep on inserting the rods until you create a grid. Maybe you will have to go up and down the pipe with a series of rods. Then go about six feet down from the grid drill another hole big enough to inject golf balls. After that is done drill a hole in the middle of this mess of semi-jammed golf balls and inject a plastic epoxy into the middle under high pressure then the pipe would jam. Like some one in England once said, “jam yesterday, jam tomorrow but never jam today”. Good luck God be with you. Your friend David C….”

Do you have a brilliant idea to stop the leak or prevent damage to the ecosystem? Would you like for BP to pay your dentist bill (thanks to David C. for that idea)? Send your idea to us and, if it appears halfway reasonable, we’ll pass it along to someone with some authority.

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