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fishing about and about fishing
menakhem ben yami

Fishing about and about fishing

  AND THE OIL FLOWS

The disastrous Gulf of Mexico oil spill caused me to reread a little book, published

a quarter century ago by the Memorial University of Newfoundland, entitled

“Fish versus Oil”. Of the thirteen authors of the book’s chapters eight mentioned and 

warned of the probability of oil spills and their effect on fisheries. “…it is a question of 

when and where it will occur rather than if it will happen” – wrote John H. Goodland of 

the Shetlands. S.G. Canning, a Newfoundlander wrote: “… it is difficult to overestimate

the highly negative environmental or economic consequences of an oil spill; predicting 

the exact nature, extent and significance of an oil spill on any fishery is recognized as 

a complicated issue”. How right they were.

 

What has been going in the Gulf of Mexico is one of the greatest oil spills in the history. 

And who remembers the worst of them all, the 1910-11 Lakeview Gusher spill, which 

during 18 months discharged into the Kern County, California, over 9,000,000 barrels of 

crude? At the moment of writing these words the Deepwater Horizon spill with at least 

5,000,000 barrels out and still going strong, is doing its best to reach the top of the list. 

As in the case of other spills, one of its main victims is the fishing industry, in general, 

and fishing people, in particular.

 

The headlines an oil spill in the sea is getting depend on how close it is to the beaches of

a “western” country, which is why the Deepwater Horizon, the 1978 Amoco Cadiz, which

polluted French coasts and caused, among other problems, a collapse of shellfish 

prices for a long period, and the 1989 Exxon Valdez spills got more sustained publicity 

than the 1991 Gulf War  spill and the 2009 Montara oil spill in the Australian sector of the

Timor Sea. But, the latter spill, though much weaker and in much shallower water, took 73 

days to kill, and has already caused thousands of fishing people preparing to migrate to 

Sumatra to find a new livelihood, because their catches declined drastically.

 

According to spill observing scientists it would take many years for the area’s ecology to return

to normal. "If Barack Obama demanded 20 billion US$ in damages from BP, the operator

of the Monatara oil field should pay about 15 billion US$ to compensate the losses of 

fishermen in the western part of East Nusatenggara and the islands of Rote, Sabu and Sumba

- said Ferdi Tanoni a local observer - The oil spill had caused a humanitarian tragedy of huge

proportions," Tanoni said, urging the Australian government, 11 months after the blowout,  to 

disclose as soon as possible the results of its investigation into the Montara oil spill disaster.  

 

Mexican Gulf fishermen should look with a wary eye on the social and ecological consequences 

of the spill in the Timor Sea, and of the other huge spills and be prepared for the worst. “A full 

understanding and the full impact (of the spill) to the Gulf's fishery may be years away” –  said 

Prof. Samantha Joye, a marine expert specializing on the Gulf of Mexico. 

 

Although the 1991 Gulf War spill in the Persian Gulf had relatively moderate effect on the 

Persian Gulf’s ecosystem, explained by the fast bio-decomposition of the oil owing to the high 

water temperature, nobody can be sure that the same would happen in the Gulf of Mexico.

 

A friend, heading a fishermen’s association in the spill area wrote me: …//… The bureaucracies                                                                                  are killing us on an individual basis but when you have four or more federal agencies all                                                                                         involved in the same issue, it is a quagmire…   … It's just we are at a turning point in our                                                                                     fishing world…//…

 

The consequence of the bureaucratic-legalistic muddle is the unconceivable delay of the

implementation of up-to date technology, which reportedly, could separate oil from water 

pretty much just as fast as the oil was gushing out of the well.  The obstruction is due to a U.S. 

regulation, prohibiting discharge to the sea water containing more than 15 ppm of oil. Thus, 

emergency management of this disaster in the Gulf of Mexico has been considered illegal and 

delayed for weeks.

 

Oil companies while going further offshore and to deeper waters. have been spending tens of                                                                                 milliards of dollars on marine oil explorations and drilling, Only a miserable fraction of this sum,                                                                             reportedly in the order of promiles, have been spent on research into new and more

efficient ways to deal with oil spills. Thus, the same means and technology that were applied over 

20 years ago to the Exxon Valdez spill have been now applied in the Gulf of Mexico.

 

Reading the headlines and dealing with those huge spills should not  make us forget the                                                                                      numerous smaller spills that occur  continually in those countries where the oil companies are                                                                                given plenty of slack, where it comes to environmental and humanitarian caution. According to                                                                                Amnesty International Summery of June 2009,  “In the Niger Delta, hundreds of oil spills occur                                                                            every year, and  some 2,000 sites have been registered as contaminated by the National Oil Spill                                                                              Detection and  Response Agency.  The true figure may be much higher. People living in the Niger                                                                            Delta have to drink, cook with and wash in polluted  water; they eat fish contaminated with oil and                                                                          other toxins - if they’re lucky enough to still be able to find fish;  the land they use for farming  is being                                                                  destroyed; after oil spills the air they breathe reeks of oil, gas and other pollutants; they complain of breathing

problems, skin lesions and other health problems.” Etc., etc.

As long as drilling for oil is inevitable, a lesson to be drawn from all those spills is that                                                                                            without strict state control over the drilling and extracting operations, and adequate financing                                                                                of the related research and technology development, one day a future spill will cause                                                                                          such damage that all the assets of the oil companies won’t be enough to compensate                                                                                                both those who were directly hurt and the humanity at large.

 

  AND THE OIL FLOWS

 

The disastrous Gulf of Mexico oil spill caused me to reread a little book, published

a quarter century ago by the Memorial University of Newfoundland, entitled

“Fish versus Oil”. Of the thirteen authors of the book’s chapters eight mentioned and 

warned of the probability of oil spills and their effect on fisheries. “…it is a question of 

when and where it will occur rather than if it will happen” – wrote John H. Goodland of 

the Shetlands. S.G. Canning, a Newfoundlander wrote: “… it is difficult to overestimate

the highly negative environmental or economic consequences of an oil spill; predicting 

the exact nature, extent and significance of an oil spill on any fishery is recognized as 

a complicated issue”. How right they were.

 

What has been going in the Gulf of Mexico is one of the greatest oil spills in the history. 

And who remembers the worst of them all, the 1910-11 Lakeview Gusher spill, which 

during 18 months discharged into the Kern County, California, over 9,000,000 barrels of 

crude? At the moment of writing these words the Deepwater Horizon spill with at least 

5,000,000 barrels out and still going strong, is doing its best to reach the top of the list. 

As in the case of other spills, one of its main victims is the fishing industry, in general, 

and fishing people, in particular.

 

The headlines an oil spill in the sea is getting depend on how close it is to the beaches of

a “western” country, which is why the Deepwater Horizon, the 1978 Amoco Cadiz, which

polluted French coasts and caused, among other problems, a collapse of shellfish 

prices for a long period, and the 1989 Exxon Valdez spills got more sustained publicity 

than the 1991 Gulf War  spill and the 2009 Montara oil spill in the Australian sector of the

Timor Sea. But, the latter spill, though much weaker and in much shallower water, took 73 

days to kill, and has already caused thousands of fishing people preparing to migrate to 

Sumatra to find a new livelihood, because their catches declined drastically.

 

According to spill observing scientists it would take many years for the area’s ecology to return

to normal. "If Barack Obama demanded 20 billion US$ in damages from BP, the operator

of the Monatara oil field should pay about 15 billion US$ to compensate the losses of 

fishermen in the western part of East Nusatenggara and the islands of Rote, Sabu and Sumba

- said Ferdi Tanoni a local observer - The oil spill had caused a humanitarian tragedy of huge

proportions," Tanoni said, urging the Australian government, 11 months after the blowout,  to 

disclose as soon as possible the results of its investigation into the Montara oil spill disaster.  

 

Mexican Gulf fishermen should look with a wary eye on the social and ecological consequences 

of the spill in the Timor Sea, and of the other huge spills and be prepared for the worst. “A full 

understanding and the full impact (of the spill) to the Gulf's fishery may be years away” –  said 

Prof. Samantha Joye, a marine expert specializing on the Gulf of Mexico. 

 

Although the 1991 Gulf War spill in the Persian Gulf had relatively moderate effect on the 

Persian Gulf’s ecosystem, explained by the fast bio-decomposition of the oil owing to the high 

water temperature, nobody can be sure that the same would happen in the Gulf of Mexico.

 

A friend, heading a fishermen’s association in the spill area wrote me: …//… The bureaucracies                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            are killing us on an individual basis but when you have four or more federal agencies all                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               involved in the same issue, it is a quagmire…   … It's just we are at a turning point in our                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              fishing world…//…

 

The consequence of the bureaucratic-legalistic muddle is the unconceivable delay of the

implementation of up-to date technology, which reportedly, could separate oil from water 

pretty much just as fast as the oil was gushing out of the well.  The obstruction is due to a U.S. 

regulation, prohibiting discharge to the sea water containing more than 15 ppm of oil. Thus, 

emergency management of this disaster in the Gulf of Mexico has been considered illegal and 

delayed for weeks.

 

Oil companies while going further offshore and to deeper waters. have been spending tens of                                                   milliards of dollars on marine oil explorations and drilling, Only a miserable fraction of this sum,                                                 reportedly in the order of promiles, have been spent on research into new and more

efficient ways to deal with oil spills. Thus, the same means and technology that were applied over 

20 years ago to the Exxon Valdez spill have been now applied in the Gulf of Mexico.

 

Reading the headlines and dealing with those huge spills should not  make us forget the                                                             numerous smaller spills that occur  continually in those countries where the oil companies are                                                 given plenty of slack, where it comes to environmental and humanitarian caution. According to                                                   Amnesty International Summery of June 2009,  “In the Niger Delta, hundreds of oil spills occur                                                     every year, and  some 2,000 sites have been registered as contaminated by the National Oil Spill                                                 Detection and  Response Agency.  The true figure may be much higher. People living in the Niger                                               Delta have to drink, cook with and wash in polluted  water; they eat fish contaminated with oil and                                             other toxins - if they’re lucky enough to still be able to find fish;  the land they use for farming  is being                                     destroyed; after oil spills the air they breathe reeks of oil, gas and other pollutants; they complain                                             of breathing problems, skin lesions and other health problems.” Etc., etc.

As long as drilling for oil is inevitable, a lesson to be drawn from all those spills is that                                                                 without strict state control over the drilling and extracting operations, and adequate financing                                                   of the related research and technology development, one day a future spill will cause                                                                   such damage that all the assets of the oil companies won’t be enough to compensate                                                                   both those who were directly hurt and the humanity at large.

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