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Mother Earth Journal | Environmental journalism | Terri Hansen reporting: Environment | Science & Traditional Knowledge | Climate, Sustainability & Adaptation | Environmental Health. For complete environmental coverage read This Week From Indian Country or visit Indian Country Today Media Network

Gulf oil disaster propels tribes into crisis

HOUMA, La. – The worst oil leak in U.S. history has grown to 19 million gallons since BP’s Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded April 20.

And the oil, still gushing from an uncapped well thousands of feet below the surface of the Gulf of Mexico is wreaking havoc with tribal lives in Louisiana.

“The smell of the oil is really bad, people describe it as smelling like you were in an engine room,” Brenda Dardar Robichaux, Principal Chief of the United Houma Nation said May 26 of the potentially toxic vapors.

The Environmental Protection Agency can’t send a representative to their tribal community for five days. “They told us to keep the children inside. In essence our children are in house arrest, their health is at risk.”

EPA air monitoring of the coastline through May 23 found normal ozone and particulate air quality levels but observed odor-causing pollutants associated with petroleum products at low levels, prompting the agency to warn, “Some of these chemicals may cause short-lived effects like headache, eye, nose and throat irritation, or nausea. People may be able to smell some of these chemicals at levels well below those that would cause short-term health problems.”

An environmental allergy expert said that while most people won’t be affected by the spill and clean up, oil washing ashore and the chemicals used may pose a health risk for those who have respiratory diseases like asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

“Since the spill is now coming ashore, adults and children with respiratory diseases need to keep a close eye on their breathing, stay inside and call their allergist if they feel ill,” said allergist Jonathan Bernstein, MD, a spokesperson for the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology. “The oil-dispersing chemicals could also be harmful since we don’t know what they are or if they have a strong odor that may trigger symptoms.”

The oil, washing into Louisiana’s fragile marshes and wetlands and smothering miles of shoreline is threatening the livelihoods of tribal fishermen and supporting businesses like netmakers, suppliers, and restaurants, Robichaux said.

“Right now it’s about two miles from these beaches tribal people grew up on,” said Charles Verdin of the Pointe au Chien Indian Tribe.

His community spans Terrebonne and Lafourche Parish. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration closed about 25 percent of the Gulf’s federal waters to fishing, including coastal areas in tribal locales.

“It doesn’t look good,” Verdin said. “Most of our people are fishermen and they’ve shut down most the areas we fish.

“This will affect families’ food supplies. That’s scary.”

Verdin said BP representatives met with their community May 25. A primary concern of tribal members was stopping the oil before it reaches burial grounds and sacred sites. “The BP rep promised to supply us booms in the next couple of days,” Verdin said.

Tribal members will place the booms around sensitive areas to deflect the oil. But booms don’t always work and when they do, they just move the oil elsewhere. BP promised $2500 to $3500 to some out-of-work people who fish for a living, Verdin said. Some of their fishermen have been hired to work on the clean up.

BP has tried several tactics to staunch the spewing oil well. All so far have failed.

“I shudder to think how this is going to affect us in the long term. We are a resilient people, but this is different than anything we’ve had to face. We haven’t seen the worst yet,” Robichaux said.

“We expect the oil will reach the canals and will infiltrate water supply. The unknown is agonizing. Heaven forbid a hurricane comes, that’s too devastating to even think about.”

Hurricane season starts June 1, and NOAA is predicting an 85 percent chance of above-average activity in the Atlantic for both named tropical storms and hurricanes, calling for 14-23 named storms, 8-14 hurricanes, and 3-7 major hurricanes. Many tropical storms and hurricanes will not reach the U.S. mainland in 2010 but the likelihood of landfall is greater in active years.

“It’s hard to imagine or see our future,” Verdin said. “We just don’t know.”

On May 27 President Obama said, “This is a big mess coming to shore. We’re confident we’re doing everything we can, as urgently as we can.” During his second visit to the Gulf May 28, Obama assured residents in a televised statement, “You will not be abandoned. You will not be left behind. We are on your side and we will see this through. I am the president and the buck stops with me.”

Visit Mother Earth Journal to get updates on tribal communities situated on the Gulf coastline.

Resources:

U.S. National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health: Crude Oil Spills and Health.

To see a map of the spill, updated daily, click here.

Update June 8, 2010: Oil from the Deepwater Horizon spill arrived on Louisiana’s shore and is impacting more than 45 miles of their coast. State agencies are working to protect their coastline, people, natural resources and way of life. Louisiana National Guard participating in missions to protect shores. Scientists from the Dept. of Environmental Quality and Dept. of Wildlife and Fisheries are monitoring environmental conditions. Visit http://emergency.louisiana.gov/, the state’s online resource for updated information.

June 16 Update:

“Factbox: White House Explanation of BP Claims Process” (Reuters)

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE65F6N920100616

June 10 Update: Forty-thousand barrels a day.

According to El Phoenix Sun │Solar and Environmental News, that’s the new official estimate of how much oil could be spewing into the Gulf of Mexico from the BP Deeepwater well, government officials said in a late afternoon press briefing June 10.
Director of the U.S. Geological Survey and chair of the Flow Rate Technical Group Dr. Marcia McNutt says the range of oil flowing from the runaway well is somewhere between 20,000 and 40,000 barrels per day — double the official estimate announced by McNutt on May 27.

For documents from today’s briefing and more visit this edition of El Phoenix Sun.

Related stories:

Oil disaster: Look beyond the human dimensions

State recognized tribes face greater oil spill risks

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