2010 BP Gulf Spill Larger, Deadlier Than Previous Estimates: New Study

"The spread of oil from the Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico was far worse than previously believed, new research has found.

As the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history approaches its 10th anniversary in April, a study by two University of Miami researchers shows that a significant amount of oil and its toxic footprint moved beyond fishery closures where it was thought to be contained and escaped detection by satellites as it flowed near the Texas shore, west Florida shore and within a loop current that carries Gulf water around Florida’s southern tip up toward Miami.

In their study, published Wednesday in Science, the researchers dubbed it “invisible oil,” concentrated below the water’s surface and toxic enough to destroy 50 percent of the marine life it encountered. Current estimates show the 210 million gallons of oil released by the damaged BP Deepwater Horizon Macondo well spread out over the equivalent of 92,500 miles."

Darryl Fears reports for the Washington Post February 12, 2020.

SEE ALSO:

"Energy Transitions: The Question BP Didn't Answer: How?" (ClimateWire)

"BP Boss Looney Sets Out To 'Reinvent' Oil Giant With Zero Carbon Goal" (Reuters)

"Revealed: Big Oil's Profits Since 1990 Total Nearly $2 Trillion" (Guardian)

Source: Washington Post, 02/13/2020