Oil spill: when a science fiction nightmare becomes reality

Joseph and Amanda Boyden report from the front lines

by Joseph Boyden, Amanda Boyden and David Parker Jr. on Thursday, July 29, 2010 9:00am - 39 Comments

Lee Celano/Reuters/ Patrick Semansky/AP /Joe Raedle/Getty Images

We walk on the sands of Pensacola Beach tonight. We’ve strolled here before, in the past, but it’s different now. Really different. The sky has turned from lavender to purple to black, and what we see comes straight from a science fiction movie. Our darkest imaginings of some mishandled future have sprung to life. For stretches longer than football fields, dozens of white-skinned, red-eyed aliens plod like zombies across the beach where the water meets the sand.

And then we see: the white-skinned aliens are really hazmat-clad humans wearing single infrared lights affixed to their heads. They shuffle and bend in teams of two, one holding a plastic bag while the other digs at black gelatinous blobs in the white sand. They wear white masks, and the waxing moon lists in the sky. Suddenly understanding that the beings are human is no less frightening.

We’ve come to this Florida Panhandle beach, one of the latest victims of the BP oil disaster, with a local politician, a number of Waterkeeper Alliance representatives, and a local journalist. We’re here to meet a geologist, Rip Kirby of the University of South Florida, a man who brings a particular tool crucial to a better understanding of the oil’s impact: ultraviolet light. Oil illuminates an eerie orange under the light while water and sand remain neutral.

The local journalist likes to talk, and he seems relatively excited by the presence of other press, if not by the disaster that has gathered us on his shores. He yabbers as we walk across the sand to meet Kirby. In the dark, we can quickly spot him. A blue, cone-shaped glow appears on the night beach in the distance amongst all the red eyes, and we beeline for it.

What we discover shuts up the local journalist for good. It’s clear that his hometown shore is now afflicted with a scarring disease that isn’t going away any time soon. Throughout the day and into the night, workers scoured the beach for telltale blobs and dark patches, scooping and raking, but here under this ultraviolet scrutiny, we can see that, especially along the waterline, the oil has covered huge swaths of the beach in a sort of splattered blanket. We move to a section where the surface appears white and either successfully cleaned or as of yet unaffected. The geologist tells us to dig into this sand, and when we do, it’s hard not to cry. At a depth of 15 cm, the telltale orange glow of oil permeates the sand in bright twisting ribbons.

This oil only arrived yesterday. The saturation is the result of merely a few tides.

Not surprisingly, to be able to visit this science fiction beach proved to be an outright struggle. The U.S. Coast Guard, acting under the authority of BP, had a few days earlier instituted a 20-m boundary around all of its workers and oil-cleaning efforts, both on land and in the water. If the curious are caught disobeying the new edict, they stand to be slapped with arrest, a felony charge, jail time and a fine of US$40,000. Other sites were inaccessible to media altogether without a pass issued by an entirely illusive head honcho. After waiting for one such pass for hours to visit Elmer’s Island, we were turned away by a man guarding the beach we’d hoped to investigate. Evidently the pass we’d just procured had expired. Or changed. It wasn’t the right one despite it being issued by the head honcho within the past hour.

While BP has instituted its boundaries under the guise of protecting the safety of the workers as well as that of the media, its regulations surely attempt only to lessen the exposure of its missteps. BP’s Kafkaesque games have grown ever more evident, just as its cleanup efforts have proven ineffective. Keeping photographers and journalists away from the real dirt has always been one of the goals of polluters. BP proves no different.

Fortunately, over the course of our days in the Gulf, we succeed in skirting the newly strung, literal yellow tape on numerous occasions by keeping company with those allowed to bypass it. Each time we come into contact with dozens of workers cleaning or placing boom. And over and over we are told the same thing when we ask their opinion: “I’m not allowed to talk to you.”

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  • shannon

    This just furthers my belief in CONSPIRACY THEORIES! America will do anything for OIL! Attack another country ….distroy it's own country …the planet for all this gov. cares! Let's dunk all the Greedy Politicians in the Gulf and let them swim to shore! Oil execs too!

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/wutevs Raul

    That is just a very very sad situation.
    http://www.wutevs.wordpress.com

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/arhendrix arhendrix

    The oil spill is such an incredibly heartbreaking event that continues to pierce and prod ~ and will for decades.

    I don't ever know what to say about this tragedy anymore ~ I just hope and pray that our country learns from it and realizes how fragile our planet is.

    If we ruin it ~ where will we go? Who wants to live under dark skies and be surrounded by oily oceans….I sure don't.

    • Kenneth

      I wished I could honestly believe that lessons have been learned, but I don't, the intense desire for wealth creation will see the world drowing in it's own greed and ignorance.

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/lifeintheboomerlane lifeintheboomerlane

    Thank you for sharing this. Humans rape the planet on a daily basis, and the US is at the top. We pay no heed to the civilizations that came before us, who had built themselves up and then destroyed themselves, all in the same quest for limited resources. I marched back when the US was in Vietnam. Where is the public outrage now?

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/mehru724 Noor

    This is a depressing situation….
    -Noor http://noor724.wordpress.com/
    :)

  • http://fountainabbey.wordpress.com curtalfriar

    In case you hadn’t noticed this week, the oil has largely disappeared. See, unbeknownst to the media apparently, and to all the handwringing panicmongers around the nation, the Gulf is filled with bacteria that eats oil.

    If you actually check your science, you will learn that there are thousands of natural oil seeps throughout the Gulf region, but this is not cause for alarm, as the bacteria take care of it for us. They have a nice feast. This BP oil spill has given them a much bigger feast for a while.

    Have no fear, our happy little friends are taking care of matters, and they have it well under control.

    • keeperofthefire

      i was waiting for the rightwing wacko falseflag answer&here it is folks!!!

    • TedTylerEzro

      Sure, and plants need phosphorous and nitrogen to live and be nourished too.

      Know what happens when you dump a huge pile of either on the ground? How well do you think that patch of dirt produces for a year or two?

      Do you understand anything about toxicity?

      • J.Lebel

        Does someone here understand anything about sarcasm? Just read the last sentence again, and I think you should get the point. Unless, indeed, this guy were serious, but it would surprise me a lot, to say the least.

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/thejamminjabber thejamminjabber

    Serendipity and science are no excuse for human negligence. STOP MAKING EXCUSES, PEOPLE!

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/onepillawayfromchaos onepillawayfromchaos

    I pray this will not be as devastating as it appears today. Such a depressing and seemingly hopeless disaster.

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/geradinemcc geradinemcc

    So sad.

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/seaorchids seaorchids

    Incredible read. Tragic beyond words.

  • http://universality-buddhkist.blogspot.com buddhkist

    Peace, Love, Light. :-)

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/thetickingmind thetickingmind

    What an all around awful experience. Even without bringing up the fact that BP is stalling its compensation payments to businesses in the gulf.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Diogenes54 Diogenes54

    Good piece Joesph, Amanda and David! Keep it up.

    BP had a horrible record for safety and environmental compliance before the blow-out. Now the worst has happened. They must pay for this mess. Send them, and all concerned, a message that grime does not pay.

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/darbpls darbpls

    Bleh, this whole situation is so depressing.

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/adamday84 Adam Day

    Whoever said this is a conspiracy needs to grow up.

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/tcallocchia Tanya

    Not only was this a disaster but we'll be paying for this for the next decade! This is only the beginning… http://www.offtrackbackpacking.com

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/tatakblogong NEIL LORD GUITANG

    God said, these things will surely happen in the last days. Read more >>> http://www.thegreenwhitered.wordpress.com

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/harunalrasid harun

    opo kui?????

  • LION

    hate Obama.DOWN WITHOBAMA

  • MY COUNTRY:USA

    USA HAS ONE OF THE WORST GOVERNMENT IN THE WORLD

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/alanfriday55 alanfriday55

    I fear that this catastrophe is just the beginning – I do not think, as a species, we are capable of seeing past the mighty dollar. http://alanfriday.com/2010/06/07/catastrophe-the-…

    Alan

  • HELP ME…….

    WE LIVE OVER THERE AND MY FAMILY GET SICK BECAUSE OF THIS.
    DOWN WITH OBAMA…………DOWN TO OBAMA..

    • Distressed

      Obama didn't spill oil into the gulf. Nor is he the one responsible for the world's dependence on oil. I'm sorry to hear that your family is sick because of this tragedy. If you want to blame someone for this, I think you rightfully could and should blame BP.

  • http://viableopposition.blogspot.com/ Open_Democracy

    As long as the industry has existed, there have been oil spills of varying sizes and seriousness. It isn't until the media brings these spills to the world's attention that any efforts are made to prevent them. The Greenpoint neighbourhood oil spill right in Brooklyn took place over decades and has still not been cleaned up. This spill is roughly twice the size of the Exxon Valdez spill but because it isn't "sexy", it gets very limited coverage in the media despite the fact that very little of the spill has been cleaned up over the past 30 years. The effects of this spill are so severe that methane levels reach the point where combustion cannot take place because there is not enough oxygen present. Here's an article on the Greenpoint spill:

    http://viableopposition.blogspot.com/2010/07/broo…

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/sirajcmr SiRu

    This is a night mare!!

    This just tells that Nature can hit back you any time. How much powerful the humans are, Nature can take everything down in a matter of minutes

    SIRu

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/saskboy saskboy

    I think there's a factual error in the article.

    "single infrared lights" do not normally emit ultraviolet light, which is at the other end of the visible light spectrum. Could you explain this please?

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