CLite,
Its funny offshore everybody talk big about safety this and safety that... yet they don't apply those same values to their on shore operations... I guess within the company they have different ideas on what safety is and isn't.
People like to be a part of something, even if it is hate for a person or corporation. Our implicit need for oil outweighs the concern for safety on these operations IMO. BP will recover from this and as long as we get our oil this spill will fade from memory until the next big spill which it can be compared to.
The problem is apparent. BP doesn't give their top management big enough bonuses so that have to settle for inferior help.
spending 4 minutes on google can prevent you from looking like an idiot. Hayward is paid more than Exxon Mobile's CEO.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/exxon-ceos-compensation-increased-in-2007
2008, Tillerson Exxon Mobile's CEO earned $1.87M, stock awards were only listed for 2007, they were $5.7M
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/exxon-ceos-compensation-increased-in-2007
2009, Hayward pay increased from $4.26M to $6M, with about $4.26M in stock.
BP covered up the seriousness of the leak for over a week which could have allowed a faster response. Instead they were hoping they could fix it and nobody would know, something a child does to keep from getting caught by the parent. $50 million ad campaign to make BP seem like they care ? People are not being hard enough .
but the we did largely fixed the problem,but it is still possible for a massive oil spill from such super tankers.
ohh ok so tankers DONT have as much risk as this spill today. Thank you for being honest.
electric cars always seemed curious to me... the seem like they would work best in an urban area, but in an urban area, most people don't have places to charge them (ie: no one has garages and everyone parks on the street in parking spaces of questionable legality).
in any event, they don't seem like they'd be a viable replacement for our trucking industry.
Dude, your sarcasm meter is apparently a two by four covered in tin foil with a dead mouse for a pointer and a rat turd for a light. Next time, caveat emptor and try before you buy. Not only was that clearly sarcasm, but it was clever and damned funny.spending 4 minutes on google can prevent you from looking like an idiot. Hayward is paid more than Exxon Mobile's CEO.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/exxon-ceos-compensation-increased-in-2007
2008, Tillerson Exxon Mobile's CEO earned $1.87M, stock awards were only listed for 2007, they were $5.7M
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/exxon-ceos-compensation-increased-in-2007
2009, Hayward pay increased from $4.26M to $6M, with about $4.26M in stock.
Also we need to stop for a minute.
I'm not saying to stop offshore drilling. I'm saying to stop it till we know why this happened and adjust to make sure it doesn't happen again. If that means something as simple and costly as relief wells dug on every well then thats what we should do.
Well RedCOMET as I'm sure you know there are two kinds of safety. The first is personal safety i.e. always using harnesses / wearing hardhats/ watching for hazards/etc. I don't know of any company that doesn't always harp about that.
The other kind of safety is general operational safety, implementing a robust maintenance and reliability program and always erring on the side of caution when making critical decisions. This kind of safety can get ignored and the deficiency in this area doesn't reveal itself until a major disaster occurs, sometimes those disasters take a long time to occur.
With better battery technology now available they work well just about everywhere since the average trip is within their batt only range.
Given incentive to install the charging systems the cars could just as easily be charged at their place of work instead of home. While this would probably cause them to rely on their gasoline motors a little more the gains would still be substantial.
There are many possible replacements for diesel. It's actually the easiest petroleum based fuel to displace.
Thanks for the link. That settles it for me, there should be a moratorium on BP, not drilling. Put buttloads of government engineers (and environmentalists) on every BP project at BP's expense and pay 'em bonuses by the infraction until BP is either the most safety-minded energy company in the world, out of business, or out of the USA.http://www.businessinsider.com/bp-h...s-has-an-awful-track-record-for-safety-2010-6
Now I will fully admit that BP's Alaska spill and texas city massacre may have contributed to OSHA paying more attention to BP than the other majors..... but still 760 "egregious, willful" violations versus Exxon getting 1.
SNIP
CANDU reactors don't use enriched fuel.
But yes, I am aware the infrastructure is not there right now.. but other than money there is no reason it could not be there in a few years. Which is why it is a weening process as I stated (until we have magic powers) but there is no reason we can't start now other than lack of will and/or money. My point was that we don't need oil in the sense that we can get as much power as we need from other sources. Obviously if all of the oil blew up today we would be kind of screwed for a while... but the only reason we still rely on it is because it is currently cheaper, which won't be the case for long (as government regulations change and the subsidization ends).
We don't 'need it' in the sense that we have other ways to extract the power it gives us. 50 years ago without oil we would lose the ability to fly planes and drive cars period. Now a days we can accomplish these technical feats other ways (albeit not for the same price).
There is enough power in the used fuel we store in holes to power us well through the next century.. It is just profoundly more expensive to reprocess that (to add to the fact that it is stored to make this nearly impossible.. at least the older 'waste') than to dig more out of the Canadian shield. We mine and sell to Asia more uranium than I'd care to think about.
Canada mines ten times as much uranium than the USA, though we have no enrichment facilities at all as our reactors do not need them. I will readily admit I am not well versed in the current state of Nuclear power in the USA.
I doubt Canada would have much issue diverting what we sell over seas to the USA instead.. provided the desire was there to buy it.
The issue is that we have to stop relying on a centralized mode of energy production. We could get away with using the plants we have now to subsidize the grid if each building was capable of producing energy though something like solar/wind/geothermal. For that to happen will require a large investment though as retrofitting a house is very expensive and even adding it to a new house it not an insignificant cost. Tax money would likely have to be diverted to this sort of thing as it is unlikely many home owners would want to partake on the up front capitol (but hey, if someone comes up with a clever business model to do this some folk might end up pretty well off)
You know, its not as if BP did jack shit for the first few weeks. It isnt quite as easy as sending 2 guys and a service truck out there to fix it.
Where do we get the electricity from and how do we get that much more electricity to its point of use?
I have been saying this for a while now, we could have used the stimulus to at least partially rebuild our electrical grid. Without a vastly upgraded grid I don't see how we can move a substantial amount of our transportation fuel from oil to electricity.
As far as Canada importing uranium, the USA has begun to mine uranium again, and even build new enrichment plants, since the mid-Bush years. It remains to be seen if the Obama administration will allow this to continue. I have to wonder though if our uranium would be able to run the CANDU or advanced CANDU reactors; if I remember from the '80s, isn't Canadian uranium naturally richer than US?
Nuclear and solar (when it's ready).
The vast majority of charging will happen at night when demand is lowest anyway and there is lots of excess generation and grid capacity.
Both are a decade or two away from being able to make any substantial difference but it can (and will) be done.
In the meantime, we are gonna need that nasty black stuff.
