mardi 17 février 2015
DAUPHINS ET MAREE NOIRE BP AVEC PETITION A SIGNER
CONTENTE ET TRISTE BIEN SUR DE LIRE CETTE INFO.
CONTENTE PARCE QU'IL Y A TOUT DE MÊME UN GROUPE DE PERSONNES QUI CONTINUE DE S' INQUIÉTER DE CES MORTS DUES A LA MARÉE NOIRE DE BP (BRITISH PETROLEUM, IL Y A 5 ANS DEJA...) QUI AVAIT TRÈS MAL GÉRÉ LES PUITS D' EXPLOITATION ET CONTINUE SANS DOUTE , ET TRISTE CAR LES DAUPHINS PAIENT UN LOURD PRIX ET QUE BIEN SUR BP ET LES AUTRES...NE COMPTENT PAS S' ARRÊTER DE FORER DE NOUVEAUX PUITS (SOUVENEZ VOUS DU DIG DIG DE SARAH PALIN )
LE PROCÈS EST TOUJOURS EN COURS ET DES FONDS DEVRAIENT ÊTRE RÉCOLTÉS DES MILLIONS DE DOLLARS QUI NORMALEMENT DEVRAIENT PERMETTRE DE RESTAURER L' ECO SYSTEME.
TOUS LES LIENS INTERNES A L' ARTICLES SONT A LIRE AINSI QUE LES LIENS SUR LES PÉLICANS
SOURCE ET SUITE
AVEC PETITION
Dolphins in the Gulf of Mexico continue to die at high rates five years after the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill, according to a new government-funded study.
The report, published in the journal PLOS One, could have a significant impact on how money the petroleum giant must pay to restore the Gulf will be used to save imperiled dolphins.
The study “indicates that the current multi-year marine mammal unusual mortality event (UME) in the Northern Gulf of Mexico has multiple groupings of high bottlenose dolphin mortalities and may be due to different contributing factors, including the Deepwater Horizon oil spill,” National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration officials said in a statement.
“It’s been fairly clear that the oil played a role in this situation, and obviously more science is always needed, but I don’t know that this study will change the strategy for BP,” said Lacey McCormick, communications manager at the National Wildlife Federation. “I think they will continue to dig in their heels and deny the science the whole way through.”
The study nonetheless can help scientists determine how to proceed from here, McCormick said.
“BP will have to pay billions of dollars under the Clean Water Act and the Oil Pollution Act, and it raises the question of what do we do with this money,” she said. “We need to use science to determine how to use this money effectively on ecosystem restoration for dolphins and other species in the Gulf.”
The report, which was prepared by the National Marine Mammal Foundation and funded by NOAA, analyzed data from four groupings of dolphin deaths in the Gulf, three of which took place after the spill.
From February 2010 through the present, 1,305 dolphins stranded on Gulf shores, about 94 percent of which were found dead, making it the longest marine mammal die-off in the Gulf in recorded history...............
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LA PETITION EST POUR STOPPER LES FORAGES
CREDIT PHOTO USF/REUTERS/LE SITE
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