Yahoo – AFP,
8 April 2014
Washington (AFP) - Birds, fish, dolphins and turtles are still struggling in the Gulf of Mexico, four years after the worst oil spill in US history, a leading wildlife group said Tuesday.
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| A pelican rests on a piling with an oil rig in the background April 18, 2011 in Dauphin Island, Alabama (AFP Photo/Mario Tama) |
Washington (AFP) - Birds, fish, dolphins and turtles are still struggling in the Gulf of Mexico, four years after the worst oil spill in US history, a leading wildlife group said Tuesday.
The 2010 BP
spill spewed 4.9 million barrels of oil into the waters off Louisiana, also
sullying the coastlines of Mississippi, Alabama, Texas and Florida.
"The
science is telling us that the impacts of this are far from over," said
Doug Inkley, senior scientist at the National Wildlife Federation.
"Based
on other oil spills, the impacts are likely to last for years, if not
decades."
A report
issued by the National Wildlife Federation summarized recent scientific studies
on 14 different types of creatures affected by the spill.
Researchers
have found evidence that dolphins in Louisiana's heavily oiled Barataria Bay
suffer from abnormal hormone levels, lung disease and anemia.
Overall,
dolphins have been stranding at three times the historic rate, with some 900
washing up dead or dying from 2010 until 2013, the report said.
About 500
dead sea turtles have been found annually in the area, also a rate much higher
than that seen in years prior to the disaster.
Bluefin and
yellowfin tuna have been shown to suffer irregular heartbeats due to a chemical
in oil from the spill, which began after the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig
exploded and sank, killing 11 people.
Toxic oil
compounds have been found at increasing levels in the blood samples of loons
that winter along the Louisiana coast, it added.
Sperm
whales that were closer to the well have higher levels of DNA damaging metals
than those in other parts of the world.
Oil is
still being removed from the coast, too, said Sara Gonzalez-Rothi, the National
Wildlife Federation's senior policy specialist for Gulf and coastal
restoration.
"Last
year, nearly five million pounds of oiled material from the disaster were
removed from Louisiana's coast," she said.
"And
that's just what we've seen. An unknown amount of oil remains deep in the
Gulf."
Earlier
this month, the US Environmental Protection Agency ended its ban on BP
obtaining government contracts following the disaster.
The
five-year deal with the EPA will allow the British company to pursue new oil
exploration leases in deepwater tracts in the Gulf of Mexico.
In pleading
guilty to the spill, BP agreed to pay the government $4.5 billion to settle
criminal charges in the case.
It also
agreed in 2012 to settle damage claims by businesses and individuals for about
$7.8 billion.

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