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From the Editors of E/The Environmental Magazine
Oil and Water Don’t Mix
What is the environmental impact of an oil spill into the sea?
The United States uses approximately 250 billion gallons of petroleum products every year, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. With so much demand, it is not surprising that spills do occur during various stages of production, transportation and distribution. A spill’s specific environmental impact depends upon the type and amount of oil and the local conditions.
According to Alaska Sea Grant, a marine research program at the School of Fisheries and Ocean Science at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, oil spills into water place an enormous variety of animals and plants at severe risk from smothering and poisoning. The group says that the infamous 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster off the coast of Alaska — America’s largest oil spill to date — directly killed between 300,000 and 645,000 birds, including bald eagles and many types of ducks and other sea birds.
The Valdez spill also wreaked untold harm on the health and reproductive success of surviving birds in the surrounding area. Seals, otters, killer whales and fish were also killed and injured in alarming numbers. Sea Grant says the oil critically damaged beach ecosystems and contaminated sediments and that the accident seriously disrupted local economies dependent on fishing and sightseeing. Beyond the immediate effects of such a spill, oil particles can linger in the environment for decades.
Less than 10 percent of the oil that makes its way into marine environments is actually due to spills like that of the Exxon Valdez, according to Judith McDowell of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Most oil ends up in seawater from a combination of natural seeps from the ocean floor and runoff from both offshore drilling facilities and land-based automobiles and machinery. Indeed, a significant amount of oil eventually makes its way into both marine and freshwater environments — including underground aquifers and other sources of drinking water — from the millions of cars and trucks that routinely leak oil onto driveways, parking lots and roads. Scientists do not have enough data to assess the long-term threats that such a persistent presence of oil has on local ecosystems, but they surmise that it can have significant impact on the health of a wide range of plant and animal populations, as well as on human health.
To help mitigate damage from oil spills following the Exxon Valdez accident in 1989, Congress passed the Oil Pollution Act in 1990, establishing provisions to improve the federal government’s ability to respond to spills. Congress also created the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund, which provides up to $1 billion per accident to cover removal costs or damages resulting from discharge of oil. The EPA also performs inspections and requires oil-storage owners to report their prevention policies.
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