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Gulf Oil Spill Research Funding Coming Too Late, Scientists Warn

Gulf Oil Spill Research

By CAIN BURDEAU   04/24/11 10:45 AM ET   AP

NEW ORLEANS -- Scientists say it is taking far too long to dole out millions of dollars in BP funds for badly needed Gulf oil spill research, and it could be too late to assess the crude's impact on pelicans, shrimp and other species by the time studies begin.

The spring nesting and spawning season is a crucial time to get out and sample the reproduction rates, behavior and abundance of species, all factors that could be altered by last year's massive spill. Yet no money has been made available for this year, and it could take months to determine which projects will be funded.

"It's like a murder scene," said Dana Wetzel, an ecotoxicologist at the Mote Marine Laboratory in Florida. "You have to pick up the evidence now."

BP PLC had pledged $500 million – $50 million a year over 10 years – to help scientists study the spill's impact and forge a better understanding of how to deal with future spills. The first $50 million was handed out in May 2010 to four Gulf-based research institutes and to the National Institutes of Health.

Rita Colwell, a University of Maryland scientist who chairs the board overseeing the money, said the protocol for distributing the remaining $450 million would be announced Monday at the National Press Club Washington. After that, scientists will be allowed to submit proposals, but it could take months for research to be chosen.

Michael Carron, a Mississippi marine scientist selected to head the BP-funded post-spill research project, the Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative, doubted money would be available before June. He acknowledged not being able to study the spring spawning in full bloom would be a problem.

"This will be the first good glimpse of what happened to larvae, the first class" of species born during and after the spill, he said.

With the BP funds so slow to get out the door, scientists are trying to get funding from federal grants and other sources. And it's possible the BP money will be handed out on an expedited basis, Carron said.

From the outset, the $500 million has been fraught with problems and questions over how the money would be distributed and how much scientists would be influenced by BP. The result has been paralysis.

It took until last month for BP and the Gulf of Mexico Alliance, a nonprofit headed by Gulf Coast governors, to finally agree on how to spend the rest of the $450 million. Under the agreement, BP pledged that research would be independent of the oil giant and the Gulf alliance and that scientists could publish their results without BP approval.

Still, BP will exert some control. For example, the funds will be overseen by a BP-hired contractor, and the oil giant has appointed half of the members on a 20-member board that will decide what research to do.

BP declined to comment and referred questions to the Gulf research initiative.

Larry McKinney, the director of the Harte Research Institute for Gulf of Mexico Studies at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi, said the science board overseeing the money was solid and unlikely to be heavily influenced by BP.

Scientists who take the BP money will have to credit the oil giant for funding the research, and BP may be able to obtain patents for inventions derived from the research. McKinney said those requirements were standard.

The delay in BP funds has rankled scientists. There was a dearth of scientific investigation to understand the effects of the massive 1979 Ixtoc spill in the Gulf's Bay of Campeche, scientists said, and there are fears the same could happen in the wake of BP's spill.

"The science was abysmal to start with," George Crozier, the head of the Dauphin Island Sea Lab in Alabama, said about the effect of oil spills in the Gulf. "But, golly, the questions have become bigger and more important."

And scientists don't have many other places to turn for research dollars.

While a lot of sampling and data collection is being done by BP and the federal government in the natural resource damage assessment, the legal battle over damage to the ecosystem also known as NRDA, scientists say that work is hardly cutting-edge and may not pick up the subtlest of changes in reproduction, DNA and other important factors.

"NRDA is not designed to advance science, it is designed to establish the damage done," Crozier said. "It is a legal-driven process."

NRDA also focuses on the commercially important and top species – not the worms, shorebirds, jellyfish, bait fish and tiny crustaceans that make up the bottom of the food web.

"There are areas of research we don't have a handle on," Wetzel said. "We're in the waiting room. We still don't know what's happened and we're waiting for someone to step up and say this is important to find out."

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NEW ORLEANS -- Scientists say it is taking far too long to dole out millions of dollars in BP funds for badly needed Gulf oil spill research, and it could be too late to assess the crude's impact on p...
NEW ORLEANS -- Scientists say it is taking far too long to dole out millions of dollars in BP funds for badly needed Gulf oil spill research, and it could be too late to assess the crude's impact on p...
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12:14 AM on 04/26/2011
Aha, someone used a spider to commit murder. I think that was on one of the csi shows...
09:12 AM on 04/26/2011
Crab. Not a spider, a crab. Gee.
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02:32 PM on 04/25/2011
15 dead sharks washing up dead in Manatee county off of Longboat Key, and Anna Marie Island
recently. http://www.baynews9.com/article/news/2011/april/236721/15-dead-sharks-wash-ashore-in-manatee-county
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SocratesSiddhartha
"Poverty is the worst form of violence." Gandhi
01:43 PM on 04/25/2011
"...and BP may be able to obtain patents for inventions derived from the research...."
But of course they should be able to make money from causing this disaster, we don't let human criminals profit from their crimes, but then corporations aren't people...Well, Actually according to the SCOTUS they are, but they aren't subject to laws that people are and can't be put in jail so they should should continue to reap rewards and money until our transformation into pure,un- relegated Fascism is complete.
08:13 AM on 04/26/2011
So if corporations are persons, with all a person's rights under the law, why not also all a person's responsibilities?

When a corporation conducts a criminal act, why do we not send all its employees to jail?

Could a corporation plead insanity as a defense? Why not, if it's a person? If so, wouldn't all its employees be insane and have to be committed for treatment?

See, I don't believe a corporation deserves personhood. It's simply an economic entity with one purpose only, not a living, breathing, sentient being.
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SocratesSiddhartha
"Poverty is the worst form of violence." Gandhi
03:13 PM on 04/26/2011
You do understand my post was sarcastic I hope.
I simply can't understand how the SCOTUS was able to twist the idea of a corporation, which is in no way an actual physical being and give it rights.
01:24 PM on 04/25/2011
OUR govt has run amock. I will say this over and over but Obama is no different than Bush. They difference is they pander to a different set of billionaire lobbieys and big corps.

The Gulf of Mexico is a DISASTER. Bush was given heck for Katrina (deservedly so) but where are THE PEOPLE today?! We, across the specturm need to DEMAND ACTION! 20 billion was to be a down payment but is sits there while the ecosystem collapses and the people suffer < not just the economic impact but many eat from the sea.

Disgusting comment on our Federal govt (no matter who is in the oval office or controlling Congress).

WAKE UP AMERICA! WE need to stand together, arm in arm, brother and siste, left to right, right to left and take back OUR GOVT! Forget the fatally flawed, business controlled 2 parties. They ALL must go.

D.R.I.P. - Don't Relect Incumbent Politicians.

They won't vote for term limits, so we must act to impose term limits.
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dbsherri
Turn off your television
12:18 PM on 04/25/2011
The entire planet is "like a murder scene" and the "unsubs" aren't unidentified subjects at all..."they" are us.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen1p
12:02 PM on 04/25/2011
"it's like a murder scene."

No doubt. And BP was given $10B tax refund to spill this murderous sludge.
That's your governement working "for the people," isn't it???
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
10:29 AM on 04/25/2011
"Still, BP will exert some control. For example, the funds will be overseen by a BP-hired contractor, and the oil giant has appointed half of the members on a 20-member board that will decide what research to do."

FAIL. ONLY in the Corporate world does the perpetrator of a crime get to direct the investigation.
11:16 AM on 04/25/2011
I've been wondering about that too...begining with the clean up directly after the spill where BP would not allow the press to film on the beach. In our country people are innocent until proven guilty. So that is why BP gets to run rampant over the crime scenes. We need to pronounce them guilty of at least some part of this disaster right now so they cannot keep destroying the evidence against them.
01:54 PM on 04/25/2011
"In our country people are innocent until proven guilty"

Except if they are BP.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
helenwheels
SEDAGIVE?!?
11:57 AM on 04/25/2011
It's reprehensible that we as a people put up with this. I think the people in the gulf are too beaten down to even try fighting it - they are trying to just get by. So horr!ble.
01:56 PM on 04/25/2011
Helen, I hate mention it to you but it was the scientists, themselves haggling over this slush fund and how to administer it that caused the delay.

Needless to say those scientists that got the short end of the stick are unhappy about the outcome and slowness of disbursement of funds.
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Slate 1947
Lead me not into temptation. I can find it myself.
09:28 AM on 04/25/2011
If these politicians continue to allow the Earth to be treated like a toilet with little or no intervention, well, you know what they say about payback. When push comes to shove, nature won't be kind to humanity and we'll pay dearly for our inaction. It can't continue without serous repercussions.
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keramos
Who are the brain police?
08:58 AM on 04/25/2011
BP is suing TransOcean (the rig owner) for $40Billion.  Looks like they're planning to make a profit of this killing!
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02:15 PM on 04/25/2011
Money and makes them look less guilty.
07:59 AM on 04/25/2011
Why would the pro-oil apologizing GOP governors be allowed to be in charge of science funds? BP appointing half the commission? Patents to BP?
This is clearly corrupt.

BP paying fines and penalties means the money is no longer BPs.
Giving them input and control on how OUR money is spent let alone profits from the research OUR money is spent on is corporatism run amok.

That is the same deal corporations get for joint ventures they fund with universities. To say that research grants and fines from oil spills result in the same business arrangement is truly bunk.
07:59 AM on 04/25/2011
So the funding is too late to tell much about the environmental effects of the spill.

Amazing how that works, isn't it?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LHoney
REINSTATE GLASS STEAGALL!!!
09:20 AM on 04/25/2011
Like taking candy from a baby... literally.
11:40 AM on 04/25/2011
Yep.
01:58 PM on 04/25/2011
Especially if is the scientists who were waiting for the honeypot haggling over who would get what.
02:53 PM on 04/25/2011
Oh, yeah, all those greedy scientists who can barely pay for of all their luxury vacation homes, new top of the line Mercedes, and gold-digging third or fourth twenty-something trophy wives.

We really gotta watch those honeypot haggling scientists before they run this entire country off into the ditch.
09:11 AM on 04/28/2011
I admit misspelling "minons", TlsA. It's been a lifelong common error of mine. It should be obvious from their definitions which word I meant, though. One of them means "hired lackey" and the other, " dainty little morsel".
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ken607
nothing clean about coal nothing natural about gas
07:52 AM on 04/25/2011
LETS DRILL ONLY IN REPUBLICAN DISTRICTS!!!!!!!
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ken607
nothing clean about coal nothing natural about gas
07:51 AM on 04/25/2011
dont forget that B astard P eople got a tax cut to the tune of 10 billion, hmmm that just happens to be the same number as the clean up..... nothing to see here......so WE THE PEOPLE are paying for their disater, IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE!
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dennis1943
whatever the voices in my head say.......
07:41 AM on 04/25/2011
"It's like a murder scene"........no..... it IS a murder scene.........
OverseasVet
Stationed not deployed
07:10 AM on 04/25/2011
This sounds more like a ecotoxicologist trolling for research dollars.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SubgeniusMustHaveSlack
Snowboarder, vegetarian, organic gardener.
08:24 AM on 04/25/2011
republickan willful ignorance is sociopathetic.
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VeryGrood
only class worse than micro-bio was molecular-bio
08:46 AM on 04/25/2011
You are correct... this has nothing to do with the snail's pace that the research funding is being passed out. This has nothing to do with the fact that very few researchers have seen a dime. This has nothing to do with the fact that BP still gets to pick and choose who they want to allow the funds to be distributed to.

I do see some trolling going on here... but it appears to come from posters and not scientists.