Waterkeeper Organizations File Suit to Plug Taylor Energy’s Gulf Oil Spill and Pry Open the Veil of Secrecy Surrounding 7 Years of Contamination
Thursday, February 2, 2012
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
February
02, 2012
CONTACT:
Brett
Abrams: (516)-841-1105:
brett@fitzgibbonmedia.com
Blair
FitzGibbon: (202)-503-6141:
blair@fitzgibbonmedia.com
Waterkeeper
Organizations File Suit to Plug Taylor Energy’s
Gulf Oil Spill and Pry Open the Veil of Secrecy
Surrounding 7 Years of
Contamination
Calls on Obama
Administration to Require Stronger Safety
Standards and More Transparency
NEW
ORLEANS, LOUISIANA -- Waterkeeper Alliance and
several Gulf Coast Waterkeeper organizations
filed suit in Federal Court today, February 2,
against Taylor Energy Company LLC under the
citizen suit provisions of the Clean Water Act
and Resource Conservation Recovery Act, for
ongoing violations stemming from an oil spill
in the Gulf of Mexico that has continued to
flow for more than seven years.
Aided
by satellite imagery and research conducted by
SkyTruth and aerial observation by SouthWings,
the Waterkeeper Alliance and its local
Waterkeeper organizations learned that the
spill, located approximately 11 miles off the
coast of Louisiana, started after an undersea
landslide in the aftermath of Hurricane Ivan in
2004. An offshore platform and 28 wells were
damaged, and since then, Taylor has yet to stop
the daily flow of oil from the site.
Waterkeeper estimates that hundreds of gallons
of oil have leaked from the site each day for
the last 7 years.
“The plaintiffs
filed suit to stop the spill and lift the veil
of secrecy surrounding Taylor Oil’s seven-year
long response and recovery operation,”
explained Marc Yaggi, Executive Director of
Waterkeeper Alliance. “Neither the government
nor Taylor will answer basic questions related
to the spill response, citing privacy
concerns.” The public deserves to know how this
spill happened and why it continues. Coastal
communities should understand the risks
involved in developing off-shore oil resources
and what protections are in place to prevent
damage from future spills.
“The
Taylor Oil spill is emblematic of a broken
system, where oil production is prioritized
over concerns for human health and the
environment,” said Justin Bloom, Eastern
Regional Director of Waterkeeper Alliance.
“Nearly two years after the BP Deepwater
Horizon Spill, none of the comprehensive
reforms recommended by the National Oil Spill
Commission have been enacted and Congress has
yet to pass a single law to better protect
workers, the environment or coastal
communities.”
Meanwhile, President
Obama, in his State of the Union, has called
for a massive push to open up 38 million acres
in the Gulf of Mexico to oil exploration and
extraction. He also seeks to open
up
pristine Arctic waters to drilling. The Taylor
spill is in relatively shallow and accessible
waters compared to the deepwater, challenging
environment where Big Oil has set its sights.
Oil exploration and extraction technology has
dramatically outpaced the development of safety
and recovery technology and it appears that the
current regulatory regime is incapable of
protecting us from a runaway
industry.
A report released this week
by the Gulf Monitoring Consortium, a
partnership between Waterkeeper Alliance,
SkyTruth, and SouthWings, investigates several
spills in the Gulf (including the Taylor Spill)
and highlights numerous deficiencies in the
reporting and response process.
A
copy of the report can be found here:
“Imagine
an incident like the Taylor Spill in a
deepwater, high-pressure environment, that
could not be contained in 7 years,” asks Paul
Orr, the Lower Mississippi Riverkeeper, “Do we
really want to race to the bottom without a
lifeline when it looks like Big Oil is still at
the helm?”
A copy of the complaint
can be found here:
http://waterkeeper.org/ht/a/GetDocumentAction/i/24743
Joining
Waterkeeper Alliance in the lawsuit are:
Atchafalaya Basinkeeper, Baton Rouge, LA;
Galveston Baykeeper, Galveston, TX, Lower
Mississippi Riverkeeper, Baton Rouge, LA;
Louisiana Bayoukeeper, Barataria, LA and
Louisiana Environmental Action Network, Baton
Rouge, LA. Plaintiffs are represented by the
Tulane Environmental Law Clinic.
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Waterkeeper Alliance is a
global environmental movement uniting more than
190 Waterkeeper organizations around the world
and focusing citizen advocacy on the issues
that affect our waterways, from pollution to
climate change. Waterkeepers patrol more than
1.5 million square miles of rivers, streams and
coastlines in the Americas, Europe, Australia,
Asia and Africa.
