The Search for BP's Oil

SUBHEAD: Found - Recently deceased coral, oiled crab larvae, bizarre sickness in the phytoplankton and bacteria. By Naomi Klein on 13 January 2011 in The Nation - (http://www.thenation.com/article/157723/search-bps-oil) Image above: Weather research vessel The Weatherbird II at dock. From (http://www.eyefetch.com/image.aspx?ID=986345).

Dolphins off the bow!"

I race to the front of the WeatherBird II, a research vessel owned by the University of South Florida. There they are, doing their sleek silvery thing, weaving between translucent waves, disappearing under the boat, reappearing in perfect formation on the other side.

After taking my fill of phone video (and very pleased not to have dropped the device into the Gulf of Mexico), I bump into Gregory Ellis, one of the junior scientists aboard.

"Did you see them?" I ask excitedly.

"You mean the charismatic megafauna?" he sneers. "I'll pass."

Ouch. Here I was thinking everyone loves dolphins, especially oceanographers. But it turns out that these particular marine scientists have issues with dolphins. And sea turtles. And pelicans. It's not that they don't like them (a few of the grad students took Flipper pictures of their own). It's just that the charismatic megafauna tend to upstage the decidedly less charismatic creatures under their microscopes. Like the bacteria and phytoplankton that live in the water column, for instance, or 500-year-old coral and the tube worms that burrow next to them, or impossibly small squid the size of a child's fingernail.

Normally these academics would be fine without our fascination. They weren't looking for glory when they decided to study organisms most people either can't see or wish they hadn't. But when the Deepwater Horizon exploded in April 2010, our collective bias toward cute big creatures started to matter a great deal. That's because the instant the spill-cam was switched off and it became clear that there would be no immediate mass die-offs among dolphins and pelicans, at least not on the scale of the Exxon Valdez spill deaths, most of us were pretty much on to the next telegenic disaster. (Chilean miners down a hole—and they've got video diaries? Tell us more!)

It didn't help that the government seemed determined to help move us along. Just three weeks after the wellhead was capped, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) came out with its notorious "oil budget," which prompted White House energy czar Carol Browner to erroneously claim that "the vast majority of the oil is gone." The White House corrected the error (the fate of much of that oil is simply unknown), but the budget nonetheless inspired a flood of stories about how "doom-mongers" had exaggerated the spill's danger and, as the British Daily Mail tabloid indignantly put it, unfairly wronged "one of Britain's greatest companies."

More recently, in mid-December, Unified Area Command, the joint government-BP body formed to oversee the spill response, came out with a fat report that seemed expressly designed to close the book on the disaster. Mike Utsler, BP's Unified Area Commander, summed up its findings like this: "The beaches are safe, the water is safe, and the seafood is safe." Never mind that just four days earlier, more than 8,000 pounds of tar balls were collected on Florida's beaches—and that was an average day. Or that gulf residents and cleanup workers continue to report serious health problems that many scientists believe are linked to dispersant and crude oil exposure.

By the end of the year, investors were celebrating BP's stock rebound, and the company was feeling so emboldened that it revealed plans to challenge the official estimates of how much oil gushed out of its broken wellhead, claiming that the figures are as much as 50 percent too high. If BP succeeds, it could save the company as much as $10.5 billion in damages. The Obama administration, meanwhile, has just given the go-ahead for sixteen deepwater projects to resume in the gulf, well before the Oil Spill Commission's safety recommendations have a hope of being implemented.

For the scientists aboard the WeatherBird II, the recasting of the Deepwater Horizon spill as a good-news story about a disaster averted has not been easy to watch. Over the past seven months, they, along with a small group of similarly focused oceanographers from other universities, have logged dozens of weeks at sea in cramped research vessels, carefully measuring and monitoring the spill's impact on the delicate and little-understood ecology of the deep ocean. And these veteran scientists have seen things that they describe as unprecedented.

Among their most striking findings are graveyards of recently deceased coral, oiled crab larvae, evidence of bizarre sickness in the phytoplankton and bacterial communities, and a mysterious brown liquid coating large swaths of the ocean floor, snuffing out life underneath. All are worrying signs that the toxins that invaded these waters are not finished wreaking havoc and could, in the months and years to come, lead to consequences as severe as commercial fishery collapses and even species extinction.

Perhaps not coincidentally, the most outspoken scientists doing this research come from Florida and Georgia, coastal states that have so far managed to avoid offshore drilling. Their universities are far less beholden to Big Oil than, say, Louisiana State University, which has received tens of millions from the oil giants. Again and again these scientists have used their independence to correct the official record about how much oil is actually out there, and what it is doing under the waves.

One of the most prominent scientists on the BP beat is David Hollander, a marine geochemist at the University of South Florida. Hollander's team was among the first to discover the underwater plumes in May and the first to trace the oil definitively to BP's well. In August, amid the claims that the oil had magically disappeared, Hollander and his colleagues came back from a cruise with samples proving that oil was still out there and still toxic to many marine organisms, just invisible to the human eye.

This research, combined with his willingness to bluntly contradict federal agencies, has made Hollander something of a media darling. When he is not at sea, there is a good chance he is in front of a TV camera. In early December, he agreed to combine the two, allowing me and filmmaker Jacqueline Soohen to tag along on a research expedition in the northern Gulf of Mexico, east of the wellhead.

"Let's go fishing for oil," Hollander says with a broad smile as we get on the boat. A surfer and competitive bike racer in his youth, he is still something of a scrappy daredevil at 52. On the last cruise Hollander slipped and seriously injured his shoulder, and he has been ordered to take it easy this time. But within seconds of being on deck he is hauling equipment and lashing down gear. This is a particularly important task today because a distinctly un-Floridian cold front has descended and winds are whipping up ten-foot swells in the gulf. Getting to our first research station is supposed to take twenty-four hours, but it takes thirty instead. The entire time, the 115-foot WeatherBird II dips and heaves, and so do a few members of the eleven-person scientific team (and yeah, OK, me too).

Luckily, just as we arrive at our destination, about ninety nautical miles from the wellhead, the clouds part and the sea calms. A frenzy of floating science instantly erupts. First to be lowered overboard is the rosette, a cluster of four-foot-high metal canisters that collect water samples from different depths. When the rosette clangs back on deck, the crew swarms around its nozzles, filling up dozens of sample bottles. It looks like they are milking a metal cow. Carefully labeled bottles in tow, they are off to the makeshift laboratory to run the water through an assembly line of tests. Is it showing signs of hydrocarbons? Does it fluoresce under UV light? Does it carry the chemical signature of petroleum? Is it toxic to bacteria and phytoplankton?

A few hours later it's time for the multi-corer. When the instrument, twelve feet high and hoisted by a powerful winch, hits the ocean floor, eight clear cylinders shoot down into the sediment, filling up with sand and mud. The samples are examined under microscopes and UV lights, or spun with centrifugal force, then tested for signs of oil and dispersant. This routine will be repeated at nine more locations before the cruise is done. Each stop takes an average of ten hours, and the scientists are able to sneak in only a couple of hours of sleep between stations.

The WeatherBird II is returning to the precise coordinates where University of South Florida researchers found toxic water and sediment in May and August. At the second stop, Mary Abercrombie, who is testing the water under UV light in a device called a spectrofluorometer, sees something that looks like hydrocarbons from a sample collected seventy meters down—shallow enough to be worrying. But the other tests don't find much of anything. Hollander speculates that this may be because we are still in relatively shallow water and the recent storms have mixed everything up. "We'll probably see more when we go deeper."

Being out in the open gulf today, I find it is impossible not to be awed by nature's capacity to cleanse and renew itself. At the height of the disaster, I had looked down at these waters from a Coast Guard aircraft. What I saw changed me. I realized that I had always counted on the ocean to be a kind of outer space on earth, too mysterious and vast to be fundamentally altered by human activity, no matter how reckless. Now it was covered to the horizon in gassy puddles like the floor of an auto repair shop. Shouting over the roaring engines, a fresh-faced Coast Guard spokesman assured the journalists on board that within months, all the oil would be gone, broken down by dispersants into bite-size morsels for oil-eating microbes, which would, after their petroleum feast, promptly and efficiently disappear—no negative side effects foreseen.

At the time I couldn't believe he could feed us this line with a straight face. Yet here that body of water is, six months later: velvety smooth and, according to the tests conducted on the WeatherBird II, pretty clean, at least so far. Maybe the ocean really is the world's most powerful washing machine: throw in enough dispersant (the petrochemical industry's version of Tide), churn it around in the waves for long enough, and it can get even the toughest oil spills out.

"I despise that message—it's blindly simplified," says Ian MacDonald, a celebrated oceanographer at Florida State University. "The gulf is not all better now. We don't know what we've done to it."

MacDonald is arguably the scientist most responsible for pressuring the government to dramatically increase its estimates of how much oil was coming out of BP's well. He points to the massive quantity of toxins that gushed into these waters in a span of three months (by current estimates, at least 4.1 million barrels of oil and 1.8 million gallons of dispersants). It takes time for the ocean to break down that amount of poison, and before that could happen, those toxins came into direct contact with all kinds of life-forms. Most of the larger animals—adult fish, dolphins, whales—appear to have survived the encounter relatively unharmed. But there is mounting evidence that many smaller creatures—bacteria, phytoplankton, zooplankton, multiple species of larvae, as well as larger bottom dwellers—were not so lucky. These organisms form the base of the ocean's food chain, providing sustenance for the larger animals, and some grow up to be the commercial fishing stocks of tomorrow. One thing is certain: if there is trouble at the base, it won't stay there for long.

According to experiments performed by scientists at the University of South Florida, there is good reason for alarm. When it was out in the gulf in August, the WeatherBird II collected water samples from multiple locations. Back at the university lab, John Paul, a professor of biological oceanography, introduced healthy bacteria and phytoplankton to those water samples and watched what happened. What he found shocked him. In water from almost half of the locations, the responses of the organisms "were genotoxic or mutagenic"—which means the oil and dispersants were not only toxic to these organisms but caused changes to their genetic makeup. Changes like these could manifest in a number of ways: tumors and cancers, inability to reproduce, a general weakness that would make these organisms more susceptible to prey—or something way weirder.

Before we left on the cruise, I interviewed Paul in his lab; he explained that what was so "scary" about these results is that such genetic damage is "heritable," meaning the mutations can be passed on. "It's something that can stand around for a very long time in the Gulf of Mexico," Paul said. "You may be genetically altering populations of fish, or zooplankton, or shrimp, or commercially important organisms.... Is the turtle population going to have more tumors on them? We really don't know. And it'll take three to five years to actually get a handle on that."

The big fear is a recurrence of what happened in Prince William Sound after the Exxon Valdez spill. Some pink salmon, likely exposed to oil in their larval stage, started showing serious abnormalities, including "rare mutations that caused salmon to grow an extra fin or an enlarged heart sac," according to a report in Nature. And then there were the herring. For three years after the spill, herring stocks were robust. But in the fourth year, populations plummeted by almost two-thirds in Prince William Sound and many were "afflicted by a mysterious sickness, characterised by red lesions and superficial bleeding," as Reuters reported at the time. The next year, there were so few fish, and they were so sick, that the herring fishery in Prince William Sound was closed; stocks have yet to recover fully. Since Alaskan herring live for an average of eight years, many scientists were convinced that the crash of the herring stocks was the result of herring eggs and larvae being exposed to oil and toxins years earlier, with the full effects manifesting themselves only when those generations of herring matured (or failed to mature).

Could a similar time bomb be ticking in the gulf? Ian MacDonald at Florida State is convinced that the disturbances beginning to register at the bottom of the food chain are "almost certain to ripple up through other species."

Here is what we know so far. When researchers from Oregon State University tested the waters off Grand Isle, Louisiana, in June, they found that the presence of carcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) had increased fortyfold in just one month. Kim Anderson, the toxicologist leading the study, described the discovery as "the largest PAH change I've seen in over a decade of doing this." June is spawning season in the gulf—the period, beginning in April, when enormous quantities of eggs and larvae drift in nearly invisible clouds in the open waters: shrimp, crabs, grouper, bluefin tuna, snapper, mackerel, swordfish. For western Atlantic bluefin, which finish spawning in June and are fished as far away as Prince Edward Island, these are the primary spawning grounds.

John Lamkin, a fisheries biologist for NOAA, has admitted that "any larvae that came into contact with the oil doesn't have a chance." So, if a cloud of bluefin eggs passed through a cloud of contaminated water, that one silent encounter could well help snuff out a species already on the brink. And tuna is not the only species at risk. In July Harriet Perry, a biologist at the University of Southern Mississippi, found oil droplets in blue crab larvae, saying that "in my forty-two years of studying crabs I've never seen this." Tellingly, this vulnerability of egg and larvae to oil does not appear to have been considered when the Macondo well was approved for drilling. In the initial exploration plan that BP submitted to the government, the company goes on at length about how adult fish and shellfish will be able to survive a spill by swimming away or by "metaboliz[ing] hydrocarbons." The words "eggs" and "larvae" are never mentioned.

Already there is evidence of at least one significant underwater die-off. In November Penn State biologist Charles Fisher led a NOAA-sponsored expedition that found colonies of ancient sea fans and other coral coated in brown sludge, 1,400 meters down. Nearly all the coral in the area was "dead or in the process of dying," Fisher told me. And he echoed something I heard from many other scientists: in a career of studying these creatures, he has never seen anything like this. There were no underwater pools of oil nearby, but the working theory is that subsea oil and dispersants must have passed through the area like some kind of angel of death.

We may never know what other organisms were trapped in a similarly lethal cloud, and that points to a broader problem: now that we are beyond the oil-covered-birds phase, establishing definitive links between the spill and whatever biogenetic or ecological disturbances are in store is only going to get harder. For instance, we know the coral died because of all the bodies: ghostly coral corpses litter the ocean floor near the wellhead, and Fisher is running tests to see if he can find a definitive chemical link to BP's oil. But that sort of forensics simply won't be possible for the much smaller life forms that are even more vulnerable to BP's toxic cocktail. When larval tuna or squid die, even in huge numbers, they leave virtually no trace. Hollander uses the phrase "cryptic mortality" to describe these phantom die-offs.

All this uncertainty will work in BP's favor if the worst-case scenarios eventually do materialize. Indeed, concerns about a future collapse may go some way toward explaining why BP (with the help of Kenneth Feinberg's Gulf Coast Claims Facility) has been in a mad rush to settle out of court with fishermen, offering much-needed cash now in exchange for giving up the right to sue later. If a significant species of fish like bluefin does crash three or even ten years from now (bluefin live for fifteen to twenty years), the people who took these deals will have no legal recourse. Even if a case did end up in court, beating BP would be tricky. As part of the damage assessment efforts, NOAA scientists are conducting studies that monitor the development of eggs and larvae exposed to contaminated water. But as Exxon's lawyers argued in the Valdez case, wild fish stocks are under a lot of pressure these days—without a direct chemical link to BP's oil, who's to say what dealt the fatal blow?

In a way, the lawyers will have a point, if a disingenuous one. As Ian MacDonald explains, it is precisely the multiple stresses on marine life that continue to make the spill so dangerous. "We don't appreciate the extent to which most populations are right on the edge of survival. It's very easy for populations to go extinct." He points to the sperm whales—there are only about 1,600 of them in the northern Gulf of Mexico, a small enough population that the unnatural death of just a few whales (which breed infrequently and later in life) can endanger the community's survival. Acoustic research has found that some sperm whales responded to the spill by leaving the area, a development that oceanographers find extremely worrying.

One of the things I am learning aboard the WeatherBird II, watching these scientists test for the effects of invisible oil on invisible organisms, is not to trust my eyes. For a few months last year, when BP's oil formed patterns on the surface of these waters that looked eerily like blood, industrial society's impact on the ocean was easy for all to see. But when the oil sank, it didn't disappear; it just joined so much else that the waves are hiding, so many other secrets we count on the ocean to keep. Like the 27,000 abandoned oil and gas wells in the Gulf of Mexico, and the network of unmonitored underwater pipelines that routinely corrode and leak. Like the sewage that cruise ships are entirely free to dump, under federal law, so long as they are more than three miles from shore. Like a dead zone the size of New Jersey. Scientists at Dalhousie University in Halifax predict that if we continue our rates of overfishing, every commercial fish stock in the world could crash by midcentury. And a study published in Nature in July found that global populations of phytoplankton have declined about 40 percent since 1950, linked with "increasing sea surface temperatures"; coral is bleaching and dying for the same reason. And on and on. The ocean's capacity to heal itself from our injuries is not limitless. Yet the primary lesson being extracted from the BP disaster seems to be that "mother nature" can take just about anything we throw at her.

As the WeatherBird II speeds off to the third research station, I find myself thinking about something New Orleans civil rights attorney Tracie Washington told me the last time I was on the Gulf Coast. "Stop calling me resilient," she said. "I'm not resilient. Because every time you say, 'Oh, they're resilient,' you can do something else to me." Washington was talking about the serial disasters that have battered New Orleans. But if the poisoned and perforated gulf could talk, I think it might say the same thing.

On day three of the cruise, things start to get interesting. We are now in the DeSoto Canyon, about thirty nautical miles from the wellhead. The ocean floor is 1,000 meters down, our deepest station yet. Another storm is rolling in, and as the team pulls up the multi-corer, waves swamp the deck. It's clear as soon as we see the mud that something is wrong. Rather than the usual gray with subtle gradations, the cylinders are gray and then, just below the top layer, abruptly turn chocolaty brown. The consistency of the top brown layer is sort of fluffy, what the scientists refer to as "flocculent."

A grad student splits one of the cores lengthwise and lays it out on deck. That's when we see it clearly: separating the gray and brown layers—and looking remarkably like chocolate parfait—is a thick line of black gunk. "That's not normal," Hollander declares. He grabs the mud samples and flags Charles Kovach, a senior scientist with the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. They head to the darkest place on the boat—one of the tiny sleeping quarters crammed with bunk beds. In the pitch darkness they hold an ultraviolet light over the sample, and within seconds we are looking at silvery particles twinkling up from the mud. This is a good indication of oil traces. Hollander saw something similar on the August cruise and was able not only to identify hydrocarbons but to trace them to BP's Macondo well.

Sure enough, after the sediment is put through a battery of chemical tests, Hollander has his results. "Without question, it's petroleum hydrocarbons." The thick black layers are, he says, "rich in hydrocarbons," with the remains of plants and bacteria mixed in. The fluffy brown top layer has less oil and more plant particles, but the oil is definitely there. It will be weeks or even months before Hollander can trace the oil to BP's well, but since he has found BP's oil at this location in the DeSoto Canyon before, that confirmation is likely. If we are fishing for oil, as Hollander had joked, this is definitely a big one.

It strikes me that there is a satisfying irony in the fact that Hollander's cruise found oil that BP would have preferred to stay buried, given that the company indirectly financed the expedition. BP has pledged to spend $500 million on research as part of its spill response and made an early payout of $30 million. But in contrast to the company's much publicized attempts to buy off scientists with lucrative consulting contracts, BP agreed to hand this first tranche over to independent institutions in the gulf, like the Florida Institute of Oceanography, which could allocate it through a peer-review process—no strings attached. Hollander was one of the lucky recipients. This is a model for research in the gulf: paid for by the oil giants that profit so much from its oil and gas, but with no way for them to influence outcomes.

At several more research stations near the wellhead, the WeatherBird II finds the ocean floor coated in similar muck. The closer the boat gets to the wellhead, the more black matter there is in the sediment. And Hollander is disturbed. The abnormal layer of sediment is up to five times thicker than it was when he collected samples here in August. The oil's presence on the ocean floor didn't diminish with time; it grew. And, he points out, "the layer is distributed very widely," radiating far out from the wellhead.

But what concerns him even more are the thick black lines. "That black horizon doesn't happen," he says. "It's consistent with a snuff-out." Healthy sea-floor mud is porous and well oxygenated, with little critters constantly burrowing holes from the surface sand to the deeper mud, in the same way that worms are constantly turning over and oxygenating soil in our gardens. But the dark black lines in the sediment seemed to be acting as a sealant, preventing that flow of life. "Something caused an environmental and community change," Hollander explains. It could have been the sheer volume of matter falling to the bottom, triggering a suffocation effect, or perhaps it was "a toxic response" to oil and dispersants.

Whatever it was, Hollander isn't the only one observing the change. While we are at sea, Samantha Joye, an oceanographer at the University of Georgia, is leading a team of scientists on a monthlong cruise. When she gets back she reports seeing a remarkably similar puddinglike layer of sediment. And in trips to the ocean floor in a submersible, she saw dead crustaceans in the sediment and tube worms that had been "decimated." Ian MacDonald was one of the scientists on the trip. "There were miles of dead worms," he told me. "There was a zone of acute impact of at least eighty square miles. I saw dead sea fans, injured sea fans, brittle stars entangled in its branches. A very large area was severely impacted." More warning signs of a bottom-up disaster.

A week after Hollander returned from the cruise, Unified Area Command came out with its good news report on the state of the spill. Of thousands of water samples taken since August, the report stated, less than 1 percent met EPA definitions of toxicity. It also claimed that the deepwater sediment is largely free from BP's oil, except within about two miles of the wellhead. That certainly came as news to Hollander, who at that time was running tests of oiled sediment collected thirty nautical miles from the wellhead, in an area largely overlooked by the government scientists. Also, the government scientists measured only absolute concentrations of oil and dispersants in the water and sediment before declaring them healthy. The kinds of tests John Paul conducted on the toxicity of that water to microorganisms are simply absent.

Coast Guard Rear Adm. Paul Zukunft, whose name is on the cover of the report, told me of the omission, "That really is a limitation under the Clean Water Act and my authorities as the federal on-scene coordinator." When it comes to oil, "it's my job to remove it"—not to assess its impact on the broader ecosystem. He pointed me to the NOAA-led National Resource Damage Assessment (NRDA) process, which is gathering much more sensitive scientific data to help it put a dollar amount on the overall impact of the spill and seek damages from BP and other responsible parties.

Unlike the individual and class-action lawsuits BP is rushing to settle, it will be years before a settlement is reached. That means more time to wait and see how fish stocks are affected by egg and larvae exposure. And according to Robert Haddad, who heads the NRDA process for NOAA, any settlement will have "reopener clauses" that allow the government to reopen the case should new impacts manifest themselves.

Still, it's not at all clear that NRDA is capable of addressing the dangers being exposed by Hollander and the other independent scientists. The federal damage assessment process is built on the concept of "ecosystem services," which measures the value of nature according to how it serves us. How many fish were fishermen unable to catch because of the disaster? And how many tourism dollars were lost when the oil hit the beaches? Yet when it comes to the place where most of the spill damage was done—the deep ocean—we are in no position to answer such questions. The deep ocean is so understudied that we simply don't know what "service" those dead tube worms and corals would have provided to us. All we know, says MacDonald, is that "the ecosystem depends on these kinds of organisms, and if you start wiping them out, you don't know what happens." He also points out, as many ecologists do, that the entire service model is flawed. Even if it turns out that those tube worms and brittle stars do nothing for us, "they have their own intrinsic value—it matters that these organisms are healthy or not healthy." The spill "is an opportunity for us to find a new way to look at ecological health."

It is more likely, however, that we will continue to assign value only to those parts of nature from which we directly profit. Anything that slips beyond the reach of those crude calculations, either because it is too mysterious or seemingly too trivial, will be considered of no value, its existence left out of environmental risk assessment reports, its death left out of damage assessment lawsuits. And this is what is most disturbing about the latest rush to declare the gulf healthy: we seem to be once again taking refuge in our ignorance, the same kind of willful blindness that caused the disaster in the first place. First came the fateful decision to drill in parts of the earth we do not understand, taking on risks that are beyond our ability to comprehend. Next, when disaster struck, came the decision to use dispersants to sink the oil rather than let it rise to the surface, saving what we do know (the coasts) by potentially sacrificing what we don't know (the depths). And now here we are, squeezing our eyes shut before the results are in, hoping, once again, that what we don't know can't hurt us.

Only about 5 percent of the deep ocean has been explored. The existence of the deep scattering layer—the huge sector of marine life that dwells in the deep but migrates every night toward the surface—was only confirmed by marine biologists in the 1940s. And the revelations are ongoing. Mysterious and otherworldly new species are being discovered all the time.

On board the WeatherBird II, I was constantly struck by the strange simultaneity of discovery and destruction, watching young scientists experiment on fouled sediment drawn up from places science had barely mapped. It's always distressing to witness a beautiful place destroyed by pollution. But there is something particularly harrowing about the realization that we are contaminating places we have never even seen in their natural state. As drilling pushes farther and farther into deep water, risking more disasters in the name of jobs and growth, marine scientists trained to discover the thrillingly unknown will once again be reduced to coroners of the deep, boldly discovering that which we have just destroyed. Video above: Naomi Klein "Addicted to Risk" at TED. From (http://www.ted.com/talks/naomi_klein_addicted_to_risk.html)

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My Brother’s Keeper

SUBHEAD: Sorry Pete! I know we’re kin! But they got this here Depression on and I got to do fer me and mine. By Lindsay Curren on 18 January 2011 in Transition Voice - (http://transitionvoice.com/2011/01/my-brothers-keeper) Image above: The boys are turned in by Wash Hogwallop. From (http://www.allmoviephoto.com/photo/2001_o_brother_where_art_thou_005.html). Part two in a four-part series.

The last time we met the boys in this series, the ones who “done escaped off the farm” in the Coen brothers’ film O Brother, Where Art Thou?, slick-tongued Everett McGill (George Clooney) was pontificating that “it’s a fool looks for logic in the chambers of the human heart.”

There’s another vignette from the movie that offers some more helpful wisdom to the peak oil and climate change community.

Just a bit earlier in the story, peacefully asleep in a barn loft while laying over at cousin Wash’s, the fugitives are awakened by the bullhorn of the authorities who are there to haul the boys back to the joint. At once Everett sees that cousin Wash had turned the three escapees in for bounty money. But Pete (John Turturro) refuses to believe it, shaking his fist at Everett and yelling that he wouldn’t, that “Wash is kin.”

But from down below, cozied right up to the law, Wash calls up sheepishly,

“Sorry Pete! I know we’re kin! But they got this here Depression on and I got to do fer me and mine.”

And it’s at that meeting place of fear and self-interest where the peak oil narrative faces many of its greatest challenges.

The brain trust Undoubtedly each person who takes the implications of peak oil seriously must first prepare his or her household for the coming changes in our world.

Obviously if you’re not prepared for the future yourself, how can you be a help to others getting ready for peak oil and climate change? And if you’re not prepared, how can you feel more secure and more able to be resilient? If you’re not prepared, how can you tell the energy and climate story, or give advice to others?

You can’t.

So, please do make your own plan for resilience. Do store emergency supplies of food and water—you should anyway, even without a potential block in the energy supply line arising from future oil shocks.

Be prepared,” as the Boy Scouts say, for whatever might come. Flood, drought, blackout, oil shortages, rising oceans, visits from fugitive kin. Whatever.

We’re in a tight spot |But there are challenges in this home preparation, too.

Because the peak oil community includes an undeniable strand of survivalist thinking, including a very real element of cousin Wash’s unhealthy “I got to do fer me and mine” mentality, solo survivalism is something we must dissect a bit more purposefully.

But first, I ask that you please don’t misunderstand me. I’ll repeat: yes, individuals and families should make emergency preparedness plans for their own families. But once that’s done, solo survival should take its rightful place as the fallback, not the vanguard position, for any individual or family unit.

A singular focus on solo survival fosters vulnerability because it:

  • Promotes isolationist behavior, a retreat from community
  • Encourages secretiveness
  • Risks turning neighbor against neighbor
  • Dehumanizes others
  • Ratchets up fear, mistrust and possibly paranoia
“I’m with you fellers” It’s an old saw that there’s “strength in numbers.” Perhaps that’s what makes it true.

In cousin Wash’s case perhaps there’s a bit of a moral quandary. After all, Everett, Pete and Delmar did each commit the crimes that sent them to prison in the first place. And Everett and Delmar aren’t even Wash’s kin, so there’s no blood allegiance there. But we, the viewer, can see that no one in the fugitive trio is violent, and that Wash’s situation is hardly more hopeful as a free but poor man, unable alone to make his fallow farm thrive. But did earning a bit of bounty scratch really justify turning in the same three who had sat down with him to horse stew and conversation that very night? Especially when one is his kin?

I’ll just say maybe, and leave each of you dear readers to tease out that moral conundrum on your own.

But looking at the situation more broadly, where we all find ourselves in the same peak oil boat, and in which we’ll all likely be swamped by its tides to one degree or another, do we really want to find ourselves at odds with every other man to only maybe gain a slippery new toehold on fortune? Do we want to wear the constant posture of fear, and move about with the attitude of suspicion and sly opportunism, ready to turn on anyone and anything just to “do fer me and mine?”

I don’t think so.

Sure, the instinct for personal survival will always be a part of the human apparatus. But we’re more than instinct alone. And there is another way.

In the mart of competitive commerce In the US we have a rich tradition of community, public schools, volunteerism, churches and other places of worship, gatherings, personal freedom.

But we also have its opposite, too. The notion of rugged individualism as mythologized in the essentially American Western genre and enshrined in economics as Capitalism.

But Capitalism, while offering opportunity, also promotes exploitation. Rugged individualism, while offering a chance to get ahead and make your mark, too often pits man against man at the expense of our nature as social beings.

Even if one believes in free trade, and is pro-business, it’s disingenuous to imagine that the mere presence of a competitive environment means an inherently level playing field. Capitalism has lead to excessive corporate power. And the excessive reach of corporate power is nowhere more at home than within its milieu, the ruling class, carried out by lawyering minions who pursue every advantage-seeking whim into legal code. Just look at the entrenched advantages for the oil industry over clean energy to get a small glimpse of this in action.

And I won’t even mention the definition of a corporate state…

The issue is that together this invites not only a backlash, but feeds a subtle cultural disposition of “Every man for himself and God against all.”

Whatever its merits, Capitalism produces its fair share of discontents, brought on, not least of all, by the apparent commodification of everything. Each moment, every relationship, a transaction. Exploitation. Alienation.

The very things that have left so many people feeling so inexplicably discontent over the past century of unchecked industrial growth. And that discontent has made more folks in recent years sense that something’s missing, driving them to seek community and to build social networks both online and off. It has made the value of unity and common cause rise up again in pursuit of something greater, something beyond politics, and media yammering. In a sense, it has given birth to renewed connections of all sorts, and also to the burgeoning Transition Movement.

In this hopeful discontent lives the rich and fertile matter of the stories to shift the tide. Tapping into that is as much, if not more, the way forward than is another fist-shaking rant about the rising cost of oil and government in denial. It’s more potent and alluring and enduring than all the tales of doom lived or doom to come. And it’s far more compelling than packing your basement full of canned goods, living in mortal fear of an imagined overnight collapse, and then telling no one around you about the triple crises of peak oil, climate change and economic crisis lest they find you “a might touched.”

Life today is all about connecting, even though what brings us together seems dismal, as dismal as our three ex-cons with their scant prospects and a bounty on their heads. As dismal as many a defaulted homeowner might feel right about now.

This here De-pression And that brings me to depression.

Or as cousin Wash says, “They got this here Depression on…”

Who of us is not concerned with a $1.6 quadrillion derivatives bubble chasing itself down the chute of once-was future prosperity? Amazingly this is an issue that seems to unite right and left, libertarians, Tea Partiers and maybe even those elusive socialists so prominently mentioned on talk radio but so hard to find in real life politics.

The bottom line is, the shit’s hitting the fan. Oil prices up. Food prices way up. Trenchant joblessness. A comical policy of quantitative easing leaving ordinary folks transfixed between self-evident inflation in the cost of goods, and mired in fear about when the last card in the house of cards is going to bring that bubble down and with it, bring on a deflationary spiral.

No matter how much the mainstream press wants to hawk a recovery, few are buying it.

The Long Emergency is unmistakably here. And we in the peak oil community have got a job to do.

Share of the treasure We need to tell the peak oil story wherever we can using sensible means and straightforward channels. Letters to the editor citing the 2010 International Energy Agency announcement of peak oil for starters. The military Joint Operating Environment report as well. The announcement of the implications of peak oil by a German military think tank. By Lloyds of London and the UK’s Peak Oil Summit. These are easy, and they translate into “don’t take my word for it…”

But step two is committing yourself more than ever in this pivotal year to shoring up the bonds of community with all you’ve got. Take the easy steps. If you’re a member or regular attendee at a church, join or start a sustainability or resilience committee. Like all coffers, church coffers are down as giving slides. Help make the church budget go further by looking for ways to cut costs while saving services and energy.

Finally get involved with that community garden initiative. Organize a plant swap at the beginning of the season and a seed swap at the end of the season. Make it a pot luck both times. Get to know your neighbors.

Plan a hunting party. Learn to brew beer; make beef jerky; dry apple slices; and ferment sauerkraut.

Go ask granny to teach you how to can, and then hold a non-threatening and totally neutral canning party with a bunch of friends. If being blunt about peak oil wouldn’t work, leave it out. But if you can edge the peak oil story into the conversation, do. Help your neighbors become aware of just where oil prices are going, and what it means for budgets, warmth, cooling, transportation, activities, health and money in the bank.

Be the one who organizes a car pooling hub in your area. Join a bike riding club.

For those of you with more observant and equally concerned friends, hold that Crash Course one-day marathon session at your home. Make it a party. Voice concerns, and show that your hearts still beat and your smiles still work at the same time.

Learn to knit with your kids and then start collecting skeins of yarn, preferably wool, at yard sales and thrift stores. Same with candle or soap making.

Hang together The bottom line is that if you’ve got to “do fer me and mine” then see your block as “me and mine.” See your neighborhood as “me and mine.” See your town as “me and mine” Your state. Our nation.

No, you can’t solve all the problems of your town, your state, or our country on your own. But by seeing us all as “me and mine” you may be able to help foster a unity that is so desperately needed after a decade and a half where “polarized” has not only been the buzzword, but an artificial and destructive description of the American spirit.

“If we don’t hang together, we will surely hang separately,” said Benjamin Franklin.

Me and mine prefer it together, with you and your’n.

See also: Ea O Ka Aina: Oh Brother. Not Peak Oil! 12/29/10

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Ku'oko'a - Transforming Hawaii

SUBHEAD: If the Grid is to be continued Hawaii has two realistic options - geothermal and ocean energy.

 By Henry Curtis on 16 January 2011 in Disappeared News -
(http://www.disappearednews.com/2011/01/kuokoa-transforming-hawaiis-economy.html)


 
Image above: Rebels took out these electrical towers = Medellin, Colombia, leaving the nation's second largest city without electricity. From (http://www.swamppolitics.com/news/politics/blog/2009/04/spies_in_power_grid_budget_sea.html).

  [Publisher's note: We have great respect for Henry Curtis and Life of the Land. He is one of the few reporting on Ku'oko'a plans for Hawaii. We, however, take exception to the case that the Grid can or should be developed as the primary energy distributor. Investing now in stand-alone local decentralized systems is the key to future resilience and continuation of services.]  

Dreams
Many people would like Hawaii to move beyond its fixation on tourism and the military and become the health state or the high tech state. Some believe that we need to transform the Honolulu Harbor area from a shipping area to a gathering spot, a coastal green lei of parks and open space. Some believe that the threat of Peak Oil and Climate Change will greatly damage the state unless we deal with it now. Others believe we should finally realize the dream of the 1978 Constitutional Convention and become agriculturally and energy self-sufficient. If you wanted to achieve some or all of this, how would you finance it? Ku'oko'a has one dream of a future. The three people most identified with it come from different backgrounds and seek different things. They have come together because through unity they can each achieve what they want.  

The Ku'oko'a Team
Several years ago HECO brought Richard Ha to Maui to counter opposition to palm oil biodiesel. As a third generation Big Island farmer, Richard saw that biofuels offered a way for the State to get off oil. He began going to Peak Oil conferences on the U.S. continent. He saw how high energy prices impacted farming, from fuel for farm vehicles, to the cost of fertilizer, to shipping costs, high energy prices negatively impacted his farming and would damage the state economy. He also realized that biofuels was not the answer, that the financials would not pencil out. He became a firm believer in geothermal.

Ted Peck served as an officer on board a nuclear submarine. His XO was Ron Cox who would become the Pearl Harbor base commander and then HECO’s biofuel person. Ted went to Booz Allen, the international military and high tech company that came up with the way of recording key strokes as a way of breaking computer passwords. Ted ran the 180 person Hawaii and Pacific Office.

Governor Lingle brought him in as DBEDT Director Ted Liu’s energy person. The three top energy people at DBEDT had all resigned about the same time during a DBEDT procurement scandal and Ted Peck became the new DBEDT Energy leader. DBEDTs focus is to transform the State. HECO also lost much of their top leadership during the same time period, and for a while it looked like they were going to significantly change to their approach. Roald Marsh is an inspirational speaker and real estate venture capitalist who came occasionally to Hawaii.  

The Utility
Hawaiian Electric Company (HECO) owns Maui Electric (MECO) and Hawaii Electric Light (HELCO). They account for all electricity sales in the State except for Kauai. Ever since the 1978 Constitutional Convention, HECO has, at some level, sought to develop renewable energy. At first utility pundits thought that the way to achieve this was by establishing a parent company, a holding company. Hawaii Electric Industries (HEI) was established in 1981-83 in order to create renewable energy sister companies to HECO. Instead HEI went into banking, real estate, insurance, and interisland shipping.

Around 2000 HECO decided that a child, a subsidiary, was actually the way to go. HECO established Renewable Hawaii Inc (RHI) to invest in renewable energy projects. It was stated that if RHI made an investment it would not impact how long HECO took to allow any renewable energy company to interface with the utility-owned electric grid. RHI failed to do anything significant. In 2008 HECO and the State came up with a new plan, called the Energy Agreement.

The State would increase and guarantee utility profits through a rate mechanism called decoupling while HECO would open up its grid through a mechanism called feed-in tariffs whereby ratepayers could build small renewable energy systems (0-5MW) and sell the electricity to the utility for a profit. DBEDT wanted these issues linked, but the State did not. The Public Utilities Commission (PUC) passed regulations guaranteeing the utility a healthy profit while the utility successfully bogged down feed-in tariffs in regulatory mire.

 Honolulu Harbor
The Aloha Tower Development Corp (ATDC) published a Request for Proposal (RFP) to develop Piers 5 & 6 in September 2002, during the final months of the Cayetano Administration. Within a month or so of the new Lingle administration, Dallas developer Kenneth Hughes and his UC Urban project was chosen.

A Development Agreement was signed in 2004. The ATDC Board approved the development rights for a mixed-use condo-hotel project in 2007. At one time a lei of green had been envisioned: Waikiki Beach, Ala Moana Park, Kewalo Basin, Kakaako Park, the Free Trade Zone, Piers 5 & 6, the Falls of Clyde and Aloha Tower. Along the way Aloha Tower was built but it was isolated from other economic activity and it suffered. UC Urban’s vision was broad.

By removing the Honolulu Power Plant, redesigning Nimitz Highway so that it would be safe and easy for pedestrians to get to the harbor area, building a rail stop and ferry stop at Aloha Tower, and financing it with a huge waterfront hotel, the area would be transformed. By 2009 the whole project had died a painful death. There were other dreams presented during those years. In 2005 HECO had informed the PUC that they had a 200MW shortfall on Oahu and they needed a 100MW biofuel peaking unit in Campbell Industrial Park.

The only intervenor in the regulatory proceedings, Life of the Land, proposed the use of ocean energy resources to meet all 200MW of need and also to produce additional MW so that Honolulu Power Plant could be torn down. In place of the downtown plant, Life of the Land proposed one level of partially below ground parking, with a passive park on top. Ku'oko'a plans to decommission the Honolulu Power Plant. They plan to redevelop the site as well as Piers 5 & 6.

Part of the site would be used to house their new international headquarters, other space would be used for a variety of open space and commercial activity including a hotel, fish market, farmers market, nightclubs, parking, a stop on the proposed rail line, etc.  

Geothermal Companies
In addition to acquiring Hawaiian Electric Industries, Ku'oko'a also wants to acquire Magma Energy Corp and Ormat Technology Inc. Ku'oko'a might be able to buyout both companies for $1.5-2.0B. The Magma Initial Public Offering in 2009 sold 66 million shares raising $87 million. The stock is currently selling at $1.38/share. Magma Energy Corp was founded in 2008 and owns two plants in Iceland with a capacity of 175MW, and a 23MW plant in Nevada.

For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2010, Magma Energy had assets of $199M, liabilities of $57M, revenue of $5M, gross profit of $1.7M. The stock trades on the Toronto Stock Exchange under the acronym MXY. Ormat Technology Inc (the owner of Puna Geothermal Ventures) has issued 45M shares of stock which is currently trading at $31/share. Ormat Technology Inc is a vertically integrated energy company focusing mostly on geothermal.

The stock is traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Twenty entities control 86% of its stock. The majority shareholder, with almost a 60% share, is the Israeli company Ormat Industries Ltd. (ORMT) which is listed on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE). Ormat is the leading vertically integrated geothermal power giant which explores, develops, builds, owns, operates, and maintains geothermal facilities.

Geothermal Energy
There are many geothermal advocates. Geothermal energy is nearly inexhaustible. The available resource is greater than the amount of oil the world has used and has left. A geothermal plant has a very small geographically footprint (MW/acre) compared to other energy sources. Geothermal produces continuous (baseload) power at a very low cost.

When done right geothermal produces minimal greenhouse gases. At the low end, the California Geysers produce electricity for 3-3.5 cents/kWhr, while some geothermal resources need 6-12 cents/kWhr. Credit Suisse (2009) calculated that geothermal power costs 3.6 cents/kWhr, versus 5.5 cents/kWhr for coal. Geothermal has a capacity factor (average output/maximum output) of 0.84 (nuclear is 0.90, wave energy is 0.6, wind is 0.4, solar is 0.20) Geothermal ranks fourth in U.S. renewable energy production: hydropower (72%), wind (15%), and biomass (8%), geothermal (4.6%), solar (0.3%). The Earth has 40,000,000MW of potential geothermal resources.

There are about 200 geothermal plants in the world, producing 11,000MW of geothermal energy. The US has about 77 plants which generates 30% of the geothermal energy in the world (3,000MW). Half of this is generated in the Geysers (72 miles north of San Francisco) while a sixth of it is generated in the Salton Sea area in south central California. Several states produce geothermal energy: California, Nevada, Oregon, Idaho, Arizona, Utah and Hawaii.

The leaders are California (2,605 MW) and Nevada (333 MW). The Philippines rank second in the use of geothermal (1,200 MW) The two major geothermal companies in the U.S. are Calpine and Ormat. There are two major air emission approaches: (1) venting geothermal gases into the atmosphere; and (2) re-injection of the steam into the Earth. Hawaii tried both approaches, venting in the early years until there was such a public outcry that they went with the second approach.

Geothermal steam can contain hydrogen sulfide (which has a bad odor of rotten eggs), dissolved salts and toxic elements such as boron, lead, and arsenic. Modern geothermal engineering techniques are able to cause earthquakes through a process called fracking (hydraulic fracturing) which seeks to fracture rocks 3-4 miles underground with explosives or pressurized water and then using steam generated to produce geothermal energy.  

Big Island Geothermal & Transmission Cable from Hawaii Island to Oahu
 Starting shortly after statehood, Hawaii began exploring the possibility of using geothermal energy to generate electricity. Hawaii envisioned building 500MW of generators on the Big Island and shipping the power to Oahu. The geothermal power plants would be built in Puna, overhead transmission lines would bring it to Kawaihae Harbor on the west side of the island, an undersea cable would bring it to an area of Maui, just south of Kihei.

The line would briefly come on shore, then go back off shore, pass between Molokai and Lanai and land in Waimanalo, in a new substation. Additional overhead transmission lines would be built between Waimanalo and Palolo.

The Hawaii Deep Water Cable Project came to an abrupt end in 1991 when Federal Judge David Ezra ended all federal expenditures, noting that money had been spent for 13 years on the project without an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS). This avoidance on an EIS was illegal under federal law. Other problems occurred due to geothermal. The State gave away part of the Puna Rainforest in exchange for lava rock. The developers tracked alien species into the forest and trampled on native practices. The new power plant had continual discharges into the air, including a 31-hour well blowout in 1991.

The Hawaii Supreme Court issued a landmark decision on the protection of Native Hawaiian rights. Ormat Technologies, Inc. acquired Puna Geothermal Venture (PGV) in 2004. The idea of geothermal powering the State never went away. An electric grid needs continuous power to constitute 2/3 of the electricity generated. For Hawaii, continuous power could come from oil, coal, biofuels, geothermal and ocean thermal. The first three cause global warming.

We can create biofuels from waste oil and this is a good use of a waste product, but supplying biofuels to power half of the electric grid would require a massive transformation and cause substantial emissions of greenhouse gases. Thus the State has two realistic options: geothermal and ocean thermal. Ted Peck noted that the way geothermal was originally done was wrong. He stated that “big business came in and bulldozed in an Avatar-like fashion," (Pacific Business News, October 11, 2010). Ku'oko'a plans to only build geothermal plants where there is community buy-in.  
The Internet
Ku’oko’a will spend $5B to install Smart Meters with broadband internet service to every ratepayer in the State. According to a survey by PCMag, Hawaii has the second slowest internet rate. Rates varied from 781 Kbps (Nevada) to 322 Kbps (New Mexico).

The average was 557 Kbps while Hawaii was 378 Kbps. “To track surf speeds, PCMag used a custom-designed SurfSpeed application that grabs pages from several popular Web sites to measure actual Internet surfing speed and pored through data from more than 17,000 unique IP addresses.” A Report on Internet Speeds in All 50 States:

A Project of Communications Workers of America (November 2010) found that “the United States ranks 25th in the world in average Internet connection speeds ...[while] Hawaii ranks 31st in the nation in internet speeds” with an internet speed of 3.4 megabits per second. Many web applications can be conducted at lower transfer rates (500 kbps – 1 mbps) including basic email, low quality video, web browsing and music streaming.

Video applications requires higher speeds: Medical file sharing & remote diagnosis (5 mbps – 10 mbps) to High Definition telemedicine, video, and gaming (100 mbps – 1 gbps) “Half (49 percent) of U.S. residents’ Internet connections fall below the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) minimum broadband speed standard of 4 megabits per second (mbps) download and 1 mbps upload. This is the minimum speed generally required for using today’s video-rich broadband applications and services, while retaining sufficient capacity for basic web browsing and e-mail.

Only 1 percent of U.S. Internet connections meet the FCC’s broadband speed goal for the year 2015 of 50 mbps download and 20 mbps upload.” The U.S. continues to lag far behind other countries. The United States ranks 25th in the world in average Internet connection speeds. In South Korea, the average download speed is 34.1 mbps, or 10 times faster than the U.S.

The U.S. trails Sweden at 22.2 mbps, the Netherlands at 20.7 mbps, Japan at 18 mbps, and even Romania at 20.3 mbps. Moreover, people in other countries have access to much faster networks. More than 90 percent of Japanese households have access to fiber-to-the-home networks capable of 100 mbps or greater in both directions.

According to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the average of advertised speeds offered by broadband providers in Japan was 107.7 mbps and in South Korea was 52.8 mbps. According to the OECD, the United States ranks 24th among industrialized nations in average advertised broadband download speed at 14.6 mbps.” There is a digital divide: “Nearly 100 million Americans do not have broadband at home. An estimated 14 to 24 million of these people do not even have access to broadband.

All too many Americans find themselves on the wrong side of a digital divide based on race, income, geography, and age.” There is a geographical divide: Rural areas in the US and Hawaii have lower rates than urban areas.  

The Name
Ku'oko'a has appropriated a Hawaiian word with strong meanings. This is bound to create tension. At the time of the overthrow of the Hawaii Kingdom in 1893, virtually all of the population except for a small subset of haole business interests, opposed the overthrow and favored the re-emergence of an independent Hawaiian nation. The Hawaiian Sovereignty Movement re-emerged over the past four decades. Ku'oko'a has special meanings. Ku'oko'a means independence, liberty, freedom; independent, free. La Ku'oko'a means Independence Day. Hƍ'ike no ke KĆ«'oko'a means Declaration of Independence. Ka Nupepa KĆ«'oko'a was the Independent Newspaper published in Honolulu (1861–1927). Ho'oku'oko'a means to establish independence, make independent. No one identified as being affiliated with Ku’oko’a Inc has any connection to Native Hawaiians nor has the group suggested any form of geothermal royalties to Native Hawaiians.  

Kauai
Ku'oko'a also wants to acquire Kauai Island Utility Coop (KIUC). They believe that a cable to Kauai will be difficult and integrating Kauai into the state network will be a money loser, however, they are seeking to offer the same package of renewable energy and broadband internet service to every electric ratepayer in the State. The Future Ku'oko'a wants to complete the deal by November 2011.

They want the new company to be an economic showcase for the 2011 Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum. During November, Hawaii will host the 2011 Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum. Attendees will include business leaders, heads of state, cabinet ministers, and leaders of international financial institutions such as the World Bank and the World Trade Organization. A total of 10,000 people are expected to attend.  

• Ku'oko'a can be contacted at freedom@kuokoa.com

 .

Ocean Swell Wind Generator

SUBHEAD: Using the physics of the blowhole to generate electricity for Hawaii in the ocean.  

By Henry Curtis on 14 January 2011 in Disappeared News -  
(http://www.disappearednews.com/2011/01/blowhole-energy.html)


 
Image above: Oceanlinx swell driven generator prototype at Port Kembla, near Sidney, Australia. From (http://www.mywindpowersystem.com/2009/09/ocean-wave-energy-alternative-energy-part-7/).

Some wave systems operate underwater. Others wiggle on the surface. Some use toxic substances. Many have broken down in the water. Get all of that out of your mind. Let us talk blowhole energy. A traditional blowhole is a cave along the ocean with a hole in its roof. When a wave reaches the shore its fills the cave with water and a water column is shot out of the hole. This is, in non-legalese, a land-based water-shooting blowhole.

By contrast, if the cave does not fill with water, an air column can shoot out of the hole. This could be called a land-based air-shooting blowhole. Offshore ocean-based platforms have similar phenomena. Picture any partially submerged container with the open end facing the oncoming waves. It could be a paper bag, a box, a container. As a swell arrives the water level in the container rises, as the swell recedes the water level falls.

Picture a small hole in the roof of the container, at the end away from the incoming swell. With each swell an air or water column is pushed out and then sucked back into the hole in the roof. A propeller is placed just above the opening.

As the air or water races by the propeller the propeller spins creating electricity. These could be called ocean-based air-shooting blowholes and ocean-based water-shooting blowholes. An Australian mathematician figured out how to spin the propeller in the same direction regardless of which way the air column is moving (in or out). This increases the efficiency of the unit. This is also simple.

The center of the propeller is solid and there are small spokes or toggles on the side. They move as wind hits them. So the center always spins in the same direction and the paddles on the edge move back and forth to allow wind pushing on them to pass by. A fancy name for a variable height water column is an oscillating water column.

An oscillating water column energy conversion system has only a single moving part. For air-shooting blowholes the moving part is above the water line. For water-shooting blowholes the moving part is sometimes above the water line. There are no oils, no toxics, and no contaminants. The system has been commercially tested off Australia, and will be built off Maui.

The Maui system will be a single small unit since the utility can accept small but not large proposals outside of the new Public Utilities Commission approved competitive bidding process. Dr. Tom Denniss and his company Oceanlinx (formerly Energetech) has won numerous awards. It was a Top Ten finisher in 2006 for the International Academy of Science's Outstanding Technology of the Year. European Venture Capitalists has found that it is the most cost effective wave energy system in the world.

The Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) found that Oahu-based wave energy conversion systems could provide 100% of Oahu’s energy needs. The blowhole energy systems can produce net power (after accounting for the power to run the system) with a six inch ocean swell. The physical structure rises about 30 feet above sea level. Each unit can produce 2MW of power. A field of several units located 3 miles off the coast could be tied to the grid with a single undersea transmission line.

The use of horizontal directional drilling would allow the line to be built below the beach and coral reefs, and then to rest on the bottom of the ocean the rest of the way to the wave energy system. The system can be built in Hawaii rather than imported, thus increasing the number of local jobs. The location of the proposed unit is about half a mile offshore from and east of Pauwela Point Lighthouse.

The transmission line would come ashore at Kuiaha Bay (Shark Bay). See also: http://spectrum.ieee.org/energy/renewables/this-renewable-energy-source-is-swell http://www.science.org.au/events/publiclectures/re/denniss.html

[IB Publisher's note: The illustration above was in an article on wave energy that described some advantages and disadvantages of floating wind generators moved by ocean swell.
Advantages • The energy is free – no fuel is needed and no waste is produced • Inexpensive to operate and maintain • Can produce a significant amount of energy.
Disadvantages • Depends on the waves – variable energy supply • Reeds a suitable site, where waves are consistently strong • Some designs generate noise • Must be able to withstand very rough weather • Costly to develop • Visual impact if above water or on shore • Can disturb or disrupt marine life – including changes in the distribution and types of marine life near the shore • Poses a possible threat to navigation from collisions due to the low profile of the wave energy devices above the water, making them undetectable either by direct sighting or by radar • May interfere with mooring and anchorage lines with commercial and sport-fishing • May degrade scenic ocean front views from wave energy devices located near or on the shore, and from onshore overhead electric transmission lines.] .

KIUC Wailua Dam Plans

SUBHEAD: Small scale slowing the flow of water is a virtue. Large scale hydroelectric dams on Kauai are abominations.  

By Juan Wilson on 17 January 2011 for Island Breath- 
(http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2011/01/kiuc-wailua-dam-plans.html)

 
Image above: Damming a rocky stream as example of rain harvesting. From (http://www.harvestingrainwater.com/imagesvideoaudio/image-gallery/assortment-of-water-harvesting-images).

According to the philosophy of permaculture, slowing the flow of water over the land is a virtuous thing to do. That would include gathering rainwater off the roof as well as creating berms along the contours of the land and adding ponds on swift flowing streams with small dams (think beavers). The idea is that these efforts should increase biomass (life) and diversity as well as reducing erosion and soil runoff. Needless to say, any such attempts at slowing water on your own property should follow studying techniques and examples that pertain.

Certainly, modifying a stream should only be done in consultation with the affected community of that stream. Getting the advice of experienced permaculture practitioners goes without saying. One of the easiest achievable water slowing permaculture efforts the individual home owner can accomplish is to collect and store rainwater from the roof. This should be done off a tile or metal roof if the water is to be for drinking or food preparation.

My grandmother used to use a 50 gallon ceramic cistern at the corner of her home fed by the rain gutter downspout. She used the water for her laundry tub. Historically on Kauai there was been a tremendous loss of soil (and waste/contamination of water) as a result of the sugarcane industry. Today GMO corn has replaced sugarcane, and the erosion and contamination continues. If permaculture techniques of slowing water were brought to bear on Kauai agland this island would be transformed. Food security could be achieved, erosion reduced, soil rebuilding begun, and reforestation of wastelands possible. That is not what KIUC's plans to do with its hydroelectric studies.

Their plan is to continue an affordable American Dream of suburban consumption. The scale and activity of their hydroelectric dreams are unaffordable and will have only damaging affect on the ecosystem of their locale. KIUC's business partner, Free Flow Power Corporation, of Gloucester, Massachusetts, is seeking a permit from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to explore siting hydroelecric dams on Kauai. After reading Judy Daltons email and Andy Parx article (reproduced in part below) revealing that the Wailua River was a targeted site I wrote FERC the following;
Do not permit Free Flow Power a preliminary permit application for the Wailua Power Project for Kauai Island Utility Co-op (KIUC). We do not need another hydro-power plant on Kauai. As it came into being (2002) KIUC agreed to pay Citizens Communication Co. $215 million for the assets of Kauai Electric. That was the first mistake. A ridiculous price that burdened the "Co-Op from day one with a debt that will never be paid off.
They have locked us into into a debt obligation that assumed and relied on continued economic growth for decades into the future. The bursting housing bubble, peak oil and peak food ended that dream. Now KIUC thrashes to find a gimmick to keep up with that old General Electric motto "Progress is our most important product." Nonsense!
We need our power utility co-op to help finance residential (and small business) solar PV projects. KIUC has squandered members money and avoided facing the reality of the future. Their perception of progress is to continue on a "business as usual" consumption model that will inevitably lead to greater damage to the Kauai's ecosystem and continue to fail to serve its members.
KIUC have had several bad business ideas. One was to grow sugarcane as fuel. KIUC is oblivious to the reality that we need to grow our own food more than we need to grow biofuel for electric power generation. KIUC is an abysmal failure as a cooperative power utility with no insight or planning that will alleviate the pain we on Kauai will experience in the next year or two as oil prices again reach the levels of the summer 2008. The real solutions here are rather simple.
1) Promote demand destruction (50% reduction for starters).
2) Enable widespread distributed generation (using solar PV and some wind)

3) Accept system resilience over reliability.

4) Implement a 5 year plan to get off diesel fuel for electricity.
The idea of damming the Wailua River to fulfill the imagined needs of pre-collapse suburban America would be laughable if it were not so tragic. Talk about bad ideas. This island is way too fragile to consider using geo-engineering projects like major dams to satisfy air-conditioning loads and our Chevy Volt recharging expectations.
Any investment in these pipe-dreams by the idiots running KIUC is a waste of our precious treasure that could be focused on those things within our grasp. And people wonder why our electricity is the most expensive in the country. The best thing that could happen to KIUC is that they go bankrupt and the county takes over their operation as a public utility. Then we could get down to the business of planning for the downsizing our the current grid and the affordable alternatives that are achievable in the real future we face.

Excerpt from Rocky Horror By Andy Parx on 13 January 2011 for PNN - (http://parxnewsdaily.blogspot.com/2011/01/rocky-horror.html)


...A press release we received today from Kaua`i Island Utilities Co-op (which apparently does not appear at their web site)- notable for the fact that it fails to mention the location of the project- says that KIUC
this week signed a memorandum of agreement with Free Flow Power Corporation, which will allow the two firms to jointly explore the development of hydroelectric energy projects on Kauai. And as if designed to double us over with laughter it announces that: KIUC's involvement will ensure that any such development will engage the community in broad discussions about appropriate technologies, locations and the wide range of environmental, cultural, economic and other concerns. “This is the first step in a lengthy public process to explore the viability of several hydroelectric projects. Our members have long recognized the hydroelectric potential on Kauai, and we feel now we have the financial resources and the proven developer to move forward,” said David Bissell, acting CEO at KIUC. “We hope to create a climate that insures an opportunity for our members to participate in an open and transparent process of evaluating hydroelectric opportunities.”
Apparently the first step in transparency is failing to mention where the projects will be located and how to present testimony if you might happen to still oppose damming Wailua River like you did the other at least three times they tried to do it. But it wasn’t like KIUC was just putting out a press release in the name of openness and good community relations. We don’t know for sure but their hand might have been forced by a widely circulated email earlier this week from Judy Dalton of the Kaua`i Sierra Club who saw the legal notice in the newspaper, did a little snooping and sent out the alarm saying that:
Wailua Falls, one of Kauai's most visited natural treasures, will be in for some changes if this permit for a dam is approved. There are more environmentally-sound options to harness hydro power. Please read and send comments to keep the river intact and the falls free-flowing. She describes the project, taken from the legal notice, writing A public notice was posted in the Garden Island (11/16/2010) with a request for a "preliminary permit" to study the feasibility of a Wailua River Hydroelectric Project. The project is to make electricity and includes: "a 503-foot-long, 23-foot-high earth-filled, roller-compacted-concrete dam creating a 35-acre reservoir with storage capacity of approximately 430 acre-feet" It also includes a 20 foot high intake structure, fish screens, a closure gate, a penstock, a powerhouse of 60 X 40 feet, channel to return water to the river, (below the falls) a switchyard with transformer, and almost 2 mile long transmission line to the Lydgate substation. No mention is made of roads and other changes that would be necessary. "The estimated annual generation of the Wailua project would be 20.7 gigawatt-hours." So what’s wrong with that? Judy writes that: Such a project will remove and reduce the water flow over the falls, create a large reservoir, cut up the land to make roads and other structures. Dams change the chemical, physical, and biological processes of river ecosystems. They alter free-flowing systems by reducing river levels, blocking the flow of nutrients, changing water temperature and oxygen levels, and impeding or preventing fish migration. Dams and reservoir are being decommissioned all over the mainland because of problems occurring which initially were unforeseen. But don’t we need renewable power and so don’t we need to dam the river to get power from it? The answer, according to Dalton is a resounding “no” saying Harnessing power from the Wailua River could be done by a "run of the stream" project far upstream with NO diversions, NO interference with the fall themselves and NO man-made reservoir. Click here to read about Run-of-the-River or Stream hydro power...
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Culture Disease with a Cure

SUBHEAD: A new narrative - one that redefines what it means to be “a good man or woman of our kind” - is emerging.  

By Jan Lundgren on 27 November 2011 in Culture Change -  
(http://www.culturechange.org/cms/content/view/686/65/)

 
Image above: Public Broadcasting System logo filled with private corporate logos. Mashup by Juan Wilson.

When Nestlé buys mineral water companies and mass markets the "product" in plastic, solely for fantastic profits, this trend cannot be reversed by laws. Laws against wrongdoing and greed at the top are hard to pass and harder to enforce. "Owning" watersheds was so foreign to the native Americans that the European invaders reaped an advantage we can call the warped mind disengaged from heart. Yet, in the long run, which culture is sustainable? Only one of them respects natural laws that, among a few other basics, revere water as the source of life for all.

An opposing reaction to industrial take-over, if it isn't to be hopelessly piecemeal, comes down to a cultural change. This is much more rare and systemic than reforms. "Difficult" isn't quite the right word, but "inevitable" must be, when culture change encompasses and assures so much.
When the big entities take over the small and the good, and when big-that's-bad becomes known as good, what kind of a world do we have when bad is good and good is bad? Orwellian and most unstable.

Condoning this is acceptance of the supposed just course of Western Civilization. But some of us cannot continue to revel in modernity, such as the often questionable wonders of technology and other features of anthropocentric culture. It all goes together: the lifestyle of consuming, enjoying endless convenience, amenities for entertainment and transitory pleasure, individual isolation and alienation (part of divide and conquer) -- and the drive to extinction.

Either you can get behind this news or you cannot: "U.S. Corporate Profits Hit Record in Third Quarter" (New York Times, Nov. 23). More and more people cannot stomach it, even when such news seemingly negates concerns over peak oil, climate destabilization, and infinite funny-money from Wall Street and the Federal Reserve. You have opinions and may be alarmed, but what say do you have?

The choice is to keep your head down, hoping the trough is kept full enough for the growing number of mouths, or, stand aside in resistance, picking up acorns or diving in dumpsters. I have personally tended toward the latter. Truth is sustenance. Oh, and send money of course.

Can the resisters be swallowed up like the business competition has been? Yes, swallowing up or buying off is a prime tool of the Establishment. There are many other means that range in severity and overtness. Given this winnowing out of the competition (not so much of business but of minds), the hope for mass change is for a critical mass of participants. The first purpose of the Establishment is to discourage this. Maintaining the power structure, as it pushes life over the ecological cliff and whips our hard-working backs in the process -- playing with our minds with images of sex and wealth -- is the name of the game from the top on down.

The most effective swallowing up of the competition has been corporate media consolidation in the last couple of decades. Gotta love that Democrat, Bubba Slick Willy. Six entities now own almost every major outlet in the U.S.; this reaches abroad. The independent outlets claiming to represent the taxpayer have dubious names for their acronyms: NPR is called National Propaganda Radio and PBS is the Petroleum Broadcasting System. As children in the U.S. we were taught that freedom of the press and of free speech is perhaps the main foundation of our democracy.

But we've lost it, and carry on somewhat aimlessly to the cliff. We march like sheep, if sheep could march, hearing the megaphone of the corporate state's message: "Fear terrorists! You get to vote! Freedom is to shop as dutiful workers! Tough luck for the poor and sick, we're the greatest nation! Don't worry about the environmental crisis when we'll always have technological progress!"

Those of us with a radical critique -- whether bitter foes of the system and/or the positive-sounding activists -- don't have a loud alternative megaphone. The cost of magazine production and distribution, and paper from trees, went up and up so that the ownership of a printing press -- defined wryly as enabling a true, free press -- has become almost completely impractical. The advantages of a magazine in one's hand, over electronic screens, include low-tech access, tactile experience, low-cost and efficient sharing, and inserting scents (although only done by corporate purveyors of petrochemicals).

When left-brain approaches to opposing the false values of our artificial world don't get traction -- i.e., by forming a growing movement -- and are dependent on money and other rules of the dominant game, it must be time for a new day of the right-hemisphere of the brain. This means our hearts participate with our minds to find and offer the true path for humanity and the survival of species. There is not one "true path," but can we agree on sustainability and mutual respect while sharing a finite planet?

Art, music, street theater, and joyful rejection of globalism and consumption promise everything. They even deliver it. I have proposed a strategy several times publicly for many years: if enough people don't buy new cars, and just buy used ones if they must, this will keep money local and starve the corporate economy within months, so as to bring it to its knees. Yes, jobs will be lost -- as they will anyway as petrocollapse intensifies. But with more mutual aid and focus, we can hasten and maximize the meaningful work needed globally for resilient neighborhoods and self-reliant communities.

Let's say we don't try to achieve it until forced by collapse. But if things somehow go in a better direction, even local autonomy can be regained in far greater measure (if that has appeal). With industrialism's habit of swallowing-up coming to an historic end, we may reconnect intimately with the interdependent and balanced universe that appears to want to be our friend (we're alive, right?). May you tread upon this path with loved ones and with joy and good health.


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Another Big Ugly Thing is Here!

SUBHEAD: Koloa Landing opens Phase One of residential resort with less than 50% units sold in range between $1 - $2 million.  

By Juan Wilson on 16 January 2011 for Island Breath -
(http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2011/01/another-big-ugly-thing-is-here.html)


Image above: Soggy lawn on a rainy day a Koloa Landing. From TGI article below.


Koloa Landing Phase One is one of only a couple of massive development projects that targeted Poipu/Koloa and survived the financial crisis in 2008. At one point there were dust-screen fences around eleven such speculations all going at the same time.

Then the bubble burst and the greedy got fleeced. Too bad Koloa Landing got as far as completing Phase One, as it was one of the uglier developments proposed. Below is a segment of an article we did in 2007 on the subject.

By Juan Wilson on 28 June 2007 Image above: Brochure cover promoting Koloa Landing at Poipu Beach condo project.
This falls into the "Just when you thought it couldn't get any worse" department. I was shuffling through my junk mail today, to separate out the bills, and found an envelope that looked like woven grass. I popped it open to find a fancy fourfold brochure in full color. A lovely local gal walking the shorebreak towards a dream-like sunset. The title "Savor Every Moment". Inside were several shots of under 30's having fun in the sun. Over a local teenage girl surfing was emblazoned:
"The more you return, the deeper your experience will be."
Someone had spent a few bucks on this "Dog & Pony Show" to characterize the southshore as such a magical place. Well it won't be magical after they build this monster. Here is the first salvo of ugliness I saw.

Oh my god! A wall of hurricane-proof concrete four-story high condos as densely packed as the fire safety regulations would allow. In the fine print I found that S & P Destination Properties is offering this nightmare up.

Koloa Landing Opens Phase One  

By Vanessa Van Voorhis on 16 January 2011 for the Garden Island - 
(http://thegardenisland.com/business/local/article_a1b52020-213d-11e0-b91a-001cc4c002e0.html)



After more than three years of phase-one development, Koloa Landing at Po‘ipu Wyndham Grand Resort condominiums sales staff have announced the official launch of the residential community.

“We are extremely excited about opening the resort and delivering a world-class development to our homeowners,” developer representative Todd Hadley said.

“We have in place an experienced construction team that understands our expectation for quality and has delivered it, and we look forward to becoming Kaua‘i’s most prestigious coastline address.”

The development’s first resident, a part-timer, moved in last November, and a “handful” of others have already closed escrow.

“We just started phase-one closings with just under 40, which is less than half of what we have available,” he said.

When the project began in October 2007, the development had signed 51 sales contracts; but in the recession that followed shortly after, many buyers backed out.

While some new south shore developments paused construction during the economic crises, Hadley said, “We kept on building. We knew we were in for tough times, but we never put the brakes on.

“We had an opportunity purchase the land back in 2004. Twenty-five acres of fee-simple land is unique in itself, and we decided to run with it. We felt there was a demand for this product.”

The phase one price and availability chart shows a range from $1.09 million for a two-bedroom, two-bath condo with 1,098 square feet of livable space, to $2.15 million for a 1,872 square-foot, three-bedroom, three-bath unit.

Marketing manager Jennifer Cole-Conner said prices average $1,000 per square foot, and homeowners association dues range between $1,200 and $3,300 per month, or $1.50 per square foot.

Phase one also includes two lagoon swimming pools, a fitness center, a deli-style market and a lobby area with an open lounge. The developer’s cost for the first phase is approximately $150 million, Hadley said. Construction is partially financed.

Phase two development recently began with the excavation of the main pool, and will include two more buildings, 29 condominiums, a pool-side bar and grill, spa and meeting center for special events. The target completion date is December 2012.

Phase two condo prices range between $1.13 million for a 1,346 square-foot two-bedroom to $3.45 million for a 2,980 square-foot three bedroom with study.

Koloa Landing is a multi-phase project that has a master plan of 19 buildings, 322 condos and four swimming pools. Hadley said there will be a phase three, four, five and so forth.

Azul Hospitality Group of San Diego was brought on board a year ago to manage condos that owners may choose to rent.

By branding the development with the Wyndham name, Azul is able to advertise rentals as hotel accommodations through sites like Expedia, which now lists the average per-night stay as $259 to $359.

Azul hired 47 employees in their initial hiring process and is expected to hire additional staff in the next few months.

Koloa Landing is owned by Po‘ipu Beach Villas LLC, which is a partnership of three real estate development companies. The group purchased the 25-acre parcel of land from the Knudsen family trust in 2004 for approximately $12 million.

The architectural firm Group 70 International was hired for the design of the development. A few of the firm’s other resort projects include many of Waikiki’s Hilton Hawaiian Village renovations and additions, Waikoloa Kings’ Land Timeshares on the Big Island, Kea Lani Hotel in Maui and the Lodge at Ko‘ele on Lana‘i.

Koloa Landing’s grand opening is scheduled for March 16, with celebration and entertainment.
See also:
Island Breath: Yet Another Big Ugly Thing is Coming Here 6/28/07
Island Breath: Kauai Lagoons- Annals of False Advertizing 3/18/2008
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