GOP and Trump Wrong on Environmental Protection!

Discussion in 'Environment & Conservation' started by Shiva_TD, May 12, 2017.

  1. Shiva_TD

    Shiva_TD Progressive Libertarian Past Donor

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    http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/fe...wetland/ar-BBB2sX5?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartanntp

    The problem is they don't clean up the spills completely because they can't. It reaches a point where the clean-up will cause more damage than the damage that remains by not cleaning up the spill. We saw that with the Duke Energy coal ash spill in the Dan River where only about 5% of the toxic and radioactive coal ash was actually removed from the river bed.

    We need strict regulations that prevent these spills from happening in the first place but the GOP opposes those regulations. President Trump, within days of taking office, ordered the approval of the Keystone Pipeline and the Dakota Access Pipeline, as well as expediting the approval of more pipelines across the nation. Scott Pruitt, an opponent of environmental protection, was appointed to head the EPA.

    Partial clean-ups just aren't enough. The destruction of the environment must be prevented from happening in the first place.

    The GOP has been highly opposed to regulations to protect the environment

    Trump administration openly oppose protecting the environment and the appointment of Scott Pruitt,
     
  2. AFM

    AFM Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    A pipeline is much more reliable and environmentally sound than rail and truck transport.
     
  3. Zorro

    Zorro Well-Known Member

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    I'd be happy with the EPA returning its focus to real environmental clean up, it isn't like we don't have plenty of old waste sites to clean up. We still have massive old mines from the CA Gold rush, filled with polluted water mixed with mining chemicals like mercury and hazardous waste sites left over from the development of nuclear weapons in rotting drums outside of Seattle, but that's boring to the left, they want to regulate Carbon Dioxide!

    As for the DAP, Boom Times Returning?

    BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) -- There are hundreds more jobs than takers in the heart of North Dakota's oil patch. Finding a hotel room, parking space or table at a restaurant is no longer easy.

    More than two years after the state's unprecedented oil bonanza fizzled to a lull, North Dakota - the nation's No. 2 oil producer behind Texas - is experiencing a sort of boomlet that has pushed daily production back above 1 million barrels daily.

    "There is a long-term optimism that was not here just a year ago," said Williston Republican Sen. Brad Bekkedahl, whose western North Dakota district is in the epicenter of the state's oil-producing region.

    Industry officials and others say the uptick comes from a bump in crude prices, regulatory certainty with the more drill-friendly Trump administration, better technology, and the prospect of nearly half of the state's crude coursing through the disputed Dakota Access Pipeline, which could open markets abroad where top prices are typically fetched.

    The $3.8 billion pipeline - expected to be fully operating next month - opens up the possibility for North Dakota oil to be sold on the world market, where industry officials say it could earn several dollars more per barrel. Shippers also can save about $3 per barrel moving the oil by pipeline rather than using the mile-long trains that have carried North Dakota crude to the Gulf Coast since 2008, industry officials say.

    "We can compete with the world," said Ness, whose group represents several hundred companies working in North Dakota's oil patch.

    At capacity, the Dakota Access pipeline will be able to transport half of the daily crude production from North Dakota's Bakken oil fields to Illinois. From there, the crude will be put into another pipeline to the Gulf Coast, where it can be used at refineries or loaded on tankers to overseas markets. Trains will still be used to take North Dakota crude to other places in the U.S.

    The price for North Dakota sweet crude has risen about $10 a barrel from a year ago and about 50 drill rigs were working in the state last week, up more than 80 percent from the same time last year. Daily production is up more than 6 percent from the worst of the slump.

    As oil prices slid, companies worked to improve efficiencies, including the time it takes to drill a well in North Dakota. Ness said a well now can be drilled in about 12 days, compared with about 20 just a couple of years ago.

    The increase in drilling activity has created a big workforce shortage. Phil Davis, a spokesman for Job Service North Dakota, said 500 more jobs are listed in the Williston-area than one year ago. And they're not just oil-related jobs.

    "Every business on Main Street needs staff," Davis said.

    The U.S. Department of Energy says increased drilling will boost crude production this year and next, with a projection of 10 million barrels daily in 2018, up about 1 million barrels from last year.

    Margaret Coleman, a geologist and analyst with the agency, said much of the growth is expected to come from Texas, though North Dakota is expected to remain above 1 million barrels over the next two years. The two states account for about half of U.S. crude oil production.

    Gov. Doug Burgum acknowledged the state faced challenges during the past boom, but "from a regulator standpoint, we are smarter than we were." The Republican governor said a strong global demand for oil is good for his state.

    "There isn't enough supply of renewables to take over for oil and gas anytime in the next couple of decades," Burgum said. "So there's a long run ahead here."

    Money throughout the world, coming to the US.

    http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/storie...ME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2017-05-13-10-34-16
     
  4. AFM

    AFM Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    We actually have all the clean air and water regulations that we need from the 70's.

    And please keep the EPA out of those mines - remember the Animus River in Colorado ??
     
  5. AGWisFAKEsillyBABYKILLERS

    AGWisFAKEsillyBABYKILLERS Well-Known Member

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    Oilfield companies are hiring, go get you some good jobs guys!!
    Make 75k+ your first year!!

    Thank you Mr. Trump!!
     
    Last edited: May 13, 2017
    Zorro likes this.

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