Source:
AOL News<snip>
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration scientists announced that 74 percent of the oil that escaped BP's Macondo well had either evaporated or been burned, skimmed, siphoned into ships from the wellhead, or broken up by a chemical dispersant released into the Gulf by BP. The White House expressed a "high degree of confidence" in the findings.
But in the parishes on the sole of Louisiana's boot, where they have battled BP, government bureaucrats, oil, bad weather and recalcitrant equipment every day since the oil first began slithering into the marshes in May, the news of the disappearing oil was greeted with skepticism -- and fresh worries.
"If only 25 percent of the oil is left, it must be all in St. Bernard Parish, because we're finding new oil every day," parish president Craig Taffaro told AOL News.
There's also this simple math: If NOAA's numbers are right, that still leaves 1 million barrels of oil at large. On its own, that amounts to a spill four times the size of the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill in Prince William Sound -- the worst in U.S. history, until the Deepwater Horizon disaster easily topped it.
Read more:
http://www.aolnews.com/gulf-oil-spill/article/remaining-gulf-spill-still-bigger-than-exxon-valdez/19581631
The figures for the disappearing oil break down like this:
* about 25 percent evaporated or dissolved
* about 17 percent captured at the wellhead
* about 8 percent skimmed or burned off
* about 8 percent broken down by chemical dispersants
* about 16 percent dispersed naturally in the water
Seems like pie-in-the-sky guesses. Even with all the guessing, isn't this double counting?: 25% evaporated or dissolved; 16% dispersed naturally