“Louisiana, a center of the oil, gas and chemical industries, "was known for its very weak environmental enforcement regulations," Kaufman said, and there are a number of landfills and storage areas containing "thousands of tons" of hazardous material to be leaked and spread. "On top of that, you have dead bodies that are going to start to decompose, along with the material that was in industrial and household discharge, sewage, gasoline and waste oil from gas stations," he added. "You've got a witches' brew of contaminated water."
Given New Orleans's desperate straits, recovery teams will not be able to do anything with the toxic mess except pump it into the Gulf of Mexico, ensuring that the contamination will spread to a larger area, he said. "There's just no other place for it."
Authorities will be monitoring levels of water toxicity along the coastline for years: "There is no magic chemical that you can put in the Gulf to make heavy metals or benzene go away. You're stuck with it."
"http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/31/AR2005083102758_3.html"
That string of swamp, wetlands, and islands trailing southeast from New Orleans into the Gulf of Mexico is a “breakpoint” for gulf currents. To the west, the Yucatan current flows on past the Texas coast down into Mexico. To the east, the Florida current flows on to Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida.
http://oceancurrents.rsmas.miami.edu/caribbean/loop-current.htmlI live near the Alabama coast, 10 miles inland. I wonder what this toxic stew will do to our fishing, shrimping, crabbing, oystering industries? And what will it do to our biggest money-maker of all, tourism?
And all because we invaded a country that was no threat to us $$$, cut taxes for people who needed no tax cuts $$$, and didn’t fund the levee projects in New Orleans $$$.
The rule of unintended consequences.
For want of a nail, a shoe was lost...