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Environmental groups welcome Obama oil freeze

Free iPhone application to report oil from Gulf spill
Washington (AFP) May 27, 2010 - A team of software developers has created a free iPhone program that allows members of the public to report the presence of oil from the ruptured well in the Gulf of Mexico. "Oil Reporter" was developed by CrisisCommons, an international volunteer network of technical and business professionals which has also created tools to help with relief efforts following the Haiti earthquake. "Oil Reporter enables people to help with the recovery effort by using real-time check-ins to report what they're seeing on the ground," CrisisCommons said. "Users can upload photos and videos, report oil sightings, harmed wildlife sightings and much more," CrisisCommons said in a statement. CrisisCommons, which has set up a website at Oilreporter.org, said the data collected using the application will be mapped and managed by San Diego State University's Visualization Center.

"We want people to share what they see and to allow that information to be shared with everyone," CrisisCommons said. "We believe that if people share what they see and that information can be placed on a map, it can help organizations and communities with their response efforts." The Oil Reporter application, which is also available for mobile phones running Google's Android operating system, provides phone numbers on where to report oiled beaches, wildlife as well as volunteer information links. Google-owned YouTube, meanwhile, was urging users of the video-sharing website to upload their suggestions on how to stop the flow of oil from the well and clean up the damage left by the disaster. As of Thursday afternoon, more than 15,300 people had submitted more than 7,300 suggestions. BP was attempting to plug the well on Thursday as new data showed it was the worst oil spill in US history, surpassing the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster in Alaska.
by Staff Writers
Los Angeles (AFP) May 27, 2010
Environmental activists campaigning for a halt on Arctic oil exploration welcomed President Barack Obama's decision to halt planned drilling in two regions off the coast of Alaska.

A coalition of groups led by the Alaska Wilderness League had been lobbying for the suspension of Shell Oil's proposed exploratory drilling in the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas, due to begin off the coast of Alaska in July.

Those projects were placed on hold Thursday as Obama unveiled tough moves to suspend new drilling and exploration following the Gulf of Mexico disaster.

"Together with people on the Arctic Slope, we extend our gratitude and thanks to President Obama and Secretary Salazar for their decision today to suspend Shell Oil's plans for drilling in the Arctic Ocean this summer," said Cindy Shogan, Executive Director of Alaska Wilderness League.

"We look forward to working with them to make sure that any development in these pristine waters is only allowed to proceed when it can be done safely," she added in a statement.

Activists have said the remote nature of the proposed exploratory drilling site, sub-zero temperatures and gale-force winds would be formidable obstacles to any potential clean-up operation.

Environmental campaigners have said it would be almost impossible to mount the kind of clean-up witnessed in the Gulf of Mexico, describing the Arctic as one of the most remote and extreme environments on Earth.

"The Arctic environment absolutely could not stand an oil spill like the one we're now seeing in the Gulf of Mexico -- any spill, in fact, would have devastating effects on Arctic wildlife, and it's clear that we couldn't clean it up," said Richard Charter, Senior Policy Advisor at Defenders of Wildlife.

A spill in the Arctic similar to the Deepwater Horizon disaster could also wreak havoc with the region's Alaskan Native communities and unique wildlife, activists say.

Rebecca Nolan, Alaska Director for the Center for Biological Diversity, said the suspension of drilling was a "tentative first step in the right direction" which she hoped would lead to a permanent moratorium.

"What polar bears need now is a permanent ban on the dirty, dangerous offshore drilling in the Arctic that threatens their very survival," Nolan said in a statement.



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FROTH AND BUBBLE
Singapore closes popular beaches after oil spill
Singapore (AFP) May 27, 2010
Emergency crews on Thursday rushed to clean up popular public beaches stained by an oil slick on the eve of Singapore's summer school holidays. A pungent chocolate-coloured sludge marred the seawater and sand in parts of the East Coast Park after crude spilled from a tanker damaged in a collision on Tuesday in the Singapore Strait slipped out of a floating cordon. Officials said that mos ... read more







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