[quote]Just how much is a dead pelican worth? BP is about to find out. ..."/>

REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Someone asked about dead birds...

POSTED BY: NIKI2
UPDATED: Friday, May 21, 2010 07:17
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Friday, May 21, 2010 7:17 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Quote:

Just how much is a dead pelican worth? BP is about to find out.


As the owner of the still-leaking oil well in the Gulf of Mexico, the oil giant will pay billions of dollars in damages, much of which will compensate for the birds, fish, mammals and plants that are killed by the accident

Exxon paid nearly a billion dollars in damages into a wildlife conservation fund following the 1989 Valdez disaster, roughly a quarter of the company's entire tab for the spill.

"What BP might pay could be much higher," said Linwood Pendleton, director of the Ocean and Coastal Policy program at Duke University's Nicholas Institute.

Hundreds of biologists, rangers, and other wildlife experts have been dispatched to take inventory along the Gulf Coast. The official tally is tiny compared to the Valdez, but that's not the whole story.

Government wildlife experts said Tuesday the spill has killed 156 sea turtles and 12 dolphins as well.

The Valdez disaster killed between 350,000 and 600,000 birds, along with thousands of sea otters and other marine creatures.

Where the Gulf oil is going
But experts say just as many animals are at risk in the Gulf. This disaster is still in its early stages; oil from the Valdez still lingers on the beaches of Prince William Sound. And unlike the Valdez, the BP spill happened 40 miles offshore, which means that a lot of the dead wildlife will end up on the ocean floor and can't be tracked.

"What concerns us most is the animals we can't see," Rowan Gould, acting director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, said during a press conference earlier this week. "They are foraging the same waters that are inundated with oil right now."

Fortunately, the government has a system in place to put a dollar figure on dead wildlife.

For example, if BP's oil spill kills 400 brown pelicans, wildlife experts will then look to replace 400 brown pelicans, said Roger Helm, head of environmental quality at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

They may do this, said Helm, by finding another colony of brown pelicans along the Gulf Coast that is threatened by predators - say, rats.

Wildlife experts will then calculate how much money it will cost to kill enough rats in order to permit the pelican population to survive, and to grow by 400. That dollar figure will be billed to BP will get, said Helm.

This approach can be used to calculate the cost of replacing plants and beaches as well.

If the spill makes three acres of wetlands unproductive, then the government will create three acres of wetlands elsewhere in the Gulf with a series of dams and dredging. If a beach is inaccessible for fisherman, then BP will have to pay to build a boardwalk so a nearby beach can be used instead.

Duke's Pendleton said that's a key reason BP (BP) may pay more than Exxon (XOM, Fortune 500).

"People actively use wildlife in the Gulf. They go fishing, hunting, bird watching," he said. Prince William Sound, in contrast, was relatively deserted.

http://money.cnn.com/2010/05/21/news/economy/bp_wildlife/index.htm?hpt
=T1


The loss of the sea otters was devastating to us; we've fought so hard to keep fishermen from killing them off the Monterey Coast, which finally took hold when they made the otters a tourist attraction. There are only two populations of them off the US Coast, and to lose that many is horrific, especially as their species doesn't recover that easily. What's to come in the Gulf, I shudder to think.



"I'm just right. Kinda like the sun rising in the east and the world being round...its not a need its just the way it is." The Delusional "Hero", 3/1/10

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