Repubs have no respect for animals.

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  • Nickdfresh
    SUPER MODERATOR

    • Oct 2004
    • 49565

    #76
    Originally posted by monkeythe
    Let's not forget that the price of gas includes tax. I live on the border of NY/NJ. It is at least 50 cents a gallon cheaper in NJ where I am forced to have full service as opposed to NY where I pay 50 cents more for self-service. I wish that we knew what the real price of gas was and how much are hidden taxes.
    Not nearly as much as in Europe.

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    • DrMaddVibe
      ROTH ARMY ELITE
      • Jan 2004
      • 6686

      #77
      .
      http://i185.photobucket.com/albums/x...auders1zl5.gif
      http://i24.photobucket.com/albums/c4...willywonka.gif

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      • FORD
        ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

        • Jan 2004
        • 59598

        #78
        Eat Us And Smile

        Cenk For America 2024!!

        Justice Democrats


        "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

        Comment

        • LoungeMachine
          DIAMOND STATUS
          • Jul 2004
          • 32576

          #79
          How Much Oil Is Under the Arctic Refuge?

          According to a study updated by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) in 2000, using the newest data available, there is a 95% chance of finding only 1.9 billion barrels (BBO) of economically recoverable oil and a 50% chance of finding 5.3 billion barrels of oil. This sounds like a lot, until you consider that Americans use 19 million barrels of oil each day, or 7 billion barrels of oil per year. The USGS concluded that -- given America’s current rate of usage -- there is in all likelihood a 180-day (6-month) supply of oil lying beneath the Arctic Refuge’s coastal plain.

          Solving any current energy problems will be difficult with Arctic Refuge oil, because it would take more than a decade to bring the new wells on line. At no time would oil taken from the coastal plain of the Arctic Refuge be expected to amount to more than 2 percent of the current U.S. demand.

          And there’s no guarantee that oil extracted from the Refuge would flow to American refineries and pumps. The same multi-national corporations that want to drill into the Arctic Refuge successfully lobbied Congress to repeal of a decades-old ban on exporting Alaskan oil overseas. They have already sold Alaskan oil to China and other foreign countries. If the Arctic Refuge is drilled, whatever oil is found there could very well be shipped overseas to meet the energy demands of foreign nations.



          FROM FORD'S LINK
          Originally posted by Kristy
          Dude, what in the fuck is wrong with you? I'm full of hate and I do drugs.
          Originally posted by cadaverdog
          I posted under aliases and I jerk off with a sock. Anything else to add?

          Comment

          • FORD
            ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

            • Jan 2004
            • 59598

            #80
            Wilderness Preservation

            Parks, Forests & Wildlands: Wilderness Preservation: In Brief: Fact Sheet

            The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
            Oil Development Damages Air, Water and Wildlife



            Toxic spills and air pollution from permanent, year-round operations are destroying Alaska's fragile North Slope.

            Once part of the largest intact wilderness area in the United States, Alaska's North Slope now hosts one of the world's largest industrial complexes, spanning some 1,000 square miles of once-pristine Arctic tundra. Prudhoe Bay and 26 other oilfields include the following:

            * 28 oil production plants, gas processing facilities, and seawater treatment and power plants
            * 38 gravel mines
            * 223 production and exploratory gravel drill pads
            * 500 miles of roads
            * 1,800 miles of pipelines
            * 4,800 exploration and production wells

            All of this activity is taking place in an exceptionally fragile region. Because of the very short summer growing season, extreme cold at other times of the year, and nutrient-poor soils and permafrost, vegetation grows very slowly in the North Slope. Any physical disturbance -- bulldozer tracks, seismic oil exploration, spills of oil and other toxic substances -- can scar the land for decades. The National Academy of Sciences concluded it is unlikely that the most disturbed habitat will ever be restored and the damage to more than 9,000 acres by oilfield roads and gravel pads is likely to remain for centuries.

            A close look at how four decades of this sprawling oil development has destroyed Prudhoe Bay dispels the myth that drilling can take place in the nearby Arctic National Wildlife Refuge coastal plain without permanently damaging the landscape and the wildlife that depends on it.


            A toxic spill every day

            Each year, the oil industry spills tens of thousands of gallons of crude oil and other hazardous materials on the North Slope. In fact, every day there is on average at least one spill either in the oil fields or at the Trans-Alaska Pipeline. From 1996 to 2004, there were some 4,530 spills of more than 1.9 million gallons of diesel fuel, oil, acid, biocide, ethylene glycol, drilling fluid and other materials. In the Arctic, the environmental damage from oil spills is more severe and lasts longer than in more temperate climates. Diesel fuel, for instance -- the most frequently spilled substance on the North Slope -- is acutely toxic to plants. Even after decades have passed, tundra vegetation has been unable to recover from diesel spills.


            Oil operations pollute the air with tons of emissions

            Each year, oil operations on Alaska's North Slope emit more than 70,000 tons of nitrogen oxides, which contribute to smog and acid rain. (That's three times more than Washington, D.C.'s annual NOx emissions, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.) Plumes of pollution from Prudhoe Bay have been detected in Barrow, Alaska, nearly 200 miles away. And pollutants from drilling operations, natural gas facilities and incinerators also have been detected in snow in the Prudhoe Bay area.

            Although the overall impact of these air pollutants on Arctic ecosystems remains largely unknown, some Arctic species are known to be especially sensitive to air pollutants at levels below national air quality standards. North Slope oil facilities also release greenhouse gases, which are a major contributor to global climate change. Each year, they emit 7 million to 40 million metric tons of carbon dioxide and 24,000 to 114,000 metric tons of methane. Emissions climb even higher as North Slope oil is transported by tanker, refined, and eventually burned in engines or power plants.


            Hazardous waste contaminates water and wetlands

            For years, old reserve pits holding millions of gallons of drilling and other wastes pocked the North Slope. The pits typically contained a variety of toxic metals, as well as petroleum hydrocarbons and other harmful substances. Thanks partly to litigation by the Natural Resources Defense Council, handling methods for the waste in these reserve pits have improved.

            While the oil industry has closed many of the pits, more than 100 remain to be cleaned. And, despite advances in disposal methods -- in which most drilling wastes are ground up and re-injected into wells -- problems remain. In 2000, for instance, British Petroleum (BP) was ordered to pay $22 million in civil and criminal fines and establish a new environmental management program because its contractors had illegally disposed of hazardous wastes containing benzene and other toxic chemicals. These crimes only came to light because a whistle-blower reported them to the EPA.

            The Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation still lists more than 100 contaminated sites associated with oil industry operations on the North Slope. These sites contain a variety of toxic materials, including acids, lead, pesticides, solvents, diesel fuel, caustics, corrosives and petroleum hydrocarbons. Leakage from some sites has contaminated the surrounding tundra wetlands and waterways, which likely will be ruined for decades.

            Eat Us And Smile

            Cenk For America 2024!!

            Justice Democrats


            "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

            Comment

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