Personal tools
Home NewsEvents Web News 2012 April Deepwater Horizon exposed serious gaps in deepwater oil spill reseach

You are here: Home NewsEvents Web News 2012 April Deepwater Horizon exposed serious gaps in deepwater oil spill reseach
Document Actions

Deepwater Horizon exposed serious gaps in deepwater oil spill reseach

University of California, Davis
April 26, 2012

Deepwater_Horizon.jpg

On the second anniversary of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, a national team of scientists, including two researchers from the University of California, Davis, warns that inadequate knowledge about the effects of deepwater oil well blowouts threatens scientists' ability to help manage comparable future events.

The findings are reported in a paper titled "A Tale of Two Spills:

Novel Science and Policy Implications of an Emerging New Oil Spill Model," published in the May issue of the journal Bioscience. The authors comprise a renowned group of ecotoxicologists, oceanographers, and ecologists -- calling themselves the Gulf Oil Spill Ecotoxicology Working Group -- who convened under the auspices of the National Science Foundation-supported National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis while the 2010 spill was still active.

The article argues that a fundamentally new approach to the study of deepwater spills is needed, particularly because the oil industry is now putting most of its exploration efforts into deep water.

"We really don't know the effects the Deepwater Horizon spill had in the deep sea because we know little about the ecosystem processes there," said group co-leader Gary Cherr, director of UC Davis' Bodega Marine Laboratory. "The deep sea is not a dead zone. It's not a desert. There's a lot of life down there. Unfortunately it's not until a disaster happens that we try to piece together the impacts.  That's difficult to do when you don't have a complete -- or even partial -- understanding of the ecosystem."

The Deepwater Horizon oil spill was unlike any other oil spill science and society had encountered. The well blowout occurred at unprecedented depths and released enormous quantities of oil (an estimated 4.9 billion barrels or 206 million gallons). Marine and wildlife habitats suffered major damage and, the authors assert, continue to suffer today, out of sight. Local economies and livelihoods were hurt, as well.

According to the paper's authors, the cleanup and containment response to the spill followed a framework that assumed the oil's behavior would mimic that seen in more familiar shallow-water and surface spills, despite the fact that the dynamics and effects of deepwater oil on ecosystems are not well understood.

The paper represents the first complete conceptual model for understanding both the Deepwater Horizon spill and analogous disasters in the future.

This new model accounts for how a deepwater oil spill unfolds and where the resulting ecological impacts are felt. It also emphasizes that the vast majority of the oil is retained at depth -- rapidly emulsified and dispersed due to the physics of the pressurized oil jetting from the wellhead -- and, among other response actions, calls into question the overall efficacy of dispersants in that situation.

"We have generally hailed the use of [chemical] dispersants as helpful, but really are basing this on the fact that we seemed to have kept oil from getting to the surface," said Cherr. "The truth is, much of this oil probably was staying at depth independent of the amount of surfactants we dumped into the ocean. And we dumped a lot of dispersants into the ocean, all told approximately one-third the global supply."

Co-author Ron Tjeerdema, chair of the UC Davis Department of Environmental Toxicology, concurs. "The problem is we really must address the downside of such compounds, particularly in light of the fact that the upside probably was not so great as it seemed at the time," he said.

Armed with a new foundation for research and policy implications, the UC Santa Barbara-based NCEAS Gulf Oil Spill Ecotoxicology Working Group is calling for further investigation on the long-term effects of deep-water oil spills like that of the Deepwater Horizon.

"We now have a sense that the bulk of the impact was probably in the mid-water and deep ocean. Who the heck knows what oil does to the mid-water open sea and deep-dwelling critters?" said the study's lead author, Charles "Pete" Peterson, a professor at University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill. "We need an integrated collaboration between deepwater explorers, modelers, ecotoxicologists, microbial ecologists, and so on, all working together in unprecedented ways. We need a whole new type of marine ecology."

For a list of UC Davis expert sources on the Gulf oil spill, visit <http://news.ucdavis.edu/search/news_detail.lasso?id=9530>.

ScienceWatch lists UC Davis as the 3rd-ranking U.S. university and 7th in the world for "Top 20 institutions on oil spill citations." <http://sciencewatch.com/ana/st/oil-spills/institutions/>.

UC Davis Magazine in its fall 2010 issue reported on the work of UC Davis oiled wildlife expert Michael Ziccardi in the wake of the Deepwater spill. Ziccardi led the marine mammal rescue operation:  <http://ucdavismagazine.ucdavis.edu/issues/fall10/oil_spill_rx.html>.

Media contact(s):
* Gary Cherr, UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory, (707) 875-2051, gncherr@ucdavis.edu (Cell: (707) 799-9947)
* Ron Tjeerdema, UC Davis Department of Environmental Toxicology,
(530) 754-5192, rstjeerdema@ucdavis.edu (Cell: (707) 266-4236)
* Kat Kerlin, UC Davis News Service, (530) 752-7704, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu, cell: (530) 750-9195

Recent Web News
Scientists explore stress, weight loss, and our brain June 13, 2013
CAES Webnews
Scientists explore stress, weight loss, and our brain
June 13, 2013

It’s not just our imagination: We really do eat differently when we’re stressed. Nutritionists at UC Davis are shedding light on the important link between stress, our brain and body weight, discoveries that could help society fight obesity and improve our individual efforts to lose weight and keep it off.

Purebred dogs not always at higher risk for genetic disorders June 10, 2013
CAES Webnews
Purebred dogs not always at higher risk for genetic disorders
June 10, 2013

If you think your mixed-breed pup is hardier than a purebred, think again. Mixed breeds may not have an advantage when it comes to inherited disorders.

Horticulture CRSP launches third Regional Center of Innovation June 07, 2013
CAES Webnews
Horticulture CRSP launches third Regional Center of Innovation
June 07, 2013

With centers in Kenya, Thailand, and Honduras, Hort CRSP serves as hubs for horticulture in developing countries.

Remote-controlled helicopter tested for use in vineyard applications June 05, 2013
CAES Webnews
Remote-controlled helicopter tested for use in vineyard applications
June 05, 2013

A remote-controlled helicopter, fitted with a spray applicator system, was field tested over a vineyard in the heart of the famed Napa Valley by UC Davis engineers.

Climate change threatens extinction for 82 percent of California native fish June 05, 2013
CAES Webnews
Climate change threatens extinction for 82 percent of California native fish
June 05, 2013

Salmon and other native freshwater fish in California will likely become extinct within the next century due to climate change if current trends continue.

Jess S. Jackson Sustainable Winery Building opens June 05, 2013
CAES Webnews
Jess S. Jackson Sustainable Winery Building opens
June 05, 2013

Supporters and wine industry leaders gathered at UC Davis to celebrate the opening of the Jess S. Jackson Sustainable Winery Building.

Nematode-resistant wheat can protect tomatoes May 20, 2013
CAES Webnews
Nematode-resistant wheat can protect tomatoes
May 20, 2013

Nematode-resistant wheat can be a trap crop to reduce parasitic root-knot nematode numbers that damage the next rotation crop.

Don't lose the organism over its genes May 20, 2013
CAES Webnews
Don't lose the organism over its genes
May 20, 2013

Physiology and behavior variations in complex organisms are due to more than genetic variations.

Leopold Conservation Award winner shares honor with agricultural industry May 17, 2013
CAES Webnews
Leopold Conservation Award winner shares honor with agricultural industry
May 17, 2013

Fourth-generation dairyman lauded for his practices that support agricultural sustainability.

Postharvest Technology Short Course provides excellent overview May 17, 2013
CAES Webnews
Postharvest Technology Short Course provides excellent overview
May 17, 2013

People who work on fresh produce quality, safety and marketability will find answers to the complicated questions they face during the 35th annual Postharvest Technology of Horticultural Crops Short Course at UC Davis June 17–28.

RSS Spotlight Archive »More… More news »