BP oil dpill: Forgotten but not gone

From April into midsummer last year, Americans watched BP’s oil spew from the seafloor into the Gulf of Mexico with outrage and guilt that came to feel like a chronic stomachache. Then,
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From April into midsummer last year, Americans watched BP’s oil spew from the seafloor into the Gulf of Mexico with outrage and guilt that came to feel like a chronic stomachache.

Then, on July 15, it stopped. And within a couple of weeks the bad feelings for a lot of us stopped too. There were reports that the surface oil was quickly disappearing. There was a government study that hopeful journalists misinterpreted to mean that most of the oil was gone.

But the oil wasn’t gone, and it still isn’t. Tar balls are washing around the gulf. Marshes are dying. Scientists say it’s still too early to know the greatest share of the spill’s environmental damage.

“The media left, so everyone assumed that meant the oil was gone too,” said Aaron Viles of the Gulf Restoration Network in New Orleans.

The nation flits from one spectacle to the next with ever-accelerating speed, but the processes of nature unfold at their same, deliberate pace. Quick, superficial information alienates us from the ecosystems that sustain life, and that’s made it more difficult to solve environmental problems.

The rate at which environmental disasters recede in our collective rear view mirror marks how fast the culture is moving. The Exxon Valdez oil spill in 1989 stuck in our consciousness much longer than BP’s spill. Alaska’s disaster happened in March; in August it was still major national news when Exxon tried to back off on needed cleanup efforts — the spotlight forced the company to promise more work. Public attention on the Alaska mess kept Congress focused until historic oil spill legislation passed, a year and a half after the accident.

Now, the anniversary of the BP spill comes with a feeling of “Whatever happened to…?” Legislative efforts have stalled, and they’re not particularly ambitious anyway. The BP spill spawned a commission, but its recommendations to Congress have been ignored.

Scholars have documented reduced interest in environmental issues when the economy is down. Storytelling biases also play a role. The story “Oil is still there” doesn’t thrill like a starlet’s fresh scandal or the predicament of the Chilean miners, which in August 2010 pulled the spotlight away from underwater oil plumes and potential gulf dead zones. Our disintegrating attention span matches our disintegrating common will to act on shared problems, at least at the national level.  

On climate change, as well, action has happened locally, in communities, cities, states and public-spirited businesses. University of Colorado policy scientist Ronald D. Brunner maintains that that’s how it has to work: Social change must always precede dramatic political change. We can’t count on the federal government to stop disasters, because we can’t count on the media or ourselves to pay attention to all the risks that face us as a nation. But community by community, we can watch over our own land and water. And we can demand that the nation respect our decisions.

Los Angeles Times

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