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Explosive Fed. Mandate Killing Thousands of Red Snapper

Reported by: John Dzenitis
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Updated: 2/12 5:47 am
MOBILE, Ala. (WPMI) A federal mandate to remove old, abandoned oil and gas rigs in the Gulf of Mexico is blowing up a lot more than just the rigs.

Undercover video obtained by Local 15 shows thousands of pounds of dead fish, mostly red snapper, floating to the surface after one of the controversial demolitions in the Gulf.

“Good Lord,” marine scientist Dr. Bob Shipp said, when Local 15 showed him the video. “As a scientist, I think it’s abominable.”

Shipp said the demolitions are frequent, sometimes three a week in the Gulf, but are seldom video-taped. Shipp also sits on the Gulf Fisheries Management Council, and has been a strong opponent of the demolitions.

“It’s a double whammy,” Shipp said, “Not only are we killing a lot of snapper, but we’re also destroying their habitat.”

The old rigs are an eye-sore, but under the surface, they’ve developed into artificial reefs with rich coral habitats. On some of the older rigs, those habitats have grown over the course of 30 to 40 years.

The killing of the red snapper is also infuriating charter boat captains and anglers. Federal restrictions keep cutting the red snapper season shorter and quotas smaller to protect the species from over-fishing.

“They tell us not to fish [red snapper] but they’re blowing them up,” charter boat Captain Jason Domange told Local 15, “It’s a cryin’ shame.”

The confidential source who provided Local 15 the video estimated 10,000 pounds of fish, mostly red snapper, were killed after that one demolition.

”That’s a year’s salary for a lot of people and that’s just going to waste,” Domange said.

Dr. Shipp said the killing of red snapper has both environmental and economical ramifications.

"We're talking about the most valuable fish species in the Gulf of Mexico, the one on which so much tourism, industry and restaurants depend," Shipp said, "Then we see something like this, which is just a blatant waste of a very precious resource."

Before Domange was a charter boat captain, he worked on oil and gas rigs all across the Gulf Coast. He’s seen plenty of demolitions and fish kills, but has never seen one on video-tape.

“A lot of [the demolitions were] hush hush, unsaid, and unseen,” Domange said, “This is the first video that’s been produced, that I’ve seen. Hopefully it shines a lot of light.”



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The views expressed here do not necessarily represent those of Local 15

demoman - 2/15/2013 1:55 PM
0 Votes
Explosives have been used in the GOM for 40+ years. Red Snapper populations have not suffered from the use of explosives. In fact, Red Snapper are overpopulated. Snapper deaths from explosives are 1/5th of 1%. Commercial fishermen and trawlers are the real culprits here. Oil companies are required by law to remove the structures 15' below mudline. The minute someone says EXPLOSIVES are used to remove these platforms everyone thinks DEATH and DESTRUCTION... that is ignorance. If you do not know both sides of the story then leave your one sided comments to yourself. Typical media running with their own version to shine a negative light an industry that has been in place since 1970.

Hatchetjobbob - 2/14/2013 8:46 PM
0 Votes
Hatchet job bob maybe should start by doing his job. The recreational fishing sector routinely blows through their allotment of red snapper by 100's of thousands of pounds per year. Where is his concern on that end? Commercial sector fishermen hit the mark every year. Against an allotment of ~7 million pounds a year for both sectors, the aggregious actions of the government killing 30000 pounds of fish a year certainly seems a waste. Lord knows ships don't require safe transit without worry of cracking up on some rotten rusty abandoned oil platform. Perhaps its just that there is a shill in scientists clothing sitting on the gulf council throwing red meet to a starved audience. Meanwhile everybody who's dealing in an honest way with the issues at hand remain looking at facts. Why are folks in Alabama and Florida worried about rigs in the first place, the vast majority of them are located in Louisiana.

Aquanaut - 2/11/2013 12:44 PM
0 Votes
Sorry, but Obama has nothing to do with this one. The requirement to remove abandoned platforms has been around for a long time. And companies are not required to use explosives to remove them. They do that to save money. And the feds give them the option to use the Rigs to Reefs program to create artificial reefs. It's their choice. The alternative is to leave them and let them rust, gradually fall apart, and become a hazard to boats, ships, and people.

Keithscatch - 2/11/2013 10:56 AM
0 Votes
Wow, what an absolute joke. I am not surprised though as our government is an absolute joke to begin with. Just another attempt at taking away something of value to the people for the greater good of a few lobbyists. Way to go Fed. Yep, don't advertise to fishery people to come and catch all you can catch for a couple weeks and then demo the platforms, that would show support for those who need these fish to make a living. Yep, let's just waste all these fish and allow them to rot in the ocean. This makes me sick. Liberals are idiots and think they are doing good to the economy yet their boy in the White House does this behind their backs and destroys years of ecological benefit in a matter of days.

mallard - 2/10/2013 6:36 PM
0 Votes
This is the same rigs to reef programs. Nothing really functionally changed. Only fish at the bottom near the detonations are killed. Most fish in the mid to upper water column survive.

mallard - 2/10/2013 6:35 PM
0 Votes
This is the same rigs to reef programs. Nothing really functionally changed. Only fish at the bottom near the detonations are killed. Most fish in the mid to upper water column survive.

Volitans - 2/10/2013 5:59 PM
0 Votes
When I worked for the Minerals Management Service in the 80's - 90's, we had a 'Rigs to Reefs' program that recognized the environmental advantages of leaving abandoned rigs as sanctuaries for marine life. Apparently the Obama Administration is so doctrinaire about fossil fuel development that they will sacrifice the good these structures do by destroying the very natural environment Obama purports to protect.

mallard - 2/10/2013 5:32 PM
0 Votes
The oil companies would prefer to leave the platform in place as sanctuaries I am sure. They spend millions to remove them and clean up the seabed. As the fish would not have been there if the platforms had not been installed in the first place, I guess the environment had the benefit for the 30 or 40 years they were there. And in the end, they will still be offshore as reefs in 200-300 feet of water. Snapper and otehr fish will still use them as home.

mallard - 2/10/2013 5:28 PM
0 Votes
The oil companies would prefer to leave the platform in place as sanctuaries I am sure. They spend millions to remove them and clean up the seabed. As the fish would not have been there if the platforms had not been installed in the first place, I guess the environment had the benefit for the 30 or 40 years they were there. And in the end, they will still be offshore as reefs in 200-300 feet of water. Snapper and otehr fish will still use them as home.

mallard - 2/10/2013 5:23 PM
0 Votes
The deck section is removed from the jacket (legs) and loaded onto a barge to be taken back to shore and scrapped. The jacket legs are sounded to see if they are clear (open)down to 15ft below the seabed. If they are not clear, they are jetted to remove the sand and mud from within. Explosives are then lowered into the legs down to the 15ft below seabed. Before the explosives are detonated, a helicopter with govt. MMS representatives (marine bioligists) fly around the area for IIRC an hour to look for marine mammals and seaturtles. If none are seen, the charge is detonated. If there are mammals seen, the team will wait for them to leave the area (at the animals will). Another flyover/waiting period will commence. Once the charge is detonated, the barge will move in to lift the jacket via crane and transport it to its final federally approved resting place. The feds, by regulation prevent anyone from picking up the fish.
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