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  1. TopTop #1
    sharingwisdom's Avatar
    sharingwisdom
     

    The use of oil-eating microbes has been proven to clean up oil spills

    The Texas Land Office and Texas Water Commission successfully used 'oil eating' microbes to clean up large oil spills in just weeks in the past. Microbes hunt down and eat the toxic oil and leave only a biodegradable waste that is non-toxic to humans and marine life. These microbes will totally change what BP is about to destroy. Please pass this around asap!

    Watch the clean ups from past use YouTube - Gulf Oil Spill-Gutsy Solution Restores Environment in Just Six Weeks

    Contact J Brent Tuttle
    www.SpillFighters.com
    [email protected]
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  2. TopTop #2
    Debunker
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    Re: The use of oil-eating microbes has been proven to clean up oil spills

    And microbes will eat the oil in the seawater, whether we add them or not. The problem is, the oil eating microbes explode in population because they have a sudden enormous food supply, then they consume all the available oxygen, suffocating all the other lifeforms.


    Quote Posted in reply to the post by sharingwisdom: View Post
    The Texas Land Office and Texas Water Commission successfully used 'oil eating' microbes to clean up large oil spills in just weeks in the past. Microbes hunt down and eat the toxic oil and leave only a biodegradable waste that is non-toxic to humans and marine life. These microbes will totally change what BP is about to destroy. Please pass this around asap!

    Watch the clean ups from past use YouTube - Gulf Oil Spill-Gutsy Solution Restores Environment in Just Six Weeks

    Contact J Brent Tuttle
    www.SpillFighters.com
    [email protected]
    | Login or Register (free) to reply publicly or privately   Email

  3. TopTop #3
    sharingwisdom's Avatar
    sharingwisdom
     

    Re: The use of oil-eating microbes has been proven to clean up oil spills

    Did you watch the video? It's been used successfully w/o killing everything else. And if you still have questions, please write to J. Brent Tuttle.

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by Debunker: View Post
    And microbes will eat the oil in the seawater, whether we add them or not. The problem is, the oil eating microbes explode in population because they have a sudden enormous food supply, then they consume all the available oxygen, suffocating all the other lifeforms.
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  4. TopTop #4
    Debunker
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    Re: The use of oil-eating microbes has been proven to clean up oil spills

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by sharingwisdom: View Post
    Did you watch the video? It's been used successfully w/o killing everything else. And if you still have questions, please write to J. Brent Tuttle.
    Yes, I did, and they did not address the problem of the microbes using up all the available oxygen in open waters.

    It's a valuable part of the clean up process in marshes and wetlands, where almost everything will die from the oil anyway, but it's effectiveness in the open ocean is debatable, since naturally present microbes will 'bloom', eat the oil and use up all the available oxygen anyway.

    The people in your link are selling a product with some, but limited, usefulness.

    This brief article from Newsweek explains some of the issues...

    Oil-Spill Answers: Are We Going to Use Microbes to Destroy the Oil? If So, How Would That Work? - Newsweek

    The very first living organism to be patented was, in fact, a bacterium engineered in the '70s to degrade components of crude oil. Others have been developed since. So can we just pour these specially engineered microbes onto the spilled oil en masse and wait for them to consume it?

    According to Ronald Atlas of the University of Louisville, who has been studying oil-spill bioremediation—a process in which oil-eating microbes are used to degrade leaked crude—since 1968, it's unfortunately not that simple. Bioremediation has been used successfully to mitigate many previous oil spills, including the Exxon Valdez (to date the largest spill in U.S. history). But success is defined differently than one might think in these cases. Bioremediation can eliminate only a portion of the compounds present in oil, and the process can take years. "It's not a panacea. This is not like a physical cleanup where I pick it up and it's gone—this takes some time," Atlas says.

    So what does the process involve? Believe it or not, naturally occurring bacteria that can degrade oil are already present in marine environments, so adding specially engineered oil-eating bacteria isn't even required. What is needed is fertilizer, since the limited availability of nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus prevent these microscopic oil eaters from growing (and eating oil) to their full potential. Oil-degrading microbes start colonizing oil as soon as it is released, so adding fertilizer to crude that has washed up onshore can help the oil-degrading bugs propagate more quickly and ultimately eat more oil.

    Atlas says it's a common misconception that adding specially engineered oil-degrading microbes is helpful, though field studies actually show that adding new microbes is no more valuable than providing nutrients to the ones that are already there. There's no major environmental drawback to increased populations of oil-degrading bacteria, although applying too much fertilizer can trigger a damaging eutrophication event in which algal blooms (thanks to the greater availability of nitrogen) use up oxygen in the water and cause die-offs of other marine species. During the Exxon Valdez cleanup, Atlas said that application of fertilizer sped up the rate of microbial oil degradation by three- to fivefold—a significant improvement, although the process is still slow.

    There's not much value in fertilizing oil-degrading bacteria while the current oil slick is still offshore, since the oil is generally spread thin enough that nutrients are not as limiting, but the technique will be useful as the oil begins piling into the shoreline. Once the physical means of cleaning up oil from the shore, like vacuuming or scraping it up, have been exhausted, then bioremediation will likely be harnessed as a secondary approach to help clean what can't be gotten by physical means. "It's one of the tools in your toolbox, but it's not the only one, and it's not necessarily the penultimate," Atlas says.
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