As Israeli rigs start drilling for natural gas, a new disaster prevention agency is proposed to avert another BP-Florida Gulf disaster.
Environmentalists have proposed a new government body that might head off ecological catastrophes on Israel’s Mediterranean coast. The new agency could set policy more efficiently by streamlining the powers currently shared by several different authorities.
Two years ago an explosion sank BP’s Deepwater Horizon oil rig. The initial blast claimed twelve lives. But that was just the first tragedy. A nightmare scenario unfolded in the weeks and months that followed. The rig sank and crude oil gushed into the Gulf of Mexico unabated from the open wellhead.
By some estimates the flow was 53,000 barrels per day. BP finally capped the wellhead nearly three months later. Unfortunately, success came only after 4.9 million barrels of oil had devastated the coastline of four US states.
As Israel ramps up offshore drilling for natural gas, advocates are eyeing a system that would prevent these disasters on their own coast. The Zalul Environmental Association and the Department of Marine Geosciences at Haifa University offered the proposal for the “Sea and Shore Authority”. They recognized that the power to set maritime policy is currently split between several different ministries.