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subject: BP's Contribution to Global Warming [print this page]


With the Deepwater Horizon still belching gallons of oil every day, and the possibility of oil spill containment nowhere to be seen, the BP oil spill is certainly an environmental disaster. In the current scenario, when all of us are speaking about the mounting costs, affected marine life, and the ecosystem, we tend to forget a significant detail, the increase in global temperature.

The 200-mile radius of crude oil is neatly doing its part in contaminating the environment. If you still think that the BP oil spill is a problem of the United States alone, then you are missing a point. The release of harmful effluents, along with the chemical dispersants used to clean up the BP oil spill, has already begun to raise concerns related to global warming around the world.

Crude oil contains abundant quantities of Methane, which is one of the major contributors for the increase in global temperature. The oil is simply a deadly recipe of 60 percent petroleum compounds and 40 percent natural gas, primarily Methane.

About 10 to 50 percent of the Methane released from the oil spill blends in the air we breathe, posing a threat to the life of people around the Gulf area.

BP has admitted that about 33.2 million cubic feet of natural gas is emitted on a single day, equivalent to a whopping 80% of the daily CO2 emissions for the entire New York metro area. Corexit, used in the oil spill cleanup, also has a fair share in increasing the global temperature. If BP had taken green measures, like the use of Oil Gone Easy S-200, the biodegradation process would have been efficient. In addition to the other damages, BP is also responsible for the increase in global warming.

BP's Contribution to Global Warming

By: oil




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