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Yesterday, smoke from the controlled burn blanketed New Orleans about 150 miles upwind but it was not considered a problem except perhaps for those with breathing problems.
This morning, the southwest passage into the Mississippi River is considered navigable but this shows the progress of the slick toward shorelines for today and tomorrow. At risk are lives, the port of New Orleans, one third of the nation's seafood and the livelihood of gulf shrimpers, fishermen, and oystermen, as well as the price of oil and the future of offshore drilling. I think the port will be closed by Monday.
As difficult as it was in your state to get wind power installations off the cape, I wonder what voodoo would be required to exchange oil rigs for windmills in the gulf.
Yesterday, smoke from the controlled burn blanketed New Orleans about 150 miles upwind but it was not considered a problem except perhaps for those with breathing problems.
This morning, the southwest passage into the Mississippi River is considered navigable but this shows the progress of the slick toward shorelines for today and tomorrow. At risk are lives, the port of New Orleans, one third of the nation's seafood and the livelihood of gulf shrimpers, fishermen, and oystermen, as well as the price of oil and the future of offshore drilling. I think the port will be closed by Monday.
As difficult as it was in your state to get wind power installations off the cape, I wonder what voodoo would be required to exchange oil rigs for windmills in the gulf.
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