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Archive for the ‘Green Practices’

Substandard Safety Record of British Petroleum!

July 14, 2011 By: Michael Jones Category: Green Practices

Disregarding safety issues always prove to be disastrous, and this was exactly the case in the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. A recent report by ProPublica, an independent non-profit newsroom that does investigative journalism in public interest, reveals the substandard safety record of British Petroleum. This report highlights a few incidents where BP ignored safety issues to reduce production costs. A person closely associated with BP leaked some of the documents concerning internal safety investigations to ProPublica.

Alaskan oil spill: The story of BP’s safety record starts from the well-known Prudhoe tragedy in Alaska Bay pipeline spill in Alaska in 2006. The corroded pipeline used by BP was one of the prime reasons for the tragedy in Alaska. It was told that the use of such out of shape equipment was mainly to cut off maintenance costs. It also came into light that BP threatened some of its workers as they raised safety issues over the firm’s operations in Alaska.

Falsifying Inspections of Fuel Storage Tanks in California: California officials found that BP falsified inspections of fuel tanks that did not meet the required safety regulations. However, the firm settled the lawsuit filed by the South Coast Air Quality Management District for $100 million!

Texas Refinery Explosion: Lack of significant process safety issues had caused the explosion at Texas City refinery, which killed 15 people and injured 170. A BP spokesperson said that the firm would revise its safety system, but it remained just a statement! Consequently, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration fined the firm $87 million last year for failing to accomplish what it had promised to do.

The Gulf of Mexico oil spill: This oil spill is one of the worst environmental disasters in U.S history. Failure of about eight different safety systems, including improperly sealed borehole, improper gas detection system, and valve failures had caused this massive oil spill.

BP’s terrible safety record doesn’t end here. The firm was also held responsible for many oil tragedies including the Exxon Valdez oil spill! When oil companies show a pattern of negligence to safeguard their finances, don’t you think an effective spill response plan should be in place. Using Oil Gone Easy Marine S-200, an environmentally safe oil remover should be the choice of nature lovers!

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Spring Cleaning – In a Greener Way!

March 28, 2011 By: Michael Jones Category: Green Practices, Oil Spill Blog, Oil Spill Cleanups, Oil Spills

The ruthless snowstorm and the long hours of biting cold are over, and it’s time to think about warm summer days! If you want your home to look its best this summer, then carry out an efficient spring cleanup. Spring cleanup is not just about cleaning the interior of your house; but you must pay equal attention to your outdoors too. Cleaning the sidewalk, gutter, flagstone, lawn, garage, and other such areas should also be taken into account.

Cleaning is always irksome. If you wish to make it simple, then plan ahead. Before starting to clean, get rid of the clutter that has piled up over the long winter months. Also, make sure you clean one room at a time to avoid jumbling!

You get to see so many kinds of stain once you start cleaning your home. And, one most prominent kind is the oil stain. You can see oil stains in your kitchen floor, carpet, furniture, clothes, garage, and driveway.

If you think oil stain removal is easy with chemical dispersants or oil absorbent pads, then you are sure to invite trouble. Dispersants release toxic chemicals that can even be carcinogenic. And when it comes to absorbent pads, they do not remove all of the stain. How about adopting a greener approach? Oil Gone Easy Home and Driveway S-200 is an eco-friendly product that will help you chuck out oil spills and is a better alternative for chemical cleaners! This green product is ideal for use on any surface and is easy to apply as well.

When you are doing spring cleanup, you just cannot ignore oil stains in your garage or driveway. By spraying Oil Gone Easy Home and Driveway S-200 over the spill and leaving it undisturbed, you can employ microbes to do the cleaning. To add the convenience, this biodegradable oil spill cleaner is available in 5-gallon pails. Given all this, why should anyone fret about oil spill removal at home? With such innovative green products, clean your homes efficiently, and get a head start on the summer months.

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Think Green and Go for Eco-Friendly Cleaning Products for Oil Spill Cleanup!

February 23, 2011 By: Michael Jones Category: Eco Green Products, Green Practices, Oil Spill Cleanups

Oil spills – well, they are one of the biggest environment issues on the rise! Not just in oceans or on highways, they are a common scenario even at home. Most of us are aware of the ill effects of an oil spill and resort to some kind of remedial measures. But the question is, “Is your oil stain remover safe on Mother Nature?”

Most of you might take pride in reacting to a spill immediately. However, to curb the problem, only using eco-friendly cleaning products works! Here are a few green cleaning ideas that might help you do your part to save Mother Nature!

  • Oil absorbent pads or tubes made from nylon stockings, hair, fleece, and fur are a great alternative to chemical oil dispersants.
  • You may also resort to other green cleaning products, such as hair mats created using hair and mushrooms to clear the spill. The oil is absorbed by the hair and the oily hair is then eaten by the mushrooms.
  • Worms are also a good idea to clean up oil spill. Worms break down the spilt oil to give out fertilizer products.
  • Another reliable alternative is the oil eating bacteria. Well, the ocean has plenty of them! All you have to do is add some fertilizer products so that the oil is absorbed at a faster rate.
  • The best of all these alternatives is the use of eco-friendly oil spill cleaner – Oil Gone Easy S-200. Be it a smaller spill or a relatively larger one, Oil Gone Easy S-200 is one product that can be completely relied upon for effective oil spill cleanup. This environmentally friendly cleaning product works using bioremediation technology to remove oil stains.

Give a thought to these eco-friendly alternatives and pave way for a better, greener world!

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Perfect Remedy for Oil Spills on Your Granite Floor

July 19, 2010 By: Michael Jones Category: Green Practices

Granite being durable and long lasting has become a popular flooring option in many houses. Even though granite flooring is scratch and heat resistant, it requires proper maintenance to keep it looking as shiny as it was at the time of purchase.

No matter how careful you are, spills on your granite flooring are unavoidable. Here are some useful tips to handle different spills on your granite floor:

Can you even imagine a mark on your new elegant granite floor? Definitely not! Laying down a protective mat on your granite flooring that is exposed to sand or any gritty soils may considerably reduce the chances of getting a mark. Also, instead of using hard brooms and vacuums to remove the gritty soil, try mopping the floor with clean water.

Food spills on the granite countertops in the kitchen are quite a normal scenario in every household. Cleaning can be as simple as just removing the remaining food with the help of a spoon, drying up the spilt area with a white cloth, spraying with a stone cleanser, and wiping it dry.

One more spill that is very common in the kitchen is oil spill. Cooking oil and butter mainly contribute to this problem. Oil spill clean up on countertops is a daunting task. The spills can turn into oil stains if they are not cleaned immediately with appropriate cleaning materials. Cleaning up a granite oil stain is easier than before with Oil Gone Easy S-200. This product works as a bioremediation accelerator and agglomerator. It bonds to the oil and breaks it down into water and carbon dioxide, thus cleaning the oil stains completely.

Preventing oil spills and oil stains on the granite floor is a good option, but it is not possible all the time. So, be prepared to tackle it with Oil Gone Easy S-200.

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World Oceans Day – A Call to Safeguard Our Oceans!

June 09, 2010 By: Michael Jones Category: Green Practices

It is a known fact that the world’s oceans cover more than 70% of our planet’s surface. But what very few of us realize is that these precious resources are under catastrophic threat from several sources, including industrial, agricultural, and human activities. In view of showing appreciation to this precious resource of ours, for the first time in 1992, the Canadian government came up with the idea of World Oceans Day at the Earth Summit in Rio.

Since 1992, many countries across the globe have joined hands to celebrate the World Oceans Day on June 8th every year. The theme of this day “Our Oceans, Our Responsibility” is in itself an eye-opener of sorts. It is a call to all of us to do our bit for protecting the oceans.

You too can take part in World Oceans Day and contribute to the noble mission of protecting the oceans. Just keep in mind some of these tips and you for sure would have made a great difference!

Equip your boats with proper bilge discharge options and avoid dumping oily bilge water into the sea.

Be very careful while changing and refueling oil in your boat and prevent any accidental oil spills.

For bilge cleaning and accidental oil spill cleanup use of eco-friendly cleaners, such as Oil Gone Marine S-200 would be the best bet. S-200 can be the safest method you can think of, for it uses bioremediation technology to break down the oil and convert it into carbon dioxide and water.

Even in your garage or anywhere in your home, avoid the use of toxic chemicals and detergents to remove oil spills or leaks from. Instead, consider using green products, such as Oil Gone Easy Home & Driveway S-200.

Minimize the use of pesticides and fertilizers in your garden and ensure proper disposal of construction residual thereby reduce pollution from storm water runoff.

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Boating and Marinas – A Cause of Concern for Nonpoint Source Pollution!

May 20, 2010 By: Michael Jones Category: Green Practices

It is quite a common sight to see the coastal waters being used for recreational boating and marinas. But unknown to many is the fact that these activities pose a catastrophic threat to the coastal waters.

Marinas, the places where the boats are maintained and operated, undoubtedly presents several possibilities of polluting the marine waters. Oil spills or oil leaks from boats, bottom paints, hull cleaners, sewage discharge, anti-freeze, and other similar effluents resulting from operation and maintenance activities are some of the common causes.

Though the amount of pollutants contributed by individual boats might seem negligible, it becomes considerable when the pollution caused by thousands of boaters and marinas are put together. Only when effective methods of managing this nonpoint source pollution are adopted, we can pave way for a safe environment.

To begin with, boaters should ensure that there is no discharge of sewage into recreational waters. While on boat, the use of U.S. Coast Guard-approved marine sanitation device (MSD) to contain the fecal matter and solid waste might help. By doing so, they minimize or ultimately eliminate the chances of degradation of water quality.

It is obligatory that the marinas are sited in areas where natural flushing encourages water circulation. As used motor oil that is contaminated with pollutants is not recyclable, it is better that marinas provide ecologically safe disposal sites.

Engine oil spills during boat maintenance or oil spills from overfilled tanks no matter how minor they are cannot be neglected. They definitely call for immediate remediation. To clean up such oil spills and prevent them from causing any further harm make use of a greener and safer method, such as Oil Gone Easy Marine S-200 which is an agglomerator and bioremediation accelerator. This product can also be used as a bilge cleaning product.

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Bilge Water Handling – Remove the Threat from the Marine Environment!

May 17, 2010 By: Michael Jones Category: Green Practices

The negative impact that dirty bilge water has on the marine environment is dreadful. With the help of efficient bilge management techniques, we can prevent oily bilge water from entering into the sea and contaminating the water, which in turn prevent the harm caused to the marine life.

Dumping oily bilge water into the sea is against the law, since it poses threat to the marine life. Recently the chief engineer of a cargo ship had been fined up to 250,000 million dollars for having dumped oil contaminated waste in area waters.

To minimize the destructive effect of oily bilge water, proper bilge water handling becomes mandatory. Discharge of bilge water from the marinas is a common practice. It is illegal unless the marinas hold a NPDES Individual Permit for Industrial Discharges.

As a part of legal bilge water handling practices, it is the responsibility of every citizen to ensure that boat owners at their marinas are provided with proper bilge water discharge options, such as oil absorbent pads which absorb oil from the bilge water. Oil absorbent pads require to be replaced quite often and also need to safely disposed.

In case of larger boats, oil spill booms will come in handy. Use of a vacuum system pump can help in efficient removal of bilge water by pumping it into drums for later disposal. These drums should be carefully stored, until they are picked up for off-site treatment.

With bilge oil filters, bilge water can be cleaned even before it is being discharged. Treating bilge water onsite with a portable oil/water separator is advisable. Another effective method of bilge water handling is using Oil Gone Easy Marine S-200. This bilge cleaner removes oil from bilge water through bioremediation. MEPC defines bio-remediation as the environmentally friendly response to an oil spill. The simple and effective way of bilge water handling is to pour this bilge cleaner into the access points of your bilge to prevent oil contamination in water.

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Green Cleaning Technologies

October 30, 2009 By: Michael Jones Category: Eco Green Products, Green Practices

Oil Gone Easy S-200Green cleaning is a term that refers to cleaning techniques and products that make use of eco-friendly materials and substances rather than toxic ingredients. Certain products emit volatile organic compounds, which can cause irreparable damage, respiratory problems, and skin infections. Green cleaning techniques are a much safer and healthier way to treat water, purify air, and clean a home or land.

Sunrays are natural disinfectants. Ultraviolet radiation emitted from the sun can be used to disinfect water and air. UV radiation is commonly used in waste water treatment and is increasingly being used in drinking water treatment. In fact, there are several manufactures that offer water purifiers that use UV light. This cleaning technique is more eco-friendly than treating water with chemicals. Almost all the pollutants in the air are carbon-based compounds. These compounds break down when exposed to high-intensity UV light at 240-280 nm.

Green CleaningHospitals have used UV technology for years to sterilize the air in their facilities. Halo vacuum cleaners also use this green cleaning technology to kill germs, bacteria, mold, dust mite eggs, and flea eggs that fester deep in carpet fibers. Halo vacuum cleaners suck up dirt as well as any other vacuum, but unlike other models, they kill microorganisms like E.coli and Samonella. Rather than use toxic chemicals that are harmful to the environment and humans to sterilize surfaces, a Halo vacuum cleaner is a great alternative.

Electrokinetic remediation is a green technology used to clean land, especially to restore contaminated waste sites. The section of soil that has been contaminated is exposed to a low voltage direct-current electric field. When the electrodes are charged, ions and water move toward the electrodes. The ions flow through the outer casing of the electrode, which contains water, where they are then removed for treatment. Bioreactors and bioventing technology are two forms of bioremediation that are used to remediate soil that has been contaminated by fuel.

Oil Gone Easy S-200 also uses bioremediation to help fight oil spill pollution both on land and in water. This eco-friendly product is more readily available than bioreactors or bioventing technology and is ideal for home and boat owners.

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Freshwater Oil Spills

October 26, 2009 By: Michael Jones Category: Green Practices

Freshwater Oil SpillsFreshwater bodies are not just the main source of drinking water, they also serve as nesting grounds and food sources for various organisms. Oil spills could pose a serious threat to freshwater ecosystems as the fresh water organisms are exposed to high risk.

Fresh water ecosystem includes two habitats, standing water, and the flowing water. Oil spills affect standing water more severely than flowing water as the currents offer a natural cleaning mechanism.

When an oil spill occurs, not only are the aquatic creatures smothered to death, the aquatic vegetation is also susceptible to deadly effects of oil spills. Oil spilled into the rivers clings to plants and grasses. Animals that feed on these plants are also affected, causing a serious damage to the food chain.

In addition, birds and mammals either get killed or injured soon after they come into contact or will be slowly poisoned by long-term exposure to oil that is trapped in shallow water bodies or stream beds. Thus oil spills have a catastrophic effect on the local ecology.

The Freshwater Spills Information Clearinghouse (FSIC) serves as a point of entry for freshwater oil spill planning and response information. It includes research data and document abstracts, geographic information system data relevant and organizational links.

The effectiveness of Freshwater Spills Information Clearinghouse depends on how much the research community posts historic and current information electronically. But there has been a lack of information specifically related to oil spills on freshwater bodies. This has been highlighted in meetings such as the Freshwater Spills Symposium and also by groups such as the Great Lakes Spill Protection Initiative (GLPSI).

FSIC also posts available environmental, economic, and cultural sensitivity data electronically and will work along with the Great Lakes Information Network’s (GLIN’s) geographic information system (GIS). Organizations that play a major role are also linked. Increased awareness and higher profile for FSIC will bring in more of these groups into the network.

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Role of National Transportation Safety Board in Investigating Oil Spills

October 22, 2009 By: Michael Jones Category: Green Practices

National Transportation Safety BoardThe National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is an independent federal agency responsible for investigating civil transportation accidents. It investigates all types of accidents, including ship and marine accidents and pipeline incidents. The NTSB will also render assistance to the military with accident investigation if requested by it.

One of the world’s premiere accident investigation agencies, the NTSB has investigated more than 124,000 aviation accidents and over 10,000 surface transportation accidents ever since its inception on April 1, 1967.

The organization has different sub-offices for highway safety, maritime safety, and aviation safety, railroad, pipeline, and hazardous material investigations, research and engineering, recommendations and communications, academy and administrative law judges.

The NTSB is responsible for maintaining the database of civil aviation accidents and conducting studies of transportation safety issues of national significance. It also provides investigators to serve as U.S. Accredited Representatives for accidents overseas involving American-registered aircrafts.

When an accident occurs, the party involved must notify the NTSB, as stipulated in the Code of Federal Regulations. The agency sets the investigation into motion by setting up a “go team.” Specialists in fields relevant to the accident usually make up this team. Once this is done, other organizations or corporations are designated as parties to the investigation. The NTSB may then hold public hearings on the issue. After completing the investigation, it issues a final statement. The board may also issue safety recommendations, if need be.

Its reputation for impartiality and thoroughness has helped it improve safety measures. Several safety features integrated in automobiles, pipelines, and marine vessels have their origin in NTSB recommendations.

The NTSB has also investigated several oil spills, including the Exxon Valdez oil spill. Oil spills on both water as well as land are a serious threat to the environment as they cause terrible damage to the encompassing ecosystem. Oil Gone Easy’s Marine S-200 can be used for oil spill cleanup effectively without causing any further damage to the environment.

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