Yes they should because . we dont want to drink that type of water or swim in that ,, type of DIRTY WATER !
BP will continue exploratory drilling, including deepwater drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, Angola, Brazil and China.
currently no
Several U.S. states allow offshore drilling for oil, primarily along the Gulf of Mexico coast. States such as Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama have established offshore drilling operations. California has some offshore drilling as well, although it faces strict regulations and significant opposition. Additionally, Alaska allows offshore drilling in certain areas, particularly in the Arctic region.
Yes providing that there are appropriate safeguards. There should be a thorough study into the Gulf of Mexico spill and its findings should guide future policy.
The drilling platform that sunk in the Gulf, referring to the Deepwater Horizon incident in 2010, was approximately 40 miles southeast of the well site.
Gulf of Mexico(Kaylop)
The Deepwater Horizon drilling rig caught fire in the Gulf of Mexico on April 20, while drilling the Maconda well. It is not an oil carrier or tanker.
because of the off shore drilling in the gulf
Russia, China, Venezuela and much of Europe drills off of our coast. We should be banning deep water drilling and allowing drilling closer to shore where it is safer and more cost effective. The only plan that could be more foolish then the one we are now chasing is to try to cap this drilling and tax... Perhaps you have heard of such a foolish idea lately?
British Petroleum employees were involved in the drilling when the oil spilled into the Gulf of Mexico on April 20, 2010. The drilling was part of BP operations off the coastal United States of America. But the platform that became involved in the original, explosive event didn't belong to BP. It was being leased.
gulf of Mexico
It was not an oil tanker, but a drilling platform.