Louisiana Environmental Action Network (LEAN) reports that, in addition to over twelve areas in and around Bayou Corne and Grand Bayou having “waters rolling from escaping methane, ethane, and propane,” locals have also reported tremors and houses shifting.This article includes video, complete article at link:
http://politicalvelcraft.org/2012/11/03/breaking-many-may-die-from-nwo-orchestrated-b-p-gulf-disaster-methane-mega-disaster-in-the-works/There Is Absolutely NO REASON For The U.S> To Store Oil Products Inside These Salt Domes Under The Auspice Of “U.S. Strategic Oil Reserves”. The United States Has More Oil Than Any Other Nation And Obama Regime Has Been Shutting Down Our Oil Production!
An as-yet undetermined amount of
natural gas is trapped in the aquifer underneath the Bayou Corne community, state and parish officials have said.
[...]
some parish officials say they are concerned the odorless, colorless gas underground could accumulate unseen to explosive concentrations if left unchecked.
John Boudreaux, director of Office of Homeland Security and
Emergency Preparedness, said there are
concerns the gas can build up pressure under the clay layer that lies above the aquifer.
Once the pressure in the aquifer reaches a pressure greater than 75 to 85 pounds per square inch, the clay layer might not be able to hold back the accumulated gas, according to Boudreaux and geologists.
Enenews<BLOCKQUOTE>
Earlier Tuesday, amid debating whether
earthquakes caused the nearby breached salt cavern to fail, extra seismic activity was recorded, according to USGS monitors observed by this reporter, also noting that in 2010,
experts foretold a methane crisis, one saying a methane-caused sinkhole could result from BP’s oil catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico.</BLOCKQUOTE>
http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=31.0,-92.0&spn=3.0,3.0&q=31.0,-92.0 (Louisiana) Louisiana State of Emergency: Oil and gas sinkhole disaster area risks and rightsviolations escalatingA possible breach of a butane-filled well 1500 feet from Bayou Corne’s sinkhole, the size of three football fields, is so
“very serious,” it has Assumption Parish sheriff and
local residents ordered to evacuate worried about a
catastrophic explosion, one according to scientists in an
Examinerinvestigation, would be in the range of one and a half B83 thermonuclear (hydrogen) bombs, the most powerful United States weapons in active service.
“The disaster is made all the more worrisome because the hole is believed to be close to a well containing 1.5 million barrels of liquid butane, a highly volatile liquid that turns into a highly flammable vapor upon release,”
CNNreported Friday about Louisiana’s declared State of Emergency.
Investigating the beginning of bubbles slide show!Earlier it was reported the butane-filled well is only
1500 feet from the sinkhole and it will not be emptied.
A breach of that well, Assumption Parish Sheriff Mike Waguespack said, could be “catastrophic,”
CNN reports.
If ignited, the butane well would release as much explosive energy as 100 Hiroshima bombs, Deborah Dupré’s scientist sources told her Sunday.
Friday, officials went door-to-door in the Bayou Corn area to complete questionnaires, including next of kin contact details of locals at home after the mandatory evacuation orders, as
Fox News reported, while ABC reported, “If any of the dangers seem to become more imminent,” the present mandatory order will be “escalated to a forced evacuation.”
Some residents of Louisiana’s cultural gumbo of Assumption Parish think dangers are more imminent now, despite state Department of Health & Hospitals Office of
Public Health officials’ letter to parish officials about air and water testing data.
“Based on their testing, it doesn’t appear that chemical exposure of site-related contaminants pose a public health risk in the immediate area of Bayou Corne,” parish officials said.
Since Saturday, disaster workers are required to wear respirators, although the public within the disaster area is not.
Government cover up continues angering residents and elected leaders“You can give us a straight answer because that’s all we want,” a woman said at the community meeting Tuesday. “We want to know when we can come home and be safe. Because you all go home after a days work. You’re safe, but we’re not,” she said, expressing sentiments of other locals with whom Dupré has spoken.
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The sands of time run through the hourglass...