The Kevin Costner Oil Spill

Some days it seems that more ink is being spilled over Kevin Costner's Ocean Therapy Solutions than oil in the Gulf of Mexico. Such is the power of Hollywood celebrity to focus public attention that BP is buying not only oil-separating centrifuges but also internet banner advertising on search results for the name Costner.

An article in Fast Company magazine reports that BP has begun fighting the oil spill in the Gulf with Kevin Costner's oil-separating centrifuges.

 

 

The Associated Press reports that, according to industry experts, the massive Gulf spill has exposed a failure by the industry and the federal government to commit adequate resources to oil cleanup and response technology.

The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement — which was known as the Minerals Management Service until this month — collects $13 billion a year in oil drilling royalties. But the agency has been spending between $6 million to $7 million a year since 1995 on oil spill research.

And the Coast Guard's annual oil spill research budget has steadily dropped from about $5.6 million in 1993 to about $500,000 for each of the past four years.

In other news today, Genoil a Canadian company with petroleum technology announced in a press release that it has been granted a patent for its breakthrough sand decontamination technology by the United States patent office.

Genoil has also presented technical material to BP on its sand decontamination. Its discussions with BP are ongoing regarding the Crystal Sea water cleaner and it has been responding to requests for more information. In consideration of the crisis in the Gulf of Mexico, Genoil has reduced the manufacturing & delivery time from three months to six weeks for an expedited fee. It should be emphasized that Ocean Therapy, Kevin Costner's oil spill device is not state of the art, and does not comply with United States Coast Guard regulations.

David K. Lifschultz Genoil's CEO adds: "I cannot understand how an environmental cleanup effort in the Gulf of Mexico could be reliant on the Costner technology that does not comply with Coast Guard environmental regulations."

Never underestimate the power of a name.

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