UPDATE III: You may be wondering «what
kind of oil spilled in Arkansas?»
«This is a new
kind of oil spill and there is no «off button,»» said Keith Stewart, an energy analyst with Greenpeace who teaches a course on energy policy and environment at the University of Toronto.
Not exact matches
The reef effort is the
kind of science - based project many Gulf stakeholders had in mind when they pushed for a federal act, called RESTORE, that allocated to Gulf restoration much
of the potentially billions
of dollars in fines and penalties that will be paid by those responsible for the
oil spill.
The
spill, which also included by an unknown quantity
of crude
oil, is by far the largest
spill of its
kind in the state's history, officials said
More than half a decade ago, a BP - operated
oil rig
spilled 4.9 million barrels
of oil into the Gulf
of Mexico, marking the largest
spill of its
kind in history and an environmental disaster
of epic proportions.
ETF for India, China, Vietnam, etc.)-- Vanguard is good; I am in process
of replacing the TD eFunds with Vanguard ETFs (I should have done it much earlier but they were under in my RRSP, it should have not mattered, the corresponding ETFs were low too)-- Big companies are good (McDonalds, Starbucks, Pfizer, WM) until they are not so perhaps I should get rid
of them and buy more Vanguard ETFs — Buying distressed companies could be a winning proposition but have I very mixed results so better not (BP and Transocean bought after the
oil spill, Nortel, BlackBerry, and Nokia — BP and NOKIA good, Transocean under not much, but under, BB very, very bad, and Nortel no comments)-- Berkshire is very good as it is a
kind of ETF but what would happen after Warren Buffett (who would have thought AIG would need to be bailed out and the shareholders wiped out in the process or other cases where individuals brought companies down for example Barings the oldest bank in England)
Not every place in the Gulf suffered the same
kind of damage from the
oil spill, she said.
But bitumen and diluted bitumen aren't actually a
kind of crude
oil (the IRS actually relieves tar sands streams from some taxes for this very reason), they're a different beast altogether, as the
spill responders at the Kalamazoo River learned the hard way.
Is this the
kind of transparency that would give you confidence in how Enbridge might account for itself in the wake
of an out -
of - sight
oil spill?
The tax applies to the
kind of crude that
spilled out
of the Valdez, but not the
kind that makes up your modern, red - blooded American
oil spill.
Aren't they
kind of like
oil tankers except they go boom rather than
spill?