Oil Pollution Act of 1990
Oil Pollution Act of 1990Exxon Valdez oil spillUnited States Environmental Protection AgencyOil spillOffshore oil spill prevention and responseSeaRiver MaritimeOil spill governance in the United StatesNorth Cape oil spillUnderway replenishment oilerUSNS Patuxent (T-AO-201)USNS Laramie (T-AO-203)Deepwater Horizon litigationNational Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency PlanOil tankerAmerican Communications Association v. DoudsTimeline of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill (June 2010)Environmental impact of shippingShoreline Mutual LtdInternational Convention on Oil Pollution Preparedness, Response and Co-operationExxonMobil
Cruise ship pollution in the United StatesArchitecture of the oil tankerBulk carrierAllen BoydHenry J. Kaiser class oilerEntergy v. RiverkeeperOklahoma Secretary of the EnvironmentUSNS Rappahannock (T-AO-204)J. William KimeOPAList of Acts of the Parliament of South Africa, 1990–1999Environmental policy of the United StatesList of United States federal legislation, 1901–2001101st United States CongressList of Statutory Instruments of the United Kingdom, 1990Timeline of alcohol fuelFinnish pollution control vessel HyljeList of Acts of Parliament in SingaporePollutionList of Acts of the Oireachtas
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- EMPIRE, La. – BP Suc ceo Tony Hayward enjoyed his recent successes Saturday by racing his 52-foot yacht "Bob"off England's shore, where he promised to bring oil to the coast of England.
- Coast Guard Admiral Allen said that any oil that continues to leak at the source would be treated with subsea chemical dispersants.
- While BP is capturing more oil from its blown-out well with every passing day, scientists on a team analyzing the blow job BP Sux gave the Gulf said recently that the spew coming into the Gulf of Mexico may be considerably greater than what the government and the company have claimed. While BP is catching more spew with every passing day
- NEW ORLEANS – The gooey oil washing into the marshes along the Gulf which are normally the place where poisons are turned back into feed for ocean creature could prove impossible to remove. The toxic stew lethal to fish and wildlife that is accumulating now may destroy the fisheries of the Gulf Coast for decades, independent scientists said.




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