BP Rehearsed Oil Spill (2001-2002)Confidential report Exposed
A joint industry project (JIP) was formed between the MMS and 23 different oil companies to conduct this research. The project consisted of an experimental release of oil and gas conducted in June 2000 off the coast of Norway. Mixtures of crude oil and natural gas, diesel oil and natural gas, as well as only natural gas were released at approximately 800 meters water depth. The goal was to simulate a blowout or pipeline rupture in deep water and obtain data to verify the predictions of a deep water blowout model being developed under a separate contract. In another, related, research project, experiments were conducted in a simulated deep ocean environment created in a high pressure chamber located at the University of Hawaii.
Coldest Winter in 10,000 years about to Hit Europe
Nov 1, 2010 GLPP-- Not since the last Ice Age did Eastern Europe face such bone chilling and dire events. The rarely reported on culprit is nothing less than a disastrous ongoing collapse of the Norway current. This vital ocean current was, until the 2010 Gulf of Mexico Oil Disaster, part of an interconnected system of global ocean currents that collaborated to deliver large amounts of tropical heat to the region.
Colossal ramifications are imminent. In a bid to guard against wide spread public panic, governments around the world fight daily to control a total media blackout on the issue. Unfortunately, as with any mega-disaster scenario effecting critical infrastructure, untold millions are not expected to survive the coming food and water distribution freeze up.
What's the connection between the oil disaster and the Norway current? Unconfirmed reports indicate that the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico is 50% covered in oil. Regardless of the amount of oil in the gulf, it is clearly can not be 'cleaned up' and is mixing with the Gulf Loop Current everyday. Oil acts to breakdown the barrier between hot and cold water, thus the oil is causing the collapse of the Atlantic Ocean's thermohaline circulation east of 55 degrees longitude. The Norway current has therefore lost over 80% of its warm water feed that is needed to keep Europe from feeling like Siberia.
(Reference the Year of Year DEOS map comparisons.)
NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope has unveiled a previously unseen structure centered in the Milky Way -- a finding likened in terms of scale to the discovery of a new continent on Earth. The feature, which spans 50,000 light-years, may be the remnant of an eruption from a supersized black hole at the center of our galaxy. "What we see are two gamma-ray-emitting bubbles that extend 25,000 light-years north and south of the galactic center," said Doug Finkbeiner, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) in Cambridge, Mass., who first recognized the feature. "We don't fully understand their nature or origin."