Blowing up Red Snapper.

Federal government shuts down red snapper to rebuild their stocks then blows them up? Not only killing but removing their habitat.
Videos like this should tell them a lot about the snapper numbers given 10,000 pounds of dead snapper per rig. Watch the video.

http://www.local15tv.com/mostpopular/story/Explosive-Fed-Mandate-Killing-Thousands-of-Red/xj8T4zPamkOGc8fuT40W_Q.cspx

MOBILE, Ala. (WPMI) A federal mandate to remove old, abandoned oil and gas rigs in the Gulf of Mexico is blowing up a lot more than just the rigs.

Undercover video obtained by Local 15 shows thousands of pounds of dead fish, mostly red snapper, floating to the surface after one of the controversial demolitions in the Gulf.

Good Lord, marine scientist Dr. Bob Shipp said, when Local 15 showed him the video. As a scientist, I think its abominable.

Shipp said the demolitions are frequent, sometimes three a week in the Gulf, but are seldom video-taped. Shipp also sits on the Gulf Fisheries Management Council, and has been a strong opponent of the demolitions.

Its a double whammy, Shipp said, Not only are we killing a lot of snapper, but were also destroying their habitat.

The old rigs are an eye-sore, but under the surface, theyve developed into artificial reefs with rich coral habitats. On some of the older rigs, those habitats have grown over the course of 30 to 40 years.

The killing of the red snapper is also infuriating charter boat captains and anglers. Federal restrictions keep cutting the red snapper season shorter and quotas smaller to protect the species from over-fishing.

They tell us not to fish [red snapper] but theyre blowing them up, charter boat Captain Jason Domange told Local 15, Its a cryin shame.

The confidential source who provided Local 15 the video estimated 10,000 pounds of fish, mostly red snapper, were killed after that one demolition.

Thats a years salary for a lot of people and thats just going to waste, Domange said.

Dr. Shipp said the killing of red snapper has both environmental

Dangitman:frowning_face:

Capt. Larry Teuton
Cracker Built Custom Boats
Small craft surveying and repair

Why arn’t the tree huggers and Greenpeace and other Liberal environmentalist going to court asking for an injunction to get it stopped. They need to ask for an Environmental Impact Study! That will shut it down for years! Someone, needs to call PETA! I’ll bet, they won’t even let people go out and pick the fish up!

Thanks for posting this Rob, I had only heard they were talking about this a year or so ago but I had know idea how far along they were with this. After all the work being done to protect the resource and then this happens. We need to pay close attention in the near future for our coast too in regards to the type of pulse and soundings equipment that will be used for gas and oil explorations.

In the early seventies down off the northeast coast of Florida the Navy did some type of sonic testing or war exercises (probably out of May port) that impacted and caused damage to the reef fish in specific areas.

As you know sound travels a long ways under water and fish are very susceptible to drastic changes in it as seen here in this video!

They’re from the government, they’re here to help us.

Imagine the lawsuit against one of the rig owners (deep pockets) that would result when someone gets killed or injured while fishing or diving on an abandoned/neglected oil rig.

Sea Hunt 207CC,Yam 150
www.abfishcharters.com

When I tried to view it , it had media error in front of it .I couldnt see it .

I DONT HAVE A BOAT
BUT LOVE TO FISH> HINT

Link still works for me.

Did yall notice that the article was written in 2007 though:question:

Capt. Larry Teuton
Cracker Built Custom Boats
Small craft surveying and repair

quote:
Originally posted by Cracker Larry

Link still works for me.

Did yall notice that the article was written in 2007 though:question:


I think you misread that. Article just came out Feb 7 2013.

Rob Harding
236 Sailfish 250 4s Yam
Charleston diving
http://www.charlestondiving.com
(Fish not Biting? Try a fast presentation of spring steel)</font id=“green”>

quote:
I think you misread that. Article just came out Feb 7 2013.

Not when I follow the link from the OP.

http://www.local15tv.com/mostpopular/story/Explosive-Fed-Mandate-Killing-Thousands-of-Red/xj8T4zPamkOGc8fuT40W_Q.cspx

The article date says…

quote:
Reported by: John Dzenitis Email: jdzenitis@local15tv.com

Print Story
Published: 2/07 11:05 pm
Share
Updated: 2/07 11:21 pm


</font id=“quote”></blockquote id=“quote”>

But the attached video is dated Feb, 2013, 6 years later. Weird.

Capt. Larry Teuton
Cracker Built Custom Boats
Small craft surveying and repair

Published: 2/07 11:05 pm would be February 7th 2013.

Usually the last 2 digits in a date is the year, but I’ve been wrong before[:I]

Capt. Larry Teuton
Cracker Built Custom Boats
Small craft surveying and repair

Put up “fish and dive at your own risk” sign on the rig. Or even better, take the part of the rig above the water, and just sink it down below creating more of a reef. That would be great. But everyone working towards red snapper and bottom fish stocks for years, and them blowing them seems pretty counter-productive…

Hunter P. Hames
11’ Tarpon 100
19’ Sea Fox 125 merc

Aren’t those rigs a hazard to navigation?
Won’t the top of the rigs sink to the bottom and form another reef?
May be better fishing in the long run?

“Watch what we do, not what we say.” John Mitchell
Sea Hunt Triton 202
Yammy 150

I’ve got a buddy that works for Texas Parks & Wildlife, he’s talked about it some. Really sh*tty situation for the Gulf right now - fish populations are better than they have been in years, due in large part to the rig habitats, and now they’re being removed again. I think most of this accelerated decommissioning is due to a new (in 2010) regulation that requires non-producing rigs to be removed, instead of just left idle until the company’s lease expired then removed. Supposedly driven by concerns of hurricanes toppling old rigs and the safety/environmental concerns if that happened. Some of the Gulf states do have a “Rigs to Reefs” program, but apparently it’s not an attractive enough option for most companies to see it as worthwhile. (ironically, due to the permitting process, which I’m sure involves environmental studies…) Even to be converted to reefs, there are a lot of restrictions about how the rig is plugged, platform must be removed, clear water to a safe depth, etc. Right now it’s easier/cheaper for the oil companies to remove them and be done with it.

Ironic that environmentalist have railed against offshore oil production since pretty much forever, and now for once the environmentalists and fisherman may be on the same side of the issue. At least maybe more people raising hell about it will get enough attention to get something done.

IMO, the best way to drive a real rigs-to-reef program is to make it so financially beneficial for the companies to reef them instead of remove them that it’s a no-brainer. But somebody has to pay for it, and address the safety concerns, and then what happens when one starts leaking or a ship gets holed by a steel piling, etc. Unfortunately, I don’t think that just leaving them is ever going to be an option. But it does seem like there should be a way to safely cut the platform off/drop the legs and leave at least some of the underwater structure intact.

Sad, complicated situation for sure.


Angler 204 FX
Yamaha 150

“Do what we say, not what we do”. Liberalism at its finest…


“I’m not a hundred percent in love with your tone right now…”