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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
ABSTRACT: Oil Spills, Ethics, and Society: How They Intersect and
Where the Responsibilities Reside
Increasing global demand for
energy
has forced societies the
world over to look for and use ever more diverse and expensive
forms of
energy
to fuel their economies. Oil is a key part of this
energy
supply, particularly in the arena of transportation fuels. The
corporations that supply
energy
have been pressed into increasingly
challenging environments to meet public and governmental
demands for inexpensive
energy
. Unfortunately, as we are reminded
by the Gulf of Mexico Deepwater Horizon incident, accidents can
happen, the environment can be damaged, and people can lose
their lives when we operate at the leading edges of technology.
When accidents occur, our responses typically tend to blame
individuals, corporations, or regulators, rather than the public
whose demand for cheap, readily available
energy
forces
exploration in new, more challenging frontiers. Public opinions on
this subject are shaped by a combination of self-education,
fulminating politicians, and aggressive, sensationalist journalists.
Exploring more than societal interests at a national level puts our
pursuit of inexpensive
energy
into context. This context pits the
competing interests of developing countries, which demand
ever-increasing shares of the world’s resources, against broader,
trans-national interest groups which are worried that continued
dependence on
energy
-dense fossil fuels may cause runaway global
warming and climate changes that may in turn destroy the earth’s
ecosystems.
Ultimate responsibilities for oil spills lie within this mix of
competing demands and expectations – a mix far more
complicated than most people are aware of or are willing to
consider. All of us who consume
energy
have an ethical obligation
to educate ourselves, and those around us, on the consequences of
our demands for
energy
and for the environment.