USA — States Prepare to Help Louisiana in Oil Spill Response

ARLINGTON, Va., May 26, 2010 — The Nation­al Guards of sev­er­al states are close­ly watch­ing Louisiana this week and are pre­pared to assist in its oil spill oper­a­tions if need­ed, a senior Guard leader said today.

“We’ve been asked poten­tial­ly to assist Louisiana with heli­copter sup­port, and if they need that, then we will pro­vide that,” Army Maj. Gen. Abn­er C. Blalock, Alabama’s adju­tant gen­er­al, said yes­ter­day dur­ing a “DoD Live” blog­gers roundtable. 

Along with Alaba­ma, avi­a­tion assets from Mis­souri and Illi­nois have been tapped to sup­port oper­a­tions in Louisiana through the Emer­gency Man­age­ment Assis­tance Com­pact. Louisiana offi­cials also have asked for pub­lic affairs sup­port through EMAC

“We’re mon­i­tor­ing real close­ly what’s going on with our sis­ter states, Louisiana and Mis­sis­sip­pi and Flori­da, par­tic­u­lar­ly Louisiana, and the kind of actions they are tak­ing and the kind of things they are doing,” Blalock said. “Quite frankly, there’s a lot of tri­al and error going on along the Gulf Coast, because we haven’t real­ly been involved in some­thing quite like this ever before.” 

About 360 Alaba­ma Army and Air Nation­al Guard mem­bers have been work­ing to lim­it the spill’s impact on their own state’s coast, the gen­er­al not­ed. “On-the-ground work includes instal­la­tion of Hes­co bar­ri­ers on a bar­ri­er island, as well as a penin­su­la on the east side of Mobile Bay,” he said. “Beyond that, we’re involved in cer­tain secu­ri­ty tasks where vol­un­teers are staged. We have about 20 folks involved in the var­i­ous ech­e­lons of com­mand and con­trol from Joint Force Head­quar­ters down to a local unit headquarters.” 

Air crews have pro­vid­ed recon­nais­sance of oth­er oil con­tain­ment booms that have been put in place along the coast. “We’ve had two heli­copters [and crews] on duty since ear­ly May, and they’ve been fly­ing boom recon­nais­sance mis­sions and doing some imagery assess­ment and aware­ness taskers,” Blalock said. For now, Alaba­ma has been large­ly unaf­fect­ed by the spill, the gen­er­al added, with only a few tar balls wash­ing up on shore. 

Despite a lack of expe­ri­ence com­bat­ing an oil spill, the Alaba­ma Guard has been using lessons learned from oth­er dis­as­ters, Blalock said. “We’re a hur­ri­cane state,” he said. “We’ve learned over the years through our expe­ri­ences the kind of things the Nation­al Guard is asked to do imme­di­ate­ly post-land­fall, and that is where we’ve focused our attention.” 

How­ev­er, he added, there are a few dif­fer­ences between the two kinds of responses. 

“For­tu­nate­ly, we’re not involved in clear­ing roads of oth­er obsta­cles to com­mer­cial or busi­ness traf­fic,” he explained. “But it’s sort of the oppo­site, in that we may get involved in clean­ing up a mess [on the beach­es] if oth­er con­tract resources are not avail­able for appli­ca­tion.” Plan­ning is the key to this oper­a­tion, the gen­er­al said. 

“We’re think­ing ahead over the long term, that six-month win­dow, which sounds hard, but the real­i­ty is we’re get­ting a pret­ty good han­dle on the kinds of things that the Nation­al Guard might be asked to do when the oil comes ashore,” Blalock noted. 

The Alaba­ma Guard’s role in respond­ing to the oil spill, the gen­er­al said, is large­ly up to the spill itself. 

“The biggest vote out there is what the oil does,” he said. “This pos­ture we’re in right now, we’re pre­pared for imme­di­ate response in case of a sur­prise. The Coast Guard is work­ing with a 180-day strate­gic plan. What I’m see­ing from my lev­el is that strate­gic plan is focus­ing in on response much like you’re see­ing going on in Louisiana.” For now, it’s all about being pre­pared for any contingency. 

“Our efforts have been focused on pro­tec­tion and pre­ven­tion at this stage,” Blalock said, “and try­ing to get all the resources in place to keep the oil off our coast­lines, to keep the oil out of our oys­ter beds, to keep the oil off our bar­ri­er islands.” 

Source:
U.S. Depart­ment of Defense
Office of the Assis­tant Sec­re­tary of Defense (Pub­lic Affairs) 

Team GlobDef

Seit 2001 ist GlobalDefence.net im Internet unterwegs, um mit eigenen Analysen, interessanten Kooperationen und umfassenden Informationen für einen spannenden Überblick der Weltlage zu sorgen. GlobalDefence.net war dabei die erste deutschsprachige Internetseite, die mit dem Schwerpunkt Sicherheitspolitik außerhalb von Hochschulen oder Instituten aufgetreten ist.

Alle Beiträge ansehen von Team GlobDef →