Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Oil, Politics, and Fish

On April 20th, five years had passed since the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico - what CNN called the worst environmental disaster in US - 11 lives of rig workers were lost, too. CNN is reporting that as a whole, the Gulf is recovering, which I don't deny. Oil rigs, as lethal as they can be in the event of a spill, provide a habitat for a wide range of marine organisms, including a substrate for coral growth, which creates a livable habitat for many other creatures. They claim, "Fish landings in the Gulf, the amount of fish caught by the fishing industry, have returned." Actually, Red Snapper populations specifically are even better than they were 25 years ago. But how?

Legislation against fishing activity.

Red Snapper populations in the Gulf have been recovering, but because fishing has been largely monitored, at a great expense to the recreational fishing industries. Since 2011, Gulf states have been shortening the season to compensate from the colossal damage that the spill caused. To prevent over-fishing, a 9-day "mini-season" was enacted. The TAC, total allowable catch, was 106,000 fish, and in 9 days, the total fish caught and counted by NOAA was 205,859. Naturally, after over-fishing by about 100,000 fish, they closed the season for 2015. Now, the season won't open until the population assessment in 2016 is completed. This has difficult economic implications for the recreational fishing component of the nearby fishing towns. Not only is there a jolt in economic activity from the mini-season, it was an opportunity for fisherman to have a fishing hay-day and over-fishing was inevitable, commence a year of economic inactivity for Red Snapper. In Florida alone, Red Snapper recreational catches account for 49% of the fish population and generate $7.6 billion dollars in revenue. per. year.

Dr. Bob Shipp, a known fishing guru in the Gulf, claims that it is "probably the worst-management fishery in the United States, when you have a fishery that's so incredibly healthy, and yet you have a nine-day season for the recreational industry with devastating economic impacts on towns like Orange Beach, Destin, and Panama City." I can't say that I disagree.

Aside from all of the Red Snapper politics, the CNN article felt strangely eerie to me. Oil means money. It just does, and I understand that given our current energy resources, it is inextricably tied to greater economic and social well-being, but to say that fish populations are recovering without any mention of how they're recovering is a bit... slimy, if you ask me.

Here are some links that I did further background reading on (in addition to what the infamous Liam Carr taught us via SFS).

http://www.cnn.com/2015/04/14/us/gulf-oil-spill-unknowns/

http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov/sustainable_fisheries/s_atl/sg/2015/red_snapper/index.html

http://tpwd.texas.gov/newsmedia/releases/

http://www.tampabay.com/sports/outdoors/tomalin-delicious-but-contentious-tale-of-red-snapper/2231556


Friday, June 19, 2015

Who Am I Anyway?

I come from a religiously and politically conservative community in West Texas, one that sometimes associates leftist views with environmentalism. When I started college, I encountered scientific and liberal ideology that contrasted heavily with the way I was raised. These two, science and religion, were equally assertive and starkly opposing views. They pushed me in opposite directions. To overcome this ideological conflict, I began seeking a way to uncover commonalities between these seemingly disparate parties. I see similar consensus building as my future career – a role that takes the shape of environmental economics – where I can be a conduit between polarized groups, my way of seeking the equilibrium of human luxury and environmental protection.

As an undergraduate, I look to several different mediums to amalgamate my seemingly mutually exclusive interests. In the summer of 2014, I was able to truly combine my environmental studies and economics backgrounds by my participation in an Applied Economics Field School in Zimbabwe, and in the spring of 2015, I was able to spend the semester studying through School for Field Studies' Coastal and Marine Resource Studies program in the Turks and Caicos Islands. Through these experiences, I've been able to further articulate my worldview that, for quite some time, was convoluted to me. 
Watching a White Rhino in Matopos, Zimbabwe

Being silly in front of the world's widest waterfall, Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe

Socializing with kiddos from the primary school in Limpopo, Zimbabwe

A photograph with a hawksbill turtle, Eretmochelys imbricata, with Christina after night turtling in South Caicos, Turks and Caicos Islands

Scuba diving at The Spanish Chain, South Caicos, TCI

The extraordinary sunsets of TCI.


With this blog, I hope to bring my opinions and ideas to fruition and share environmental news with a large audience. I've learned the hard way that having mass communications experience is important in being a competitive candidate for internships.

The title, Musings of a Hippie Economist, is merely a cute way to express the uniqueness of my position. By no means am I interested in labeling myself as a certain type of human being, but I am fond of ways to extend a notion of who I am through humor. My blog, whether revered or dismissed, is a representation of who I am and is a place to share current events and things I learn. I appreciate your support in my endeavor of starting my first blog!