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A brand new abandoned gas station ⛽ lol
A ella le gusta la gasolina.
The Gulf of Mexico caught on fire because a pipeline ruptured.
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico’s state-owned oil company said Friday it suffered a rupture in an undersea gas pipeline in the Gulf of Mexico, sending flames boiling to the surface in the Gulf waters.
Petroleos Mexicanos said it had dispatched fire control boats to pump more water over the flames.
Pemex, as the company is known, said nobody was injured in the incident in the offshore Ku-Maloob-Zaap field.
The leak near dawn Friday occurred about 150 yards (meters) from a drilling platform. The company said it had brought the gas leak under control about five hours later.
But the accident gave rise to the strange sight of roiling balls of flame boiling up from below the surface of the Gulf of Mexico.
It was unclear how much environmental damage the gas leak and oceanic fireball had caused.
(continue reading)
The Ku-Maloob-Zaap oilfield in the Gulf of Mexico released a shocking amount of the greenhouse gas methane last month, a new report finds.
Excerpt from this story from Earther/Gizmodo:
A huge oilfield in the Gulf of Mexico, which caused a hellish fire in the ocean last year, has been releasing massive amounts of planet-warming methane. Reuters reported last week on satellite data that shows that the Ku-Maloob-Zaap oilfield leaked 44,064 tons of methane into the atmosphere over the course of 24 days in August. That’s the equivalent of 3.7 million tons of carbon dioxide—what 653,106 homes emit by using electricity over the course of one year.
Researchers with the European Space Agency found that the platform released around the same amount in another ultra-emission event in December 2021. That’s around 3% of Mexico’s average annual emissions.
“In December, the flaring shut down, and they were venting gas almost constantly for 17 days,” Itziar Irakulis-Loitxate, a scientist from the Polytechnic University of Valencia and the lead author of the paper, told Reuters. “This time, however, they have been venting and flaring gas intermittently during the whole month.”
If the platform’s unusual name rings any bells, it’s probably because this is the oilfield that dramatically caught fire last summer, making images of a doomsday-looking crater of flame on the ocean go viral. The fire began after an underground pipeline ruptured.
The platform is owned by Pemex, Mexico’s state-owned and operated oil and gas company. While neither Reuters nor the ESA researchers could confirm the cause of either methane leak, previous reports suggest Pemex has a long history of not taking care of its aging oil and gas infrastructure, including at Ku-Maloob-Zaap. There were around 100 deaths attributable to accidents on Pemex sites between 2010 and 2017, according to research firm Statista.
Bonito Jueves☺
Pemex's "Motions."
Opening on February 5th, 2022 at Spoke Art Gallery in San Francisco, California is artist Pemex's solo exhibition, "Motions."
Celebrated internationally for his graffiti, Pemex's recent works are inspired by the cultural influences stemming from his travels throughout South America and Mexico.
This new body of work features a series of carefully constructed oil paintings created over the last year as part of an artist residency in Mexico City. While creating these pieces, Pemex reflected on the duality of life; literally for those living in Mexico City and spiritually through the depiction of themes such as life and death. Within this body of work, Pemex specifically pays tribute to the lost children of Mexico who’ve died while attempting to cross the border into the United States. For the children who do cross successfully, Pemex magnifies the new and unexpected struggles of maintaining a dual identity: belonging to two cultures separated by a border.
Pemex uses deep and vibrant colors to create paintings that celebrate his Mexican- American heritage alongside symbolic references from South American cultures . The symbolism in each picture attempts to deepen the sense of duality that Pemex is exploring, often through specific animal imagery such as coyotes, foxes and animal skeletons which portray meaning behind the cycle of life and death.
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