Oiling is Localized to Summerland
After several hours of detailed field assessments across Summerland beaches and associated explorations of neighboring beaches bracketing the Summerland area yesterday, we now have a much clearer and complete picture of the current beach oiling event occurring in Summerland at the moment. Below I summarize the state of affairs as of Sunday, August 23, 2015.
ESRM Beach Teams: Positioned To Best Understand Beach Oiling
Recent months have seen generally heightened seep activity across the Santa Barbara Channel, overlapping with the tar and crude deposition of the Refugio Oil Spill. This originally caused a bit of confusion as to the source of the tar covering our southland beaches in late spring/early summer (the vast majority of which proved to be from the pipeline itself and not background seep activity). CSUCI researchers were in the field almost daily from mid-May through mid-July after which most of our team migrated to the South Pacific, other points across the western U.S., and the Louisiana coast for other research projects and management commitments. As of mid August our team has returned to our beach monitoring work, albeit not to a daily pace of visitation. As a consequence of so many field hours, we were well positioned to evaluate the amount of “background” beach tarring and oiling.
Heightened Seeping Of Late
We observed increased background rates of beach deposition of tar/oil for the past few months, especially in the vicinity of Summerland (and Coal Oil Point). This is the normal state of things in this region. Indeed, abundant oil (especially enriched with asphaltenes) has been known since Chumash times and was the motivator for intensive drilling across Summerland starting in the late 1890s. This elevated seep rate was nevertheless nowhere near as intense as the recent activity in and around Summerland California.
This heightened oiling rate we are observing at Summerland is much greater than our “typical” seep deposition seen in previous years and greater than the rates seen this year prior to about two weeks ago (confirmed by both our observations and numerous reports from local residents), but still within the range of “natural” oiling.
What is causing this increased rate of seeping/beach deposition?
This is unclear and likely due to the vagaries of subsurface pressure fields and geological structures. But the reason this particular event has triggered a Public Health Warning and beach closure is not surprising: the highest concentration of oil occurred right at the bottom of the public beach access ramp leading to the beach from Lookout Park. So the spot where just about everyone enters the beach had the greatest pooled oil deposits, the most obvious visual concentration of oil, and the strongest crude oil stench (note: while not dangerous for short exposures, the amount of volatile organics in the air in the vicinity of these accumulated oil swales translates into a not particularly healthy situation should you be inhaling this air over the long run). It is very clear that this oiling is not deriving from poorly maintained terrestrial storm drains, as folks have speculated.
Avoid the Summerland Epicenter for Now
This heavy oiling over the past two weeks is highly localized. A few miles up the coast or a few miles down the coast translated into essentially no deposited oil upon those beaches. We feel it is prudent for folks to avoid the Summerland beaches for the immediate future until this seep activity dies back down to a lower level. This might be a few days or weeks or months. Time will tell.
In Context
Finally lets make sure we keep all this in perspective. Our beaches are under assault from many sides and in many ways…