Haiti earthquake may reveal major oil and gas reserves.

jmdrake

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http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601072&sid=aUqFB_GbhRYM
Haiti Earthquake May Have Exposed Gas, Aiding Economy (Update1)
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By Jim Polson

Jan. 26 (Bloomberg) -- The earthquake that killed more than 150,000 people in Haiti this month may have left clues to petroleum reservoirs that could aid economic recovery in the Western Hemisphere’s poorest nation, a geologist said.

The Jan. 12 earthquake was on a fault line that passes near potential gas reserves, said Stephen Pierce, a geologist who worked in the region for 30 years for companies including the former Mobil Corp. The quake may have cracked rock formations along the fault, allowing gas or oil to temporarily seep toward the surface, he said yesterday in a telephone interview.

“A geologist, callous as it may seem, tracing that fault zone from Port-au-Prince to the border looking for gas and oil seeps, may find a structure that hasn’t been drilled,” said Pierce, exploration manager at Zion Oil & Gas Inc., a Dallas- based company that’s drilling in Israel. “A discovery could significantly improve the country’s economy and stimulate further exploration.”

Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive met yesterday in Montreal with diplomats, including U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, to discuss redevelopment initiatives. Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon said wind power may play a role in rebuilding the Caribbean nation, where forests have been denuded for lack of fuel, the Canadian Press reported.

“Haiti, from the standpoint of oil and gas exploration, is a lot less developed than the Dominican Republic,” Pierce said. “One could do a lot more work there.”

Abraham Lincoln’s Consul

The Dominican Republic shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti. It may have 3 million barrels of oil in a shallow offshore formation that’s probably also shared by Haiti, Pierce said.

“One of the main reasons for the dearth of information on reserves in Haiti is that the Dominican Republic has numerous surface-hydrocarbon seeps while Haiti had very, very few,” he said.

Abraham Lincoln’s consul to the Dominican Republic reported oil seeps there in 1862. Neither nation produces oil or gas. As much as 1 trillion cubic feet of gas may be trapped in a border formation near the earthquake fault, Pierce said.

Pierce hasn’t worked in Hispaniola since joining Zion in February 2005. He said he’s unaware of any petroleum geologists conducting fieldwork in Haiti. There has been exploration of Ocoa Bay, the largest potential oil deposit in the Dominican Republic, he said.

600,000 Without Shelter

“All basins cross the border,” said Paul Mann, co-author of a 1991 paper in the Journal of Petroleum Geology on Hispaniola’s petroleum potential. The paper concluded that “existing seismic data indentify undrilled prospects.”

More than 600,000 people are without shelter in the Port- au-Prince area, the United Nations said Jan. 22. The 7.0- magnitude quake destroyed about one-third of the buildings in Port-au-Prince. It also knocked out the capital’s seaport and water and sewage systems.

“Relief and recovery for the survivors is the priority now,” Mark Fried, a spokesman for British charity Oxfam, said in a statement. “Hundreds of thousands who lost everything but their lives” need water, shelter and toilets to stop the spread of disease, he said.

‘Colossal’ Reconstruction

Haiti will need “massive support” for a “colossal” reconstruction from the earthquake, Bellerive said at the meeting yesterday in Montreal.

The Greater Antilles, which includes Cuba, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico and their offshore waters, probably hold at least 142 million barrels of oil and 159 billion cubic feet of gas, according to a 2000 report by the U.S. Geological Survey. Undiscovered amounts may be as high as 941 million barrels of oil and 1.2 trillion cubic feet of gas, according to the report.

Among nations in the northern Caribbean, Cuba and Jamaica have awarded offshore leases for oil and gas development. Trinidad and Tobago, South American islands off the coast of Venezuela, account for most Caribbean oil production, according to the U.S. Energy Department.
 
Cue the "the US attacked Haiti with an earthquake machine to get the oil" cross-links...
 
Cue the "the US attacked Haiti with an earthquake machine to get the oil" cross-links...

LOL. Interestingly enough I just found out about this from my barber and he said it raised suspicion in his mind about the cause of the earthquake. We do know from statements by William Cohen that the technology probably exists. I'm still in the "this probably was a natural occurrence" camp. But this does make me wonder about statements by radical environmentalists like Danny Glover (blamed the quake on global warming). Haiti's biggest environmental problem is deforrestation. But if they were able to shift to locally produced natural gas, poor people would no longer need to cut trees for fuel and solving the deforrestation problem would be that much easier. So really the best way to restore the Haitian environment is to do the exact opposite of what Al Gore wants. (Of course this presupposes using a significant amount of the energy reserves that may be found to actually help Haiti instead of siphoning it all off to make money for the cleptocracy that rules that miserable place.)
 
This is great news for the kleptocrats that rule Haiti. And a few haitians might get jobs with oil companies... and yes, if they could stop cutting down their rainforest to cook food with, that would help it not become a desert.
 
Another catastrophic event that works out wonderfully. Will the miracles ever cease?
 
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Cue the "the US attacked Haiti with an earthquake machine to get the oil" cross-links...

I don't think it was an earthquake machine or w/e. But there is a lot of stuff out there that says that they knew there were oil reserves there in the past and now there is an excuse to say we "found it". Perhaps the reason for the occupation.
 
I found this article posted somewhere else on this forum - I apologize I can't remember who posted it originally to give them credit

Oil in Haiti - Economic Reasons for the UN/US occupation

There is also good evidence that these very same big US oil companies and their inter-related monopolies of engineering and defense contractors made plans, decades ago, to use Haiti's deep water ports either for oil refineries or to develop oil tank farm sites or depots where crude oil could be stored and later transferred to small tankers to serve U.S. and Caribbean ports.

This from October 13, 2009...
 
please, GOD, let free trade reign and let the people of hati capitolize on this wealth so they may rebuild a country and find peace, for your name's sake & glory, in Yeshua's name i pray to the FATHER.
 
please, GOD, let free trade reign and let the people of hati capitolize on this wealth so they may rebuild a country and find peace, for your name's sake & glory, in Yeshua's name i pray to the FATHER.

While 20,000 American soldiers occupy Haiti.

Sorry padre, God is powerful, but he can not stop the corruption of men.
 
I don't think it was an earthquake machine or w/e. But there is a lot of stuff out there that says that they knew there were oil reserves there in the past and now there is an excuse to say we "found it". Perhaps the reason for the occupation.

Occupation, huh? I thought only Hugo Chavez had the capacity to make such a statement.
 
Occupation, huh?

Yes. 20,000 U.S soldiers in Haiti or off the coast by Sunday as a U.S military spokesperson said. Quite a vast unparalleled operation. Taking their airports, ports, and even the sign of their national sovereignty, under our control. Not like we didn't control Haiti before, now we just have a bigger reason to justify sending so many soldiers and now you have the convenience of oil "just being found" that will "help Haiti".

We are occupying Haiti. While I disagree hotly with Chavez and most everything he says or believes, he is SPOT ON when he attacks America's foreign policy.
 
Let's not forget the resolution that every voting member of the House voted FOR (except RP, of course) that vowed to assist with the "long-term rebuilding" of Haiti.

This plays right into that.
 
hmmm.... well, despite what the tin foil hat community believes, H.A.A.R.P. is supposed to be about remote imaging of underground complexes and underwater communications. I also recall a discussion about locating deep mines in CA that were on top of the San Andrus Fault and pumping a lot of ANFO into them. In this case, if it were deliberate, it would take a drill platform or a submarine - and in the latter case, drilling would still be necessary.

First I recalled and dug this up:

"Hostile manipulations of the land that have been suggested as military possibilities of the future seem for the most part to be highly dependent for their success on the local site factors. For example, if an enemy region happens to be tectonically unstable it might become possible to trigger an earthquake there. Similarly, quiescent volcanoes ... avalanches and landslides ... flooding ... generation of tsunamis ..."

"Weapons of Mass Destruction and the Environment" by Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (1977). They have another title on Environmental Warfare that is probably more detailed, but I unfortunately don't have a copy.

LOL! - Oh this is rich! - I got the book used, and just noticed the bookplate (sticker on inside cover) it reads: "Ex Libris - Council on Foreign Relations"!!!

I'm rather sure I've seen other discussions, probably in dissertations from military service academies and articles in Janes air and space, etc. Looking through Google, the conspiracy nuts are coming out of the woodwork and I'm finding very little of any credibility, however this bit from 1968 is interesting...

http://twm.co.nz/envwar.html

HOW TO WRECK THE ENVIRONMENT
Chapter from Unless Peace Comes by Gordon J. F. MacDonald U.S.A.
1968
[Abridged]

The key to geophysical warfare is the identification of the environmental instabilities to which the addition of a small amount of energy would release vastly greater amounts of energy. Environmental instability is a situation in which nature has stored energy in some part of the Earth or its surroundings far in excess of that which is usual. To trigger this instability, the required energy might be introduced violently by explosions or gently by small bits of material able to induce rapid changes by acting as catalysts or nucleating agents. The mechanism for energy storage might be the accumulation of strain over hundreds of millions of years in the solid Earth, or the super-cooling of water vapour in the atmosphere by updraughts taking place over a few tens of minutes. Effects of releasing this energy could be world-wide, as in the case of altering climate, or regional, as in the case of locally excited earthquakes or enhanced precipitation.

Here's one from LexusNexis:
https://litigation-essentials.lexis...cid=3B15&key=e38f8bf9d27724eeb5582a7e7ff8d1df

Interesting - fair ammount out there - I haven't looked into it in a while.

To offer an opinion, I think it's unlikely that the Haiti quake was triggered by humans, however the UN treaties all seem to ban such activity in relationship to warfare, and don't address corporate profit as a motive. As the first post indicates, there is certainly a profit motive here.

-t
 
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there have been a few threads on this matter...ive posted one on this specifically the red cross and it was thrown to hot topics...i do feel this is very important info...haiti is also rich in gold
 
http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?t=227418
please take the time to read the above thread...

The big thing about Haiti now may be a boom due to reconstruction financed by aid money poured from all over the world, but if the debt of Haiti goes erased, then is can start fresh with getting into more debt, that means the vicious cycle of dependency to the world banks and nations like US and UK will never stop.

This could also be a reason as to why we are occupying Haiti:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8476395.stm


Quote:

A new US assessment of Venezuela's oil reserves could give the country double the supplies of Saudi Arabia.

Scientists working for the US Geological Survey say Venezuela's Orinoco belt region holds twice as much petroleum as previously thought.

The geologists estimate the area could yield more than 500bn barrels of crude oil.
 
I don't think it was an earthquake machine or w/e. But there is a lot of stuff out there that says that they knew there were oil reserves there in the past and now there is an excuse to say we "found it". Perhaps the reason for the occupation.

This is what I'm thinking. Although I have read somewhere that there is some suspicion that some kind of machine could have caused it.
 
Hope they build better dwellings in the future.
 
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