in southeastern Louisiana. Katrina caused a long-term environmental and health impact. Katrina caused a long-term environmental and health impact.
Being that hurricane Katrina had a bad oil spill, scientist say “that the damage to birds and wildlife could be disastrous.” Ongoing assessment, conducted on Sept. 27, showed high levels of petroleum hydrocarbons, or fuel oils, and E. coli bacteria in sediment samples of residue left over from receding floodwaters. According to EPA spokesman Michael Dorff, “we are not sure what the wildlife long-term effects are going to be. It’s going to take time to pull everything together, and get the big picture and figure out what this is going to mean for the
future. Hurricane Katrina caused more damages than just the oil spill. Katrina’s damage was between $96-$125 billion. It also damaged gas pipelines. It spilled nearly as much oil as the Exxon Valdez oil disaster, this caused oil prices to increase by $3 a barrel and gas prices to nearly reach $5 a gallon. Katrina’s impact was so devastating because of its path. It had a major impact on Louisiana’s sugar industry. It had an estimate of 500 million annual crop value.