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Disaster looms as oil slick reaches US coast

...and now for the latest craze hitting america wasting food spilling oil!


btw: the sad point i was making with my last post was that if i, as a fairly socially conscious person, can forget this catastrophy, joe schloe probably thinks of it as a forgettful subplot on last week's episodes of the soap opera like news-tainment shows. you know, the one with all them fictional political characters.
 
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http://www.cnbc.com/id/38471922

The government's point man for the Gulf oil spill says preparations for an attempt to plug the gusher from above are going well enough that the timeline for the "static kill" may be moved up.


Getty Images
Retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen said Thursday the Gulf well could be killed earlier than originally anticipated.

Work on the relief well needed for a permanent fix must be completed before the start of the static kill, which is intended to make the job of plugging the well for good easier.

Retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen said Thursday that crews will lay in the casing for the relief well later in the day. He says that could accelerate the work on the static kill, which he previously said would begin late Sunday or early Monday.

Allen also says there is now little chance that any of the spilled oil will reach the East Coast, and the odds will go to zero as the well is killed.

The government's point man for the Gulf spill also met with coastal parish officials Thursday to talk about what's next now that the oil has stopped flowing.

Allen said crews are having trouble finding patches of the crude that had been washing up on beaches and coating delicate coastal wetlands since the Deepwater Horizon offshore drilling rig exploded April 20, killing 11 people.

Though no one knows for sure how much oil might be lurking below the surface, most of what was coming ashore has broken up or been sucked up by skimming boats or burned.

"The oil that we do see is weathered, it is sheen," Allen said.

Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungesser said as he arrived for the meeting at a downtown New Orleans office building that it's clear the cleanup effort is being scaled back even though oil is still showing up on the coast.

He said his biggest fear is "they are going to start pulling back. They say they are not but already they have canceled catering contracts, they've stopped production of boom at factories."

Nungesser said no BP [BP 38.42 0.71 (+1.88%) ] spill cleanup efforts were going on in Plaquemines on Wednesday, though a parish crew was working.

"We continued to get slammed by the oil," he said. "Once again, instead of having a seat at the table discussing it, they are pulling the rug from under us."

Barring a calamity, the oil won't start flowing again before BP can permanently kill the well, which could happen as soon as mid-August. Allen said the Coast Guard expects oil to keep showing up on beaches four to six weeks after that happens.

In Orange Beach, Ala., Jack Raborn said he didn't see any tar balls when he went to the shore Wednesday with friends and family. But when they entered the ocean, he said, the water was tainted.

"It feels like you've got diesel fuel on you. It's sticky," said Raborn, 49. "I was optimistic before today. I'm really disturbed by what I found once we got in the water."

A report by the National Resources Defense Council found oil still fouling beaches even after the gusher was capped July 15. Since the spill started, beaches from Louisiana to the Florida Panhandle have been closed or slapped with health warnings more than 2,200 times, the council found.

Allen said once oil stops for good, the Coast Guard may start redeploying some of the 11 million feet of boom, 811 oil skimmers and 40,000 people that have been part of the oil spill response. Many of the workers are fishermen who have lost their livelihoods because of the spill.
 
can someone summarize the current forecast? this thread is long as hell

i read a little about the second spill, and how they've been working on plugging the pipeline
 
That's about. it. They're going to start pumping heavy drilling mud into the top of the well this weekend, then intersect the well with their relief well from the bottom and pour cement in it this coming week. That should finally stop it for good.
 
speaking of oil spills, here is another recent one. i was just in slc and they were still cleaning it up.... a bunch of people who lived by the stream got sick and one of my favorite parks is all fucked up now. I can't even begin to imagine the extent of damage that bp's gusher will cause :(

http://www.deseretnews.com/article/700039797/Oil-spill-in-Red-Butte-Creek-threatens.html

SALT LAKE CITY — Containment of a crude oil spill estimated at around 20,000 gallons into Red Butte Creek is expected to last well into the night and continue through Sunday as multiple agencies work to mitigate impacts to the stream and wildlife.

The fracture of the Chevron pipeline sent oil gushing into the riparian corridor, leaving the thick, tacky substance clinging to rocks, soil and any fish and birds in its path.

A biology teacher from Rowland Hall watched with dismay the stream "running black" on Saturday.

The creek that runs through his backyard and normally gives him such delight instead swamped the morning air with a horrible smell.

"It stinks and it is toxic," Peter Hayes said. "Whatever is in that creek will die. I have so little faith in oil companies to take care of this."

Even as the BP Gulf Coast oil tragedy and its stumbling cleanup efforts continue to dominate the news, Salt Lake City awakened Saturday morning to its own ecological disaster winding its way through Salt Lake neighborhoods and turning Liberty Park into a command center.

Where children would normally play and chase ducks, those same waterfowl were coated with the gooey substance, helplessly trying to groom the oil off themselves.
Story continues below

Jane Larson, an animal care supervisor at Hogle Zoo, said between 150 and 200 birds — mostly Canada geese — were herded into temporary corrals and taken to the zoo for the cleansing process. The birds will either remain at the zoo for the time being or go to a wildlife rehabilitation center.

The all-day effort tapped specialists with the state Division of Wildlife Resources and the state agriculture department.

The agencies, also joined by Tracy Aviary employees, will return to the park for the next several days to look for stragglers that may have been missed in the initial sweep.

"It's going to be a concerted effort on the part of many groups," Larson said.

Pipeline fracture

The pipeline fracture most likely happened at about 10 p.m. Friday on the south side of Red Butte Creek. The 10-inch-diameter line runs down Emigration Canyon to the company's refinery near Beck Street, carrying medium crude oil from western Colorado and eastern Utah to the Salt Lake Valley.

Chevron reported receiving high and low pressure alarms Friday evening, but the nature of the alarm did not give a location that would pinpoint the trouble.

Just before 7 a.m. Saturday, however, Salt Lake police and fire received reports of petroleum odors near the Veterans Administration facility on 500 S. Foothill Drive. It was then that the crude oil was discovered in Red Butte Creek, with 50 to 60 gallons gushing into the stream every minute. Crews reached the shutoff valve seven miles upstream from the leak at 7:45 a.m. By 11:20 a.m., the spill was at 20 to 25 gallons per minute.

In the meantime, crews hastily issued a warning for residents to stay away from Red Butte Canyon and shut down Liberty Park for the day, where a command center replaced afternoon recreation.

The pond at Liberty Park — Liberty Lake — was soon covered with thick black oil slicks, and residents along the streams reported seeing dead fish.

A handful of residents began making phones calls to emergency dispatchers, concerned about the petroleum odor wafting into the air.

A persistent rainfall left over from Friday's night's thunderstorm helped clear the air of the stink, and as news briefings continued throughout the day, the calls tapered off, said Salt Lake Fire spokesman Scott Freitag.

A construction crew in the neighborhood began using its heavy equipment to help dam the stream in early efforts to stanch the flow, Freitag said.

"Our real concern is keeping people safe and keeping the oil from reaching the Great Salt Lake," he added.

Crews are using absorbent booms and creating dams in an effort to contain the spill, but some oil has already leaked to the Jordan River.

Work will continue

By 4 p.m., Salt Lake Mayor Ralph Becker was back in town, cutting short a trip to Oklahoma to address the spill.

He, like others, was grim-faced about the urgency of what needs to happen this weekend and the work that will continue in the days ahead.

"We have a mess on our hands" as the result of what he termed a "bad accident."

Becker added that the city intends to get to "the bottom of what made this happen. ... The city is not going to rest until we see the cleanup through."

Early on, city officials stressed that the city's culinary water system was not impacted by the spill and that household water is safe to drink.

The vitality of the aquatic wildlife, birds and vegetation that depend on Red Butte Creek is another matter.

Employees with the state Division of Water Quality spent Saturday sampling the water from the creek just below the spill, downstream through Liberty Park and where the stream discharges into the Jordan River.

Jim Harris, the division's monitoring section manager, said samples will be taken multiple times at those locations throughout the coming days to determine the extent of the stream's contamination.

"We're looking for a wide range of organic compounds," Harris said. "They are likely to kill a lot of aquatic wildlife — fish and birds, bugs and reptiles."

The immediate goal, of course, is to clean up the spill and save the wildlife from its impacts, noted Dan Griffin, an environmental engineer for the agency and permit writer.

He stressed that simply removing the oil — while a paramount concern — can create a whole host of problems if it is not done correctly.

"Right now there appears to be crude oil in the creek beds along the creek, and that has to be cleaned out, and you have to do that properly," he said. "If you force it into the creek bed or the soils and damage or destroy the natural habitat — the cleanup can ruin the environment of the creek completely."

Oil affects the natural water resilience of waterfowl and contaminates moss and algae, which are then consumed by animals and fish, Griffin said.

The severity of the spill, Griffin said, is not to be taken lightly.

"The size of the spill, compared to what is going on in the Gulf, the impact would be proportional," he said.

The state is likely to issue a notice of violation to Chevron for the discharge, Griffin said, and a settlement will include costs to cover the cleanup. That is a process that could take months to complete as the investigation unfolds.

Full responsibility

An EPA investigator is also probing the impacts of the spill and will help kickstart any cleanup efforts that merit federal intervention.

A team of investigators from Chevron is arriving in Salt Lake City from Houston, and a special hotline has been set up to field complaints or questions from residents. The number is 1-866-752-6340.

Chevron spokesman Mark Sullivan said the company takes full responsibility for the spill and intends to cover all financial costs of the containment and cleanup. The pipeline was last inspected in 2008, he added, and showed no problems that would raise concern. Most pipeline fractures are due to water-caused corrosion, he said.

"We understand the sensitivity surrounding the oil industry right now, and we take responsibility for fixing this," he said.

Becker also stressed that the city "would work with Chevron, but we won't leave it to Chevron."

Contacts on the oil spill

The public may register questions or concerns regarding the Chevron oil spill with the city in three ways. The Salt Lake Joint Information Center will field calls at 801-535-7171, or the public may e-mail oil@slcgov .com or fill out an online form at www.slcgovb.com. Community Emergency Response Teams will be visiting affected neighborhoods today to distribute information.
 
Interestingly, I cannot find anything w.r.t. what you're talking about on any of CBC's, BBC's, or even CNN's website, yet all three have Chelsea Clinton for their headlines...
 
461-mission_accomplished.jpg



i won't believe it until i get this
 
NEW ORLEANS — Officials have long insisted that a relief well was the only surefire way to kill the oil leak at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, but with engineers only feet away from completing a pair of them they're now wrestling with how exactly to use them.

Crews planned testing Monday evening to determine whether to proceed with a plan — called a "static kill" — to pump mud and perhaps cement down the throat of the mile-deep busted well. The role of the relief well, plus a backup one dug at White House insistence, was to do the same from the bottom of the well and insure that the oil would stay in its vast undersea reservoir.

BP PLC Senior Vice President Kent Wells said Monday that engineers may pump cement directly into the busted well through the failed blowout preventer via a surface ship, rather than wait for the relief well's planned completion later this month.

That idea isn't new — but BP has never before indicated it might forgo use of the relief well altogether in direct attempts to plug the leak.

"Precisely what the relief wells will do remains to be seen given what we learn from the static kill," BP spokesman Daren Beaudo said. "Can't predict it for certain."

Either way, Wells said, "We want to end up with cement in the bottom of the hole."

The company began drilling the primary, 18,000-foot relief well May 2, 12 days after the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded and killed 11 workers, and the second well May 16. The first well is now only about 100 feet from the target, and Wells said it could reach it by Aug. 11.
ABC News: BP Prepares Permanent Plug for Oil Well

The British oil giant said there's no doubt the relief wells, which can cost about $100 million each, would be used in some fashion. Mud and cement could be pumped down to plug the reservoir, or it could simply be used to "confirm" that the static kill worked, Beaudo said.

BP didn't fully explain why, after so much time, money and effort, the company was unclear on the role a relief well would play.

The company could be more worried than it has said publicly about debris found in the relief well after it was briefly capped as Tropical Storm Bonnie passed last week, said Louisiana State University environmental sciences professor Ed Overton.

Plus, trying to seal the well from the top gives BP two shots at ending the disaster, Overton said.

"Frankly, if they can shut it off from the top and it's a good, permanent seal, I'll take it," Overton said. "A bird in the hand at this point is a good thing with this deal."

http://www.comcast.net/articles/news-national/20100731/US.Gulf.Oil.Spill/

yeah...dunno guys
doesn't look like it's capped to me.
 
BP didn't fully explain why, after so much time, money and effort, the company was unclear on the role a relief well would play.
Obviously, this operation would shut off an oil well. That's the last thing they want. They first tried everything they could in order to make the well reusable. Assuming this works, the well COULD have been capped several months ago.
 
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