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Deep Horizon Oil Well Gushing 42,000 Gallons Into Gulf Of Mexico Per Day

Deep Horizon Oil Spill

First Posted: 06/26/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:15 PM ET

NEW ORLEANS (AP)-- Coast Guard crews raced to protect the Gulf of Mexico coastline Monday as a remote sub tried to shut off an underwater oil well that's gushing 42,000 gallons a day from the site of a wrecked drilling platform.

If crews cannot stop the leak quickly, they might need to drill another well to redirect the oil, a laborious process that could take weeks while oil washes up along a broad stretch of shore, from the white-sand beaches of Florida's Panhandle to the swamps of Louisiana. The oil spill already stretches across more than 1,800 square miles of water in the Gulf Of Mexico, according to the Coast Guard.

The oil is escaping from two leaks in a drilling pipe about 5,000 feet below the surface. The leaks threaten hundreds of miles of coastline in four states, with waters that are home to dolphins, sea birds, and prime fishing and tourism areas.

NASA's Aqua satellite captured this image of the oil slick on Sunday:

The oil began gushing out of the sea floor after the rig Deepwater Horizon exploded April 20 and sank two days later about 40 miles off the Mississippi River delta. Eleven of the 126 workers aboard at the time are missing and presumed dead; the rest escaped. The cause of the explosion has not been determined.

As of Monday afternoon, an area 48 miles long and 39 miles wide was covered by oil that leaked from the site of the rig, which was owned by Transocean Ltd. and operated by BP PLC.

Crews used robot submarines to activate valves in hopes of stopping the leaks, but they may not know until Tuesday if that strategy will work. BP also mobilized two rigs to drill a relief well if needed. Such a well could help redirect the oil, though it could also take weeks to complete, especially at that depth.

Kenneth E. Arnold, an offshore production facility expert, said relief wells pose serious engineering challenges.

"Sometimes you have to drill through the steel, and that's what happened in Australia," he said, referring to a blowout last August on a rig called the West Atlas in the Timor Sea. "It took them three times before they were successful."

Not until November could mud be pumped through a relief well to shut off the deepwater spigot. The spill has resulted in major environmental damage along the coast of East Timor and Indonesia.

BP plans to collect leaking oil on the ocean bottom by lowering a large dome to capture the oil and using pipes and hoses to pump it into a vessel on the surface, said Doug Suttles, chief operating officer of BP Exploration and Production.

"That system has been deployed in shallower water," he said, "but it has never been deployed at 5,000 feet of water, so we have to be careful."

The U.S. spill, moving slowly north and spreading east and west, was about 30 miles from the Chandeleur Islands off the Louisiana coast Tuesday. The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration said oil would not reach the coast for several days. The Coast Guard said kinks in the pipe were helping stem the flow of oil.

George Crozier, oceanographer and executive director at the Dauphin Island Sea Lab in Alabama, said he was studying wind and ocean currents driving the oil.

He said Pensacola, Fla., is probably the eastern edge of the threatened area, though no one really knows what the effects will be.

"We've never seen anything like this magnitude," he said. "The problems are going to be on the beaches themselves, that's where it will be really visible."

Aaron Viles, director for New Orleans-based Gulf Restoration Network, an environmental group, said he flew over the spill Sunday and saw what was likely a sperm whale in the oil sheen.

"There are going to be significant marine impacts," he said.

Concern Monday focused on the Chandeleur and Breton barrier islands in Louisiana, where thousands of birds are nesting.

"It's already a fragile system. It would be devastating to see anything happen to that system," said Mark Kulp, a University of New Orleans geologist.

The spill also threatened oyster beds in Breton Sound on the eastern side of the Mississippi River. Harvesters could only watch and wait.

"That's our main oyster-producing area," said John Tesvich, a fourth-generation oyster farmer with Port Sulphur Fisheries Co. His company has about 4,000 acres of oyster grounds that could be affected if the spill worsens.

"Trying to move crops would be totally speculative," Tesvich said. "You wouldn't know where to move a crop. You might be moving a crop to a place that's even worse."

He said oil and oysters are not a good mix. If the oyster grounds are affected, thousands of fishermen, packers, processors might have to curtail operations.

Worse, he said, it's spawning season, and contamination could affect young oysters. But even if the spill is mostly contained, he said oil residue could get sucked in by the oysters.

"You will have off-flavors that would be a concern," Tesvich said.

If the oil continues oozing north, the white-sand beaches in Mississipi, Alabama and west Florida could be fouled.

In Louisiana, Gov. Bobby Jindal asked the Coast Guard to use containment booms, which float like a string of fat sausage links to hold back oil until it can be skimmed off the surface. Crews were trying to keep oil out of the Pass A Loutre wildlife area, a 115,000-acre preserve that is home to alligators, birds and fish near the mouth of the Mississippi River.

In Mississippi, Gov. Haley Barbour said he has spoken with the Coast Guard mission commander, Rear Adm. Mary Landry but was uncertain what steps his state might take to protect its beaches.

"It's a real difficulty in trying to determine what defenses will be effective," he said.

A fleet of boats and containment equipment was working to skim oil from the surface of the Gulf late last week. But a weather system that spawned deadly tornadoes in Louisiana and Mississippi and stirred up heavy seas over the weekend forced crews to suspend their efforts.

Coast Guard Petty Officer Connie Terrell said 32 vessels are waiting for conditions to improve to resume the cleanup. She could not say when they will be back at work, but she said 23,000 feet of containment boom had been deployed, 70,000 more were ready to go when the effort resumes, and another 50,000 feet were on order.

___

Associated Press writers Kevin McGill in New Orleans, Emily Wagster Pettus in Yazoo City, Miss., and Melinda Deslatte in Baton Rouge contributed to this story.

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NEW ORLEANS (AP)-- Coast Guard crews raced to protect the Gulf of Mexico coastline Monday as a remote sub tried to shut off an underwater oil well that's gushing 42,000 gallons a day from the site of ...
NEW ORLEANS (AP)-- Coast Guard crews raced to protect the Gulf of Mexico coastline Monday as a remote sub tried to shut off an underwater oil well that's gushing 42,000 gallons a day from the site of ...
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03:06 PM on 05/27/2010
Would it be too much for the Huffington liberals here to note that the democratic party controlled house and senate (operating at a 14% approval rating at the time) allowed the Offshore drilling moratorium to expire on October 1, 2008? Bush bashers will be forced to torture the truth entirely to death if they want to lay this at anyones feet but Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid. I personally despise the current executive branch and would love nothing better than to add another good battle cry to the "change express" for 2012, but credit should only be given where it's due.

The President (and rightly so) has limited powers and it's silly to blame him for, or expect him to solve, this no matter how many times he defended offshore drilling.
He could affect the direction of regulations placed on the spill or a war declared against it. Good luck with either of those helping.

I'm disgusted that he's not communicating with Jindal which seems to indicate his strongest desire is to score some kind of political point.

It should be pointed out that this disaster will not come close to making anybodies list of top ten spills http://envirowonk.com/content/view/68/1/ the reason being the requirements and restrictions we have on that activity that are in place currently. Without the regulations currently in place this would be much worse. I say would have in hopes that the current effort will fully succeed.
06:24 AM on 04/30/2010
Coast Guard??! On order???? WTF?

BP, Exxon and Shell executives and their "govt watchdogs" should be skinned alive on the courthouse steps in every town they live in - now.

Chemical "dispersansts"??? WTF --- we need every concrete pipe down to hole. Help me get this started! These BUFOONS at BP, Coast Guard and Govt agencies that allowed this (and Valdez) to pass are completely clueless and FAILED worse than Valdez and Katrina.
10:29 PM on 04/27/2010
We need to stop drilling NOW! Not just offshore, but all domestic drilling. Shut down as many rigs as they can. That is the only way to save this country. Let me see if I can figure this out;
We stop the drilling, we are totally dependent on foreign oil, the prices go through the roof, Americans everywhere begin to loose everything, food prices through the roof. It's the right thing to do!
Then, get to the polls as fast as we can to vote these moron liberal socialists out of office. Maybe we can be done with them once and for all. I mean, it would take a little suffering by all of us but we could end this liberal nonsense for good.
We could thank this moron Obama in 2012 by sending him packing.
Save the country. Stop drilling, stop drilling now.
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Don Malvo
Jesus was a socialist.
12:04 AM on 04/28/2010
Hint... leave sarcasm to others. You baggers are incredibly bad at it.
08:34 PM on 04/28/2010
Gee Malvo, thanks for the hint. And you may be right.(about bad sarcasm), but not as bad as you liberals are with grasping reality. Cut off the oil before alternatives are fully developed and it will all fall apart.
Us baggers see plenty of idealism and very little reality on this site, I hope you never receive your dosage. If you do, we'll all pay.
04:02 PM on 04/27/2010
Every now and then, people have to be reminded that the slogan "drill baby drill" originated with Rudy GIuliani at the 2008 Republican convention. The audience took it up enthusiastically, and the GOP seemed to be gaining considerable momentum from it. Now we have this disaster, and the silence from the likes of Sarah Palin is ear-splitting. Still, as has happened before, a Democratic President is in line to get blamed for going along with what was mainly a Republican idea. It reminds me of Lyndon Johnson; some say he got us involved in Vietnam because he was afraid of being labelled "soft on Communism" if he didn't.
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missouriwatcher
military veteran, veteran teacher, father, grandpa
01:34 PM on 04/27/2010
This type of thing is precisely why a moratorium was placed years ago on offshore drilling. Now the shortsighted, the ignorant and the greedy want more drilling offshore. Makes me wonder what planet they are from, seriously.
01:23 PM on 04/27/2010
Some positive news...

According to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) experts participating in the spill response, the spill is "very thin" and consists of 97 percent sheen, BP said in a statement Tuesday.

http://www.rigzone.com/news/article.asp?a_id=91728&hmpn=1
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NewAmericanCenturySucks
Clearcutting humans to prop up the petro$ is wrong
05:09 PM on 04/27/2010
Suspect "very thin, and 97% sheen" is NOAA's description of BP's PR effort.
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Mitzy
12:32 PM on 04/27/2010
Hey Bobby Jindal, drill baby drill!!
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RedWhiteandBlueState
Let's all be purple.
12:03 PM on 04/27/2010
We oil people of the 20th and early 21st century will have a rude awakening for using the ocean as our collective toilet. WAKE UP - we are destroying our planet. Warming, no warming, left right who cares. The Earth is a FINITE resource, we only have so many trees, fresh water sources, life forms in the sea... We are already nearing Double Earth's carrying capacity of humans and will TRIPLE it by 2050. We are riding the mighty ship called "Out of sight, out of mind" right into the rocks.

It's not that petroleum is "bad" look all that it has allowed us, it's just that we've misused and abused it and we need to STOP. It's not a liberal notion, it's not artsy fartsy hippy dippy - it's plain and simple survival of the race as we know it and the preservation of our existence on this beautiful planet.

We must cut the military spending in HALF immediately and use all of those resources for a "Manhattan Project" like commitment to developing a renewable energy infrastructure, one that creates millions of jobs, establishes America as the leader in the new energy paradigm, allowing us to be a manufacturing - exporting country again, frees us of our dependence on foreign petroleum and re-align our human experience in harmony with nature.
12:00 PM on 04/27/2010
This is a blessing in disguise, simply give the 12 million illegal aliens a sponge and push 'em off da beach. And only 2 weeks ago I was thinking they all had to walk back to Mexico, but swimming in the gulf should do the trick. Now I am not a social scientist, but I did stay at a Motel 6 seven years ago.
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HawaiiSteve
be your own lamp... let truth be your light!
02:13 PM on 04/27/2010
Was it the same motel where Palin got her degree?
11:55 AM on 04/27/2010
So should we stop driving cars because every now and then an accident happens? If we stopped drilling for oil offshore, you would all be crying because the price of oil would skyrocket.
12:03 PM on 04/27/2010
Spill baby, spill.
12:21 PM on 04/27/2010
Not really, we can never get anywhere close to the oil we need here. When oil prices become higher it encourages people to rely on new forms of energy. We should be loosing our dependence by finding new sources of energy instead having the false hope that drilling for oil here will magically solve our energy needs. When OPEC cuts off the flow it wont matter how much oil we pump here, it will never supply demand, or do much to bring down the cost.
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citizenbloggerx
11:51 AM on 04/27/2010
Drill baby drill ! I wish $arah Palin had that oil well up her saggy ass
11:49 AM on 04/27/2010
So, where is Palin and Bachmann with their "Drill Baby Drill"?
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boilinabag
Nam et ipsa scientia potestas est.
11:36 AM on 04/27/2010
this is how the world ends, not with a bang, but a whimper.......

there is no putting the cork back on the bottle. the gulf is screwed..... your shrimps are going to taste really bad soon....
airmikee99
I can has micro-bio?
01:58 PM on 04/27/2010
Nice Southland Tales reference. +10 points ;)
11:16 AM on 04/27/2010
THIS is the downside to offshore drilling!

I'm not so sure President Obama should go through with his expanded offshore drilling plan.
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ClareP
01:16 PM on 04/27/2010
I'm sure that he shouldn't. It was a bad idea from the start.
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Richard Bohn
11:00 AM on 04/27/2010
The President should issue an executive order stopping all off shore drilling operations on US territorial waters until such time that a safe and complete solution can be developed and instituted on all oil rigs.
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ClareP
01:16 PM on 04/27/2010
And Big Oil would invest everything they have in taking him down....