More

Gulf Oil Spill: Best Chance To Stop Leak Won't Be Ready Until August

MATTHEW BROWN   05/31/10 10:36 PM ET   AP

Relief Wells August

NEW ORLEANS — The best hope for stopping the flow of oil from the blown-out well at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico has been compared to hitting a target the size of a dinner plate with a drill more than two miles into the earth, and is anything but a sure bet on the first attempt.

Bid after bid has failed to stanch what has already become the nation's worst-ever spill, and BP PLC is readying another patchwork attempt as early as Wednesday, this one a cut-and-cap process to put a lid on the leaking wellhead so oil can be siphoned to the surface.

But the best-case scenario of sealing the leak is two relief wells being drilled diagonally into the gushing well – tricky business that won't be ready until August.

"The probability of them hitting it on the very first shot is virtually nil," said David Rensink, incoming president of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists, who spent most of his 39 years in the oil industry in offshore exploration. "If they get it on the first three or four shots they'd be very lucky."

The relief well drilling and temporary fixes were being watched closely by President Barack Obama, who planned to meet for the first time Tuesday with the co-chairmen of an independent commission investigating the spill. A senior administration official said the meeting will take place at the White House. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the meeting had not been formally announced.

For the relief well to succeed, the bore hole must precisely intersect the damaged well. If it misses, BP will have to back up its drill, plug the hole it just created, and try again.

The trial-and-error process could take weeks, but it will eventually work, scientists and BP said. Then engineers will then pump mud and cement through pipes to ultimately seal the well.

As the drilling reaches deeper into the earth, the process is slowed by building pressure and the increasing distance that well casings must travel before they can be set in place.

Still, the three months it could take to finish the relief wells – the first of which started May 2 – is quicker than a typical deep well, which can take four months or longer, said Tad Patzek, chair of the Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering Department at the University of Texas-Austin. BP already has a good picture of the different layers of sand and rock its drill bits will meet because of the work it did on the blown-out well.

On the slim chance the relief well doesn't work, scientists weren't sure exactly how much – or how long – the oil would flow. The gusher would continue until the well bore hole collapsed or pressure in the reservoir dropped to a point where oil was no longer pushed to the surface, Patzek said.

"I don't admit the possibility of it not working," he said.

A third well could be drilled if the first two fail.

"We don't know how much oil is down there, and hopefully we'll never know when the relief wells work," BP spokesman John Curry said.

The company was starting to collect and analyze data on how much oil might be in the reservoir when the rig exploded April 20, he said.

BP's uncertainty statement is reasonable, given they only had drilled one well, according to Doug Rader, an ocean scientist with the Environmental Defense Fund.

Two relief wells stopped the world's worst peacetime spill, from a Mexican rig called Ixtoc 1 that dumped 140 million gallons off the Yucatan Peninsula. That plug took nearly 10 months beginning in the summer of 1979. Drilling technology has vastly improved since then, however.

So far, the Gulf oil spill has leaked between 19.7 million and 43 million gallons, according to government estimates.

In the meantime, BP is turning to another risky procedure federal officials acknowledge will likely, at least temporarily, cause 20 percent more oil – at least 100,000 gallons a day – to add to the gusher.

Using robot submarines, BP plans to cut away the riser pipe this week and place a cap-like containment valve over the blowout preventer. On Monday, live video feeds showed robot submarines moving equipment around and using a circular saw-like device to cut small pipes at the bottom of the Gulf.

The crews will eventually cut the leaking riser and place the cap on top of it, the company hopes it will capture the majority of the oil, sending it to the surface.

"If you've got to cut that riser, that's risky. You could take a bad situation and make it worse," said Ed Overton, a Louisiana State University professor of environmental sciences.

BP failed to plug the leak Saturday with its top kill, which shot mud and pieces of rubber into the well but couldn't beat back the pressure of the oil.

Meanwhile, the location of the spill couldn't be worse.

To the south lies an essential spawning ground for imperiled Atlantic bluefin tuna and sperm whales. To the east and west, coral reefs and the coastal fisheries of Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and Texas. And to the north, Louisiana's coastal marshes.

More than 125 miles of Louisiana coastline already have been hit with oil. "It's just killing us by degrees," said Tulane University ecologist Tom Sherry.

It's an area that historically has been something of a superhighway for hurricanes, too.

If a major storm rolls in, the relief well operations would have to be suspended and then re-started, adding more time to the process. Plugging the Ixtoc was also hampered by hurricane season, which begins Tuesday and is predicted to be very active.

Three of the worst storms ever to hit the Gulf coast – Betsy in 1965, Camille in 1969 and Katrina in 2005 – all passed over the leak site.

On the Gulf coast beaches, tropical weather was far from some tourists' minds.

On Biloxi beach, Paul Dawa and his friend Ezekial Momgeri sipped Coronas after a night gambling at the Hard Rock Casino. Both men, originally from Kenya, drove from Memphis, Tenn., and were chased off the beach by a storm, not oil.

"We talked about it and we decided to come down and see for ourselves" whether there was oil, Momgeri said. "There's no oil here."

Though some tar balls have been found on Mississippi and Alabama barrier islands, oil from the spill has not significantly fouled the shores.

Still, the perception that it has soiled white sands and fishing areas threatens to cripple the tourist economy, said Linda Hornsby, executive director of the Mississippi Hotel and Lodging Association

"It's not here. It may never be here. It's costing a lot of money to counter that perception," Hornsby said. "First it was cancelations, but that evolved to a decrease in calls and there's no way to measure that."

Yet there was fear the oil would eventually hit the other Gulf coast states. Hentzel Yucles, of Gulfport, Miss., hung out on the beach with his wife and sons.

"Katrina was bad. I know this is a different type of situation, but it's going to affect everybody," he said.

Attorney General Eric Holder plans to visit the Gulf Coast on Tuesday and meet with state attorneys general. Several senators have asked the Justice Department to determine whether any laws were broken in the spill.

___

Associated Press writers Kevin McGill, Ben Nuckols and Greg Bluestein in Covington, La., Holbrook Mohr in Biloxi, Miss., and Darlene Superville at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., contributed to this report.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

NEW ORLEANS — The best hope for stopping the flow of oil from the blown-out well at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico has been compared to hitting a target the size of a dinner plate with a drill...
NEW ORLEANS — The best hope for stopping the flow of oil from the blown-out well at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico has been compared to hitting a target the size of a dinner plate with a drill...
Filed by Jeff Muskus  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 18
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lindayb
i used to be a Martian in a previous life
06:29 AM on 06/01/2010
couldn't we-as in the us govt- call for a "dunkirk" moment, and get all the oil drillers together,the exxons and others, along with govt workers, maybe nasa people and jump on this effort and have the new wells dug in a month, and bring in the tankers to start sucking up the oil already spilled. everyone working together, this is the country that routinely puts people safely in space, i just can't believe we don't have the ability and know how and guts to do this.
03:25 AM on 06/01/2010
I have been concerned about what will happen to all of this oil once the 2010 hurricane season arrives in the Gulf of Mexico. Of course the seas will get whipped up into a frenzy, and should one of the hurricanes pass over where the oil is collecting I felt that surely some of it would be sucked up into the developing storm.


My first place to visit for information on this was the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration web site, which told me categorically there would be no oil in rain related to a hurricane. I was dissatisfied (dare I say distrustful?) of that seemingly blasé comment, so went searching further for information.

http://just-me-in-t.blogspot.com/2010/05/its-raining-its-pouring-but-will-it-be.html
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bibulus
On my way back from Hawaii with the long-form bio
03:19 AM on 06/01/2010
"Let me say a few words about Gluppity-Glupp.
Your machine chugs on, day and night without stop
making Gluppity-Glupp. Also Schloppity-Schlopp.
And what do you do with this leftover goo?...
I'll show you. You dirty old BP man, you!

"You're glumping the pond where the Humming-Fish hummed!
No more can they hum, for their gills are all gummed.
So I'm sending them off. Oh, their future is dreary.
They'll walk on their fins and get woefully weary
in search of some water that isn't so smeary."
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dispatches
02:40 AM on 06/01/2010
for a sideways look at the oil spill, please visit www.dispatchesfromtheend.com
it's the news, only more fun to read.
12:39 AM on 06/01/2010
I don't like the looks of what they're planning next. Trying to set that bell reducer fitting onto the cut off pipe is going to concentrate all pressure onto the top of the bell and probably blow it right off. They should be doing the exact opposite. If they put a bell reducer on with the small side going onto the cut off pipe and the larger end, maybe twice the size of the cut off pipe, then the pressure will be immediately dimenished inside the larger pipe. A pipe with twice the diameter of the one they want to cut would have four times the surface area per inch of length and would thus have one fourth the pressure. A smaller pipe with a pump attached could then be inserted into the larger pipe.
12:39 AM on 06/01/2010
The reality of the situation is nothing can be done until the relief well is drilled.
Ihave 25 years experience in this feild , They are finaly admitting it will be august,
but with the hurricane season coming it will pobably be december.
that is the sad reality of the situation.
there will be oil on every shore from mexico to the east coast of canada.
11:11 PM on 05/31/2010
I can't believe I came here to cheer me up after reading all the other news.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Overtone
See bio on the Aesop Institute website
10:09 PM on 05/31/2010
TIME FOR REAL LEADERSHIP AND IN DEPTH RESPONSE!

See Worst Case Scenario and other articles at http://www.aesopinstitute.org

The White House needs to establish an emergency Command Post immediately and staff it with the best people who might be able to help.

This could prove as life threatening to humanity as nuclear war.

Since it is not sudden, it is hard to believe it could be that serious. But, see the Aesop website.

A few months after the attack on Pearl Harbor, a bomber was completed every 59 minutes.

Kevin Costner has supported development of a remarkable centrifuge that can remove 200,000 gallons of oil from the water every day. These should be manufactured on a 24/7 basis in the largest quantities possible and deployed as they are completed.

Breakthrough, cost competitive, replacements for fossil fuel are being born. Accelerate their birth!

For examples, see Moving Beyond Oil and Running on Water on the Aesop website.

The response so far falls dangerously short of what must be done!
11:14 PM on 05/31/2010
Really? Who's not there studying this that's supposed to be. I bet President Obama and even BP would welcome the suggestions. In case you haven't noticed this blow is mowing down experts like weeds.

Get any scientists you want on this but I bet the best in the world are already there.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Overtone
See bio on the Aesop Institute website
11:56 PM on 05/31/2010
Try Matt Simmons and people like him. They are not scientists, but have huge experience that they will freely offer.

See his recent TV appearance at www.washingtonsblog.com
08:42 PM on 05/31/2010
One thing needs to happen and it needs to happen now!! Tell everyone and anyone that if they recover even a Gallon of Oil BP will pay them the going rate for it. There is Money to be make and the Gulf to Clean up. Lets kill two birds with one stone and get money into the pockets of Gulf residents. Incentive at the rate of $70 a barrel should do the trick and at this point we should try anything and everything.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dolmance
06:58 PM on 05/31/2010
BLOW THE GODDAMN WELL UP!!!
06:32 PM on 05/31/2010
The Republican mantra "Drill Baby Drill" and "Deregulation". I'll bet that 80%+ of those folks down there voted Republican and now they want to blame Obama, for the Bush Republican era deregulation we had to endure during their reign in Congress. My heart goes out to the folks down in the Gulf but one can't help wonder why they now want Gov't. help when they were so dead set against the Gov't. in their lives. Typical Right Wing/Tea Bagger folly!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dolmance
06:54 PM on 05/31/2010
Amen... I couldn't have said it better myself.
07:46 PM on 05/31/2010
fanned!

i still don't understand why people can't see what's hurting them... seems to be one of the more tragic flaws of humanity.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
johnjohn1234
Satire is healthy.
06:18 PM on 05/31/2010
Boycott BP. Don't buy their gas or their junk food and soon they will have a pretty good reason to get this fixed PDQ.
06:52 PM on 05/31/2010
Then they won't have the billions in profits to fix it....declare bankrupcy, and we will pay again, one way or another....
I don't think anyone wins in this situation...Except maybe BP
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
05:57 PM on 05/31/2010
What can we do !?!??!?!?!

BOYCOTT BP / ARCO / AM/PM / Castrol Oil !!!!!

NOTHING gets the attention of a business better than the amount of money a business makes.

Call or write the White House (whitehouse.gov), your U. S. Senator (senate.gov) and Representative (house.gov) and demand that all government contracts with BP and it's subsidiaries be cancelled/terminated! Remind them of the Buy American Act!! (domestic products/services should be considered first when awarding government contracts).

Ask the attendants/managers at gas stations where they get their gas/products from ... or ask directly if BP supplies the gas and oil at their station ... and if BP does, go to another gas station.

BOYCOTT BP / ARCO / AM/PM / Castrol Oil !!!!