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BP 'Cut-And-Cap' Effort Underway To Plug Gushing Oil Well

First Posted: 06/02/10 04:44 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:40 PM ET

Cut And Cap Oil Spill
A still from the underwater video footage shows a blade cutting through the oil well's riser pipe.

PORT FOURCHON, La. (AP) -- As submersible robots made another risky attempt to control the underwater Gulf oil gusher, the crude on the surface spread, closing in on Florida. BP's stock plummeted and took much of the market down with it, and the federal government announced criminal and civil investigations into the spill.

The stakes couldn't be higher.

After six weeks of failures to block the well or divert the oil, the latest mission involved using a set of tools akin to an oversized deli slicer and garden shears to break away the broken riser pipe so engineers can then position a cap over the well's opening.

But it's a big gamble: Even if it succeeds, it will temporarily increase the flow of an already massive leak by 20 percent - at least 100,000 gallons more a day. That's on top of the estimated 500,000 to 1 million gallons gushing out already.

In Florida, officials confirmed an oil sheen about nine miles from the famous white sands of Pensacola beach. Crews shored up miles of boom and prepared for the mess to make landfall as early as Wednesday.

"It's inevitable that we will see it on the beaches," said Keith Wilkins, deputy chief of neighborhood and community services for Escambia County.

Florida would be the fourth state hit. Crude has already been reported along barrier islands in Alabama and Mississippi, and it has impacted some 125 miles of Louisiana coastline.

More federal fishing waters were closed, too, another setback for one of the region's most important industries. More than one-third of federal waters were off-limits for fishing, along with hundreds of square miles of state waters.

Fisherman Hong Le, who came to the U.S. from Vietnam, had rebuilt his home and business after Hurricane Katrina wiped him out. Now he's facing a similiar situation.

"I'm going to be bankrupt very soon," Le, 53, said as he attended a meeting for fishermen hoping for help. "Everything is financed, how can I pay? No fishing, no welding. I weld on commercial fishing boats and they aren't going out now, so nothing breaks."

Le, like other of the fishermen, received $5,000 from BP PLC, but it was quickly gone.

"I call that 'Shut your mouth money,'" said Murray Volk, 46, of Empire, who's been fishing for nearly 30 years. "That won't pay the insurance on my boat and house. They say there'll be more later, but do you think the electric company will wait for that?"

BP may have bigger problems, though.

Attorney General Eric Holder, who visited the Gulf on Tuesday to survey the fragile coastline and meet with state and federal prosecutors, would not say who might be targeted in the probes into the largest oil spill in U.S. history.

"We will closely examine the actions of those involved in the spill. If we find evidence of illegal behavior, we will be extremely forceful in our response," Holder said in New Orleans.

The federal government also ramped up its response to the spill with President Barack Obama ordering the co-chairmen of an independent commission investigating the spill to thoroughly examine the disaster, "to follow the facts wherever they lead, without fear or favor."

The president said that if laws are insufficient, they'll be changed. He said that if government oversight wasn't tough enough, that will change, too.

BP's stock nose-dived on Tuesday, losing nearly 15 percent of its value on the first trading day since the previous best option - the so-called top kill - failed and was aborted at the government's direction. It dipped steeply with Holder's late-afternoon announcement, which also sent other energy stocks tumbling, ultimately causing the Dow Jones industrial average to tumble 112.

If BP's new effort to contain the leak fails, the procedure will have made the biggest oil spill in U.S. history even worse.

"It is an engineer's nightmare," said Ed Overton, a Louisiana State University professor of environmental sciences. "They're trying to fit a 21-inch cap over a 20-inch pipe a mile away. That's just horrendously hard to do. It's not like you and I standing on the ground pushing - they're using little robots to do this."

Since the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded on April 20, eventually collapsing into the Gulf of Mexico, an estimated 20 million to 40 million gallons of oil has spewed, eclipsing the 11 million that leaked from the Exxon Valdez disaster.

BP PLC's Doug Suttles said that although there's no guarantee the company's latest cut-and-cap effort to close off the leak will work, he remained hopeful, but wouldn't guarantee success.

Engineers have put underwater robots and equipment in place this week after a bold attempt to plug the well by force-feeding it heavy mud and cement - called a "top kill" - was aborted over the weekend. Crews pumped thousands of gallons of the mud into the well but were unable to overcome the pressure of the oil.

The company said if the small dome is successful it could capture and siphon a majority of the gushing oil to the surface. But the cut and cap will not halt the oil flow, just capture some of it and funnel it to vessels waiting at the surface.

The British oil giant has tried and failed repeatedly to halt the flow of the oil, and this attempt like others has never been tried before a mile beneath the ocean. Experts warned it could be even riskier than the others because slicing open the 20-inch riser could unleash more oil if there was a kink in the pipe that restricted some of the flow.

Eric Smith, an associate director of the Tulane Energy Institute, likened the procedure to trying to place a tiny cap on a fire hydrant that's blowing straight up.

"Will they have enough weight to overcome the force of the flow?" he said. "It could create a lot of turbulence, but I do think they'll have enough weight."

But BP's best chance to actually plug the leak rests with a pair of relief wells but those won't likely be completed until August.

The company has carefully prepared the next phase, knowing that another failure could mean millions more gallons spew into the ocean and lead to even more public pressure. And they say they have learned valuable lessons from the failure of a bigger version of the containment cap last month that was clogged with icelike slush.

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PORT FOURCHON, La. (AP) -- As submersible robots made another risky attempt to control the underwater Gulf oil gusher, the crude on the surface spread, closing in on Florida. BP's stock plummeted and ...
PORT FOURCHON, La. (AP) -- As submersible robots made another risky attempt to control the underwater Gulf oil gusher, the crude on the surface spread, closing in on Florida. BP's stock plummeted and ...
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02:44 PM on 06/02/2010
Just curious, as I haven't the patience required to listen to him, has Rush L changed his tune about this just being something the ocean can easily absorb, now that it's on the way to his house?
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02:52 PM on 06/02/2010
Rush who?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
right Alice
03:09 PM on 06/02/2010
I have never tuned into him, but this is easy to answer:
of the two polarities that define his psyche - denial and blame -
am sure he's now switched to the blame [Obama] side.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dispatches
02:23 PM on 06/02/2010
for a sideways look at the oil spill, visit www.dispatchesfromtheend.com
it's the news, but more fun to read.
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02:17 PM on 06/02/2010
Here is an interesting side note on BP - According to regulatory filings, Goldman Sachs sold 4,680,822 shares of BP in the first quarter of 2010. Goldman's sales were the largest of any firm during that time.

Hmmmm?
02:42 PM on 06/02/2010
Then they prepared to sell short, being able to see the future? Or hired mercenaries to sabotage the rig and wreak murder and devastation and then made money when the stock fell? Really, kind of a stretch, even for GS, no?
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02:51 PM on 06/02/2010
Hey, your stretch, not mine.

How about BP is a out-of-control multi-national and any number of disasters were (and are) imminent?

Industry common knowledge.
01:07 PM on 06/02/2010
I can see it now, President Bush standing on BPs oil rig with a big sign in the background " mission accomplished"
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12:40 PM on 06/02/2010
I wonder if they put a series of viton o-rings inside the cap-pipe for a better seal?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
BMcCue7
I'm Buddy McCue (and you're not.)
12:25 PM on 06/02/2010
I sure hope this works.
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probo
fear is a waste of my time
01:13 PM on 06/02/2010
me too.,..me too.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cybergirl2
12:16 PM on 06/02/2010
Here is a unique solution to cleaning up the oil spill. Here is the youtube video demonstrating this technology.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CRvOOHxusrg

It works. contac me. altnvest[at]gmail.com
11:44 AM on 06/02/2010
With hundreds of deep water wells all over the world, The Ixtoc, the one down under, and now the BP derrick, with another oh Sh*t, which well will be next. What a dirty business, but they pay well and employ thousands, pay taxes to states, bribes to polititons. they will be around for quite awile and we will still be pulling up to the gas stations, heating our homes and fuel for cooking. Hopefully the next generation of humans will find better answers and clean up the mess of the last 120 or so years of oil dependency.
12:43 PM on 06/02/2010
The next humanoid species will be "homo furioso" -- bipedal creatures who subsist on withered fruit and poisoned fish, and spend their entire lives cursing us for f*ing up their world.
11:14 AM on 06/02/2010
The more devastation of the ultra-affluent East Coast real estate market, the faster BP, Halliburton and Transocean will be stopped. (Notice how Halliburton and Transocean have mysteriously disappeared from all major news stories on this spill?)
When the GOP billionaires begin to find oil on their own private beaches, they'll pick up the phone, call their stooges at Fox and in Congress, and tell them to cut it out. Oh, and get an aircraft carrier down there stat to clean up that mess around the yacht!
ONLY when this hits the GOP billionaires' club in the prestige department -- like they care about a few deductible millions spent scrubbing their pool filters -- will this stop. Only when club members start complaining in the main dining room about the oil smell in the air off Star Island, Lauderdale, Hilton Head and Nantucket will someone make a perfunctory effort to make Halliburton, Transocean and BP pay for their crimes.
What's the point of putting all those de-regulator dodos in power if they up and ruin your property values? Why give $1 million to the far-right candidates if those good ole boys wind up knocking $10 million off the price of your seaside home in Key West? Do the numbers.
12:02 PM on 06/02/2010
You got that exactly right. Only when that happens will something be really done. Spot on!
12:47 PM on 06/02/2010
People who live on their job incomes around the Gulf also support the corporations and Republicans. Most Gulf residents don't think they should stop all oil drilling and change their reliance on oil. In fact, they can't wait to get start pumping again. They say fisheries and oil drilling are complimentary activities. They share a strange religious belief in the infallibility of human beings. People will always make mistakes but religions define these as various kinds of sin and offer fast forgiveness. This appears to create guilt-free treatment of the environment. Drilling deeper for oil even though we have no idea of the long term geological and biological effects is playing havoc with our planet. People drive SUV's and live inside air-conditioned environments, increasinly disconnected from nature. It's heartbreaking. Democracy (educated people voting for what they think is right) has failed our naturally fabulous environments around the world - but so have most other governing systems. Have humans risen to the level of our total incompetency? If we actually had proportional voting in the US, would voters save the oceans and atmosphere? For all of its devastation, this the destruction of the Gulf economy and environment is tiny compared with the destruction of our atmosphere and the worldwide oceans. How could we use the Gulf oil destruction as a lesson for how to save the rest of the world?
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farmilyman
everything is illusion
11:10 AM on 06/02/2010
BP makes about $5 billion profit every quarter.......they should recover quickly.
11:49 AM on 06/02/2010
I hate that the oil is ruining the gulf and all these southern states ... but I don't really mind that the oil is being lost to them (and us).
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12:29 PM on 06/02/2010
Consumers everywhere being gouged on top of destruction of life, but the payoffs have made life comfortable for the Politicos.
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LeFlaneur
does nuance.
11:02 AM on 06/02/2010
The rumors I keep hearing is that BP has been focusing only on "solutions" that allow it to recover, and eventually sell the remaining oil. Does anyone know if there is any validity to this?
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lunarsnare
♫♪♫ ♪♫♪
11:23 AM on 06/02/2010
They are an oil company.
That is they job.
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LeFlaneur
does nuance.
11:57 AM on 06/02/2010
That's their job before a disaster.
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Evisionary
environmentalist, political & news junky, animal
10:54 AM on 06/02/2010
21" cap over a 20" hole; with all that pressure at that depth?
Get fuged. Turn Green? Why is this not headline news today?
11:52 AM on 06/02/2010
Agreed. How are those little submersibles going to have the leverage to combat the force of the oil?
10:32 AM on 06/02/2010
I hope they find out that BP didnt do anything wrong. Because if they dont they will have to admit it cant be done safely, period. Then we can make a bid to stop drilling in the ocean all together.
10:47 AM on 06/02/2010
It can and has been done safely. Nearly 500 wells have been drilled in the gulf in water deeper than 5000 feet.
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10:53 AM on 06/02/2010
To borrow a conservative doctrine, if there is even a 1 percent chance a spill like this could happen, then all off-shore drilling should stop.

Simple and easy really. We are talking about the total destruction and devastation of the wetlands and possibly the creation of an unprecedented dead zone in the area.

Right now the US has spent 1 trillion on the war on terror, what will they spend to stop the war on our environment?

I can tell you right now, this 'accident' is going to cost us all far more than we can pay.
10:54 AM on 06/02/2010
Until now. It's sort of like having 500 nuclear power stations ... but one Chernobyl.
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LeFlaneur
does nuance.
11:10 AM on 06/02/2010
Well we already know that several more safety measures could have been applied: back up shut off valves, acoustic triggers, etc.

BP didn't use them, but was that "doing something wrong?" These safety measures are not required in the US. BP could well have been doing something wrong, but not doing anything illegal.
11:53 AM on 06/02/2010
Having relief wells dug BEFORE drilling began...
12:55 PM on 06/02/2010
You can thank the GOP and their vicious, mendacious subversion of government for this disaster.

First, they convinced us that corporate behavior that was unsafe, reckless, immoral or unethical -- but not technically illegal -- was all fine & dandy. "Market forces" would weed out the bad actors, so government intrusion was unnecessary.

Then they proceeded to whittle away at what little was left of the legal constraints on corporate behavior until a company like BP could truthfully say they "complied with all applicable regulations" in spite of the fact that if anything went wrong with this well, it would be at least THREE MONTHS before the damage could be controlled.

Republicans are traitors, and they are k.illing us all.
10:03 AM on 06/02/2010
June 2 (Bloomberg) -- BP Plc’s failure since April to plug a Gulf of Mexico oil leak has prompted forecasts the crude may continue gushing into December in what President Barack Obama has called the greatest environmental disaster in U.S. history.
“The worst-case scenario is Christmas time,†Dan Pickering, the head of research at energy investor Tudor Pickering Holt & Co. in Houston, said. “This process is teaching us to be skeptical of deadlines.â€
Ending the year with a still-gushing well would mean about 4 million barrels of oil spilled into the Gulf, based on the government’s current estimate of 12,000 to 19,000 barrels leaking a day. That would wipe out marine life deep at sea near the leak and elsewhere in the Gulf, and along hundreds of miles of coastline, said Harry Roberts, a professor of Coastal Studies at Louisiana State University.
12:59 PM on 06/02/2010
The worst-case scenario is not "Christmas time". The worst-case scenario is no containment at all, ever. It could very well mean the end of the world.

In other words, the predictable end result, and final victory, of laissez-faire capitalism.
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TankGirlz
can we have a "This post is full of suck" button?
01:03 PM on 06/02/2010
I wonder how many realize this?

We are talking the entire food chain at worst, at best we lose the fishing there for decades, a couple of marine species, tourism... For what again? So we can drive to the corner store? In an SUV?

drillbabydrill
10:00 AM on 06/02/2010
to anyone that is interested and also NOTICING THAT BP GAS stations are being repainted and re-named in their area overnight, but doesn't want to use BP here is a link to pull all the gas stations in your state....... so even though they change the name, they are not picking up the buildings and moving them...........

http://www.bp.com/toolserver/heliospowertool/fuelStationSearch.do?categoryId=1000001&contentId=7031707
12:07 PM on 06/02/2010
Good point. I think it's important for people to know this.
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catcancook
Obama/Biden 2012
12:21 PM on 06/02/2010
Thanks, haven't seen any station changes here but there is picketing.