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Thad Allen: Gulf Oil Cleanup Will Take Years

First Posted: 06/07/10 08:49 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:40 PM ET

Thad Allen Oil Years

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The cap on the blown-out well in the Gulf is capturing a half-million gallons a day, or anywhere from one-third to three-quarters of the oil spewing from the bottom of the sea, officials said Monday. But the hopeful report was offset by a warning that the farflung slick has broken up into hundreds and even thousands of patches of oil that may inflict damage that could persist for years.

Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, the government's point man for the crisis, said the breakup has complicated the cleanup.

"Dealing with the oil spill on the surface is going to go on for a couple of months," he said at a briefing in Washington. But "long-term issues of restoring the environment and the habitats and stuff will be years."

Allen said the containment cap that was installed late last week is now collecting about 460,000 gallons of oil a day out of the approximately 600,000 to 1.2 million gallons believed to be spewing from the well a mile underwater. In a tweet, BP said it collected 316,722 gallons from midnight to noon Monday.

The amount of oil captured is being slowly ramped up as more vents on the cap are closed. Crews are moving carefully to avoid a dangerous pressure buildup and to prevent the formation of the icy crystals that thwarted a previous effort to contain the leak. The captured oil is being pumped to a ship on the surface.

"I think it's going fairly well," Allen said.

BP said it plans to replace the cap – perhaps later this month or early next month – with a slightly bigger one that will provide a tighter fit and thus collect more oil. It will also be designed to allow the company to suspend the cleanup and then resume it quickly if a hurricane threatens the Gulf later this season. The new cap is still being designed.

"It gives us much better containment than we've got" with the existing cap, said BP senior vice president Kent Wells.

BP and government officials acknowledged it is difficult to say exactly how much oil is spewing from the well, and thus how much is still flowing into the water. BP spokesman Robert Wine said the figures being discussed are estimates, some of which have been provided by the government.

Ed Overton, a Louisiana State University professor of environmental sciences, suggested it is too early for anyone to claim victory. The spill, estimated at anywhere from 23 million gallons to 50 million, is already the biggest in U.S. history, dwarfing the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster in Alaska.

"We're hopeful the thing is going to work, but hoping and actually working are two different things," Overton said. "They may have turned the corner, they may not have. We just don't know right now."

He said he doesn't believe BP will have turned the corner until it sees a significant flow from the well stopped. "And it is not entirely obvious to me that that is happening," Overton said.

"I do worry we are not removing as much oil as we ought to be getting," he added.

The "spillcam" video of the leak continued to show a big brown billowing cloud of oil and gas 5,000 feet below the surface.

In Washington, President Barack Obama sought to reassure Americans that "we will get through this crisis."

Later, he said he's been talking closely with Gulf Coast fishermen and various experts on BP's catastrophic oil spill and not for lofty academic reasons.

"I talk to these folks because they potentially have the best answers – so I know whose ass to kick," the president said.

The salty words, part of Obama's recent efforts to telegraph to Americans his engagement with the crisis, came in an interview in Michigan with NBC's "Today" show.

"This will be contained," he said earlier. "It may take some time, and it's going to take a whole lot of effort. There is going to be damage done to the Gulf Coast, and there is going to be economic damages that we've got to make sure BP is responsible for and compensates people for."

But in a forecast that was by turns hopeful and gloomy, Allen indicated that cleaning up the mess could prove to be more complex than previously thought.

"Because what's happened over the last several weeks, this spill has disaggregated itself," Allen said. "We're no longer dealing with a large, monolithic spill. We're dealing with an aggregation of hundreds or thousands of patches of oil that are going a lot of different directions."

When finished, the new cap would be connected a riser pipe floating about 300 feet below the surface. Engineers say the riser would be deep enough to avoid damage from hurricanes that can roar over the Gulf of the Mexico, but shallow enough to allow returning drill ships to quickly reconnect to the flow.

Meanwhile, crews worked furiously to skim, scour and chemically disperse the substance from the water.

Tony Wood, the director of the National Spill Control School at Texas A&M University in Corpus Christi, said BP's success at containing some of the leaking oil would not dramatically reduce the amount of time it would take to clean up the Gulf.

"We have a large volume still escaping," he said. "Cleanup levels up to twice as large as we have right now will go on for at least a year." He added: "The reality is that most of the spill, the vast majority of the spill, is still well offshore."

The oil – brick red in places, chocolate brown in others – has washed up on the shores of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and the Florida Panhandle.

Some of the most enduring images of the disaster are of pelicans and other wildlife drenched in oil.

In a sweltering metal building in Fort Jackson, workers in biohazard suits were doing the time-consuming task of cleaning oiled brown pelicans and releasing them back into the wild. After getting 192 in the last six weeks, 86 were delivered on Sunday, the biggest rescue since the BP rig exploded on April 20, spewing oil into the Gulf of Mexico.

"We did have someone faint today because of the heat," said Jay Holcomb, executive director of the International Bird Rescue Research Center. "But usually they come in about six or seven in the morning and stay until about six or seven at night."

A table is lined with tubs, bottles and even a microwave. In the tub an enormous pelican, turned almost black by the oil, sits stoically as workers pour a light vegetable oil over it. A process they humorously refer to as marinating, which has to be done before the birds can be washed.

Other than the oil, the pelicans have been healthy, said Heather Nevill, the veterinarian overseeing the process.

"They respond really well to the cleaning," Nevill said. "If we get them in time."

At Barataria Bay, La., just west of the mouth of the Mississippi River, large patches of oil the consistency of pancake batter floated in the still waters. A dead sea turtle caked in brownish-red oil lay splayed out with dragonflies buzzing by.

The Barataria estuary, which has become one of the hardest-hit areas, was busy with shrimp boats skimming up oil and officials in boats and helicopters patrolling the islands and bays to assess the state of wildlife and the movement of oil. On remote islands, pelicans, gulls, terns and herons were stained with oil.

Jody Haas, a tourist from Aurora, Ill., was among the few walking on tar-stained Pensacola Beach. Haas, who has visited the beach before, said it wasn't the same.

"It was pristine, gorgeous, white sand," she said. "This spot is light compared to some of the other spots farther down and it is just everywhere here. It's just devastating, awful."

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NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The cap on the blown-out well in the Gulf is capturing a half-million gallons a day, or anywhere from one-third to three-quarters of the oil spewing from the bottom of the sea, offi...
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The cap on the blown-out well in the Gulf is capturing a half-million gallons a day, or anywhere from one-third to three-quarters of the oil spewing from the bottom of the sea, offi...
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11:55 AM on 06/09/2010
Generations.
07:30 AM on 06/09/2010
I hope all those animals that sacrificed their lives, and the fishermen who sacrificed their livelihoods will at least cause a sea-change in how we allow the nations natural resources to be exploited at bargain prices....to be sold back to the American people.

I hope it spurs debate and ways to decrease our dependency on petrochemicals from plastic water bottles, plastic shopping bags to SUV mileage.
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Viper1st
multi quasi faceted
01:31 AM on 06/09/2010
Thad - gonna postpone your retirement for the Community can't organize a shit'n thing Organizer?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NonPrawf
You can't see, but I have a Predictor Badge too.
12:24 AM on 06/09/2010
A few years? Wuteva!

I'm just gonna pray to God and He will make it go away in 7 days.

Remember kids, pray.
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SirSlappy
My micro-bio is still empty.
06:38 PM on 06/08/2010
Can I have a six figure salary to stand around, stating and restating the obvious too?
06:38 PM on 06/08/2010
The look on Adm. Allen's face speaks volumes.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Keith52
04:37 PM on 06/08/2010
Translation: .....cleanup will take DECADES....
05:55 PM on 06/08/2010
If we're lucky.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
follygirl
11:38 PM on 06/08/2010
Exactly. And BP will not pay for it, the taxpayers will pay while BP continues to reap obscene profits. The lawsuits alone will take decades; the Gulf may not recover for another generation, if not for longer.

In the news today - the Bhopal, India disaster that took place 26 years ago that killed thousands of people resulted in company officials getting 2 years in jail. After 26 years! Look for much the same with the Gulf tragedy except I doubt any BP officials ever see the inside of a jail.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
guntotinganglion
04:25 PM on 06/08/2010
I think he may well be misunderestimating the damage. Think more in terms of decades and centuries. The Earth will eventually clean this up...but it ain't gonna be soon, and there's a lot of species that will no longer be among us. Bluefin Tuna being one likely candidate for extinction based on their having only two breeding areas in the world, one is the Gulf Of Petroleum, the other is the Mediterranean, which has to be one of the filthiest seas on Earth. Humans have been using it as a toilet since pre-history.
04:25 PM on 06/08/2010
Well, Duh.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
esalter
01:33 PM on 06/08/2010
We need to stop bailing out companies and bail out the Gulf. Pay some more folks to go down ther and clean up. BP is never going to pay for all of it and we know. They gave $998K to the Obama run for the presidency. He's not going to beat them up.
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ariveria
01:54 PM on 06/08/2010
ok who is going to pay.

the federal government cant for several reasons

1. they dont have the money. are you willing to pay more in taxes to have the federal government bail out bp.

2. i dont want my tax dollars going to bail out bp.

3. read the constitution of the good ole us of a. nowhere does it give the federal government the power to clean up an oil spill caused by a greedy oil company that violated the most basic safety rules including their own.

4. the 10th amendment to the constitution specially says the only government bodies that has the right to clean up this mess are state governments.

“When the Holy One Blessed be He created Adam, He took him and caused him to pass before all the trees of the Garden of Eden. He said to him, ‘See how beautiful and praiseworthy are my works; and all that I have created, I have created for your sake. Take heed that you do not damage and destroy my world.’†(Koheleth Rabbah 7:28)
01:19 PM on 06/08/2010
what T allen fails to tell us is whether he will keep his boots on BP's neck to make sure they pay on time for the recovery instead of telling us something we all aalready know.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lukester
11:16 AM on 06/08/2010
We invaded Iraq killing hundreds of thousands for oil. Now, our Gulf Coast is awashed with it.
Gaylord P Farqua
Herb Gardner Amateur Chef, Historian and Political
10:12 AM on 06/08/2010
All this straight talk has screwed the Admiral's chances for a political career. Failing to think of reasons why BP and the rest should be lightly spanked and turned loose to jump right back into environmental destruction, not cooking up long range plans for the eventual forgiveness and transfer of the continuing clean up to the taxpayers will cost him a Congressional seat if he wants one. And, even worse once he became tired of making sure the oil industry is allowed to operate unmolested the promise of a nice consulting job after leaving the big pork barrel is history as well.
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dfranz
With Liberty and Justice for all
09:58 AM on 06/08/2010
The Exxon Valdez accident happened 21 years ago and Prince William Sound has still not recovered. How do you restore species that become extinct?

This is the price we pay for being a country addicted to oil led by politicians that enable the addiction because of the allure of money.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
den1953
The best politicians are for free!
09:36 AM on 06/08/2010
How many species of birds and fish will never come back, how many years will it take the people of LA and the Gulf Coast to get there lives back, this should be a criminal issue and the Government should freeze all of BP'S assets!