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Gulf Oil Efforts Abandoned And Unmonitored Due To Bad Weather

First Posted: 07/22/10 09:11 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:05 PM ET

Gulf Oil Spill

ON THE GULF OF MEXICO (AP) -- Engineers prepared to abandon their vigil over BP's broken oil well Friday as ships and rig workers evacuated the Gulf of Mexico ahead of Tropical Storm Bonnie.

The mechanical plug that's throttled the oil for a week will be left closed, even if the undersea robots monitoring the well's stability leave. The only way BP would know if the cap had failed would be satellite and aerial views of oil gushing to the surface.

But retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen said he's confident the cap will hold, despite a few leaks that raised concerns last week. Scientists say even a severe storm shouldn't affect the plug, nearly a mile beneath the ocean surface 40 miles from the Louisiana coast.

Bonnie made landfall in Florida south of Miami Friday morning with top sustained winds of 40 miles per hour. The storm was on a track to pick up strength as it crosses the Gulf of Mexico, reaching the site of the massive oil spill by Sunday.

The National Hurricane Center in Miami said the eye of Bonnie came ashore Friday midday near Cutler Bay, about 20 miles south of Miami. There were no immediate reports of damage.

The rough weather could delay by another 12 days the push to plug the broken well for good using mud and cement, Allen and BP officials conceded. Even if it's not a direct hit, the rough weather will push back efforts to kill the well by at least a week.

"Preservation of life and preservation of equipment are our highest priorities," Allen said.

The rigs working to plug the well were pulling up a mile of pipe and will start moving to safer waters later Friday, Allen said.

Ships carrying the robotic submarines watching the well will be the last to leave - likely for about two days - and the first to return.

"If conditions allow, they will remain through the passage of the storm," Allen said.

Audio surveillance gear left behind could tell BP whether the well is unstable, but they won't be able to listen to the recordings until the ships get back into the area.

The delay in work would be worse if BP had to open the cap while the ships closely monitoring the well head left. More oil would have been allowed to spew into the Gulf until they returned.

Shell Oil is also evacuating its operations in the Gulf, moving out more than 600 workers and shutting down production at all but one well.

Seas already were choppy in the Gulf, with waves up to five feet rocking boats as crews prepared to leave, and more of the smaller boats involved in the coastal cleanup were called into port, Coast Guard Rear Adm. Paul Zukunft said.

At the spill site, the water no longer looks thick with gooey tar. But the oil is still there beneath the surface, staining the hull of cutters motoring around in it.

Before the cap was attached and closed a week ago, the broken well spewed 94 million to 184 million gallons into the Gulf after the BP-leased Deepwater Horizon rig exploded April 20, killing 11 workers.

Work on plugging the well came to a standstill Wednesday, just days before authorities had hoped to complete the relief shaft. Allen said Thursday he has told BP to go ahead preparing for a second measure called a static kill that would pump mud and cement into the well from the top, a move he said would increase the relief well's chances for success. BP will have to get final approval from Allen before starting the procedure.

Vice President Joe Biden visited cleanup workers in southern Alabama, and said he was cheered the cap could remain on.

"After the storm's passage we will be right back out there," Biden said.

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ON THE GULF OF MEXICO (AP) -- Engineers prepared to abandon their vigil over BP's broken oil well Friday as ships and rig workers evacuated the Gulf of Mexico ahead of Tropical Storm Bonnie. The mec...
ON THE GULF OF MEXICO (AP) -- Engineers prepared to abandon their vigil over BP's broken oil well Friday as ships and rig workers evacuated the Gulf of Mexico ahead of Tropical Storm Bonnie. The mec...
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01:08 PM on 07/24/2010
Earlier this week, BP was once again caught lying to the public, this time indirectly, through photoshopped images the oil giant has been posting across their official response website.

Read the full story here: http://www.bestfunnyblog.com/world-news/bp-photoshops-pictures-command-center/
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BannedNBoston
Is hemp legal yet?
11:29 AM on 07/24/2010
Confirmed its a "MILDY NUCLEAR HELLHOLE thats still flowing!!!
And it is all BP's misbehaved devil child...

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2010/07/23/98088/researchers-confirm-subsea-gulf.html
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ydnas639
I want my country forward
09:41 AM on 07/24/2010
Don't worry about it. BP didn't worry about hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico when it wrote its oil spill response plan, so, OBVIOUSLY, they are not a threat. No worries, then.
In my opinion, waterboarding BP execs. is called for - 100's if not 1,000's of times.
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09:10 AM on 07/24/2010
The upper level low or Tropical Upper Tropospheric Trough (TUTT) that prevented Bonnie from becoming a hurricane is moving into Texas as the remnants of Bonnie now a TD (tropical disturbance) moves into Louisiana. Really good news for the clean-up effort in the Gulf of Mexico.

There is another potential storm in the Caribbean south of Jamaica but another TUTT to the north is inhibiting this weather feature from forming into a TD or tropical storm at this time. More good news, weather wise. How long this situation will last with hurricane season well underway is not determined at this time?
06:38 AM on 07/24/2010
I have a bad feeling about Bonnie, judging from it's trajectory.

Louisiana coast will be hit hard by the underwater plumes that will be dredged up towards the coast.

Will this nightmare ever end?
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06:55 AM on 07/24/2010
No, reality never ends.
09:13 AM on 07/24/2010
S: Yes, 90+ days of reality. Why? Greed, greed, greed, and, oh, I don't care one hoot for Thado, who has a huge job waiting at BP for huge bucks...ok, I could be wrong, but I don't think so. He is a toddy for BP, having dinner with that awful man, who is no longer on my TV. Talk about dancing with the devil. I'm watching, but am not hopeful and feel sorry for those people in the Gulf, who will be breathing that dispersant poison soon, not to mention their crops, which will soon be filled with that poison. The corp$ rule the world and have won. Pack up shop, Americans, we lost.
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04:33 AM on 07/24/2010
What is the value of an ocean rendered toxic by crude and dispersants?
How will a value be affixed to farm land and crops lost through the spread of these contaminants?

When entire systems are destroyed through the ignorance and greed of the corporate-politician partnership, will we notice their passing?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kwaut lizard
Reductio ad Absurdum
05:06 AM on 07/24/2010
That intrinsic value can never be fully calculated but the loss will be felt by those people that are closest to the ecosystem. I would think that there is not a Gulf Coast resident that will not be immediately effected in profound ways, esp. culturally, emotionally and physically.
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06:56 AM on 07/24/2010
Uh, yeah, I think if "entire systems" were destroyed someone would notice. And frankly, "what is the value of an ocean" sounds like a zen exercise, but since it's far too early for those I must be mistaken.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Mensch99
03:11 AM on 07/24/2010
So now we just wait and hope that Gulfzilla is not spawning?
The Gulf of Madness story becomes more Kafkaesque by the day.
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06:57 AM on 07/24/2010
There is nothing the least bit Kafkaesque about this. It's a screw-up by humans coupled with a perfectly usual act of nature. Isn't this bad enough without going all Drama Queen on us?
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tribalogical
FANTASYLAND is over there, on the right.
02:58 AM on 07/24/2010
here's what I find troubling about the whole thing (ocean drilling in general, and deep-sea drilling in particular)...

We open a hole into the earth, a mile underwater, into a pressurized chamber full of gas and oil. From the moment that hole is opened, it must be tended for all time by humanity, or we'll have untold catastrophe wreaked on our planet.

Seriously. There are hundreds, if not thousands of these holes on the floor of the gulf. If something happens that removes or radically diminishes our ability to tend to those, the planet is hosed.

Does it make any sense at all to be doing things like that? Imagine if BP (et al) can't, for any reason, return to tend to this well. Eventually, we're back to square one.

Other wells that are capped, but sitting idle. What happens when those eventually exceed their maintenance window?

I'm really against the practice, not from an economical perspective, from a common-sense and ecological perspective.

And this doesn't even take into account how under-equipped we are for managing these deep-water wells. This can't happen again. It just can't.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kwaut lizard
Reductio ad Absurdum
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06:58 AM on 07/24/2010
"This can't happen again. It just can't." And yet it does, and it will as long as big business is in charge of this country. It truly does bite, but I suggest that getting all twisted up about it isn't going to do anyone any good, least of all yourself.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
code blue
I support the right to Keep and Bear Children
01:52 AM on 07/24/2010
The well is safe from any rough seas.

Wave action only impacts about 300* ft deep. The well is 5000 ft deep.

All this does is set back the relief well and static kill progress. The hurricane is not going to cause the well head to break once more.

As for the wave action on the oil slick, that's another matter....

* I'm going from memory here. Someone confirm this.
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BigHound1
Above all, seek wisdom and understanding
12:54 AM on 07/24/2010
I do hope that we are at the beginning of the end for this catastrophe. It will still cause environmental damage for years to come. There are no quick fixes but time can heal our land; however, don't expect to harvest fish, shrimp, and other seafoods from this area uncontaminated of tars and oil.

As we, as a nation, continue our glut for oil, we will encounter many more of these episodes. Fishermen, dock owners, hotel chains, and on down the line will continue to remain hostage to big oil for a long time as a means to bring prosperity to their region.

I can remember the ole days of the south when cotton was the claim for prosperity. Those days have gone now so we need to realize that the prosperity of this country will not depend on past prosperities but newly created prosperities for jobs.

Rather than fighting and kicking President Obama's proposal every inch of the way, people need to energize themselves to diversify our prosperity or we will find ourselves in the same predicament as Wall Street before a bailout. It is time to make a change - in our own lives!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pending
11:36 PM on 07/23/2010
Xenu help us!
10:55 PM on 07/23/2010
I'm sorry but nobody wanted this, why would BP want to lose out on Millions of gallons of Oil??

-Not because they want to hick up the gas prices, they would’ve made more money of the millions of gallons that were lost instead compared to the few extra cents made off of already drilled oil....

-Plus now they also have to pay for thousands of people who were affected

-Plus they don't get to drill off shore anymore

The only conspiracy I can believe is that it was a terrorist attack at Best, or just a freak screw up by several human beings who aren’t perfect......

-Note to self and to the world no one is perfect..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pending
11:46 PM on 07/23/2010
It was just corporate America doing what it does best, slashing costs and cutting corners. The almighty dollar is to blame and we are all responsible.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tiggy
11:58 PM on 07/23/2010
They took a calculated risk that their greed would not catch up to them. But what price are they really paying? And can you put a price on the damage that risks has cost our eco system for years to come?

No, there is no conspiracy, just a case of greed.
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Jamf
Friends Don't Let Friends Watch Fox News
10:47 PM on 07/23/2010
Monitor, Schmonitor. We don't need no stinkin' monitors...
10:12 PM on 07/23/2010
Sorry Liberals. STORY OVER. The well is capped. The Gulf isn't dying. Ninety eight percent of the beaches are clean. There aren't oil "plumes".

FACT: the amount of oil that leaked out is equivalent to a pinhead of oil in two olympic size pools.
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SueMVetforObama2
With Liberty and justice for all
10:13 PM on 07/23/2010
Stoopid post
10:48 PM on 07/23/2010
wow, is that ever ignint
10:10 PM on 07/23/2010
Bif F'ing deal...eh?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SueMVetforObama2
With Liberty and justice for all
10:12 PM on 07/23/2010
yep

Think of your countrymen on the Gulf.
10:13 PM on 07/23/2010
Obama sent jobs overseas with his moratorium. Why isn't HE thinking of his countrymen.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pending
11:48 PM on 07/23/2010
Yes.