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Oil Platform Explodes In The Gulf Of Mexico Off The Louisiana Coast

Oil Spill

ALAN SAYRE   09/ 2/10 10:41 PM ET   AP

NEW ORLEANS — An oil platform exploded and burned off the Louisiana coast Thursday, the second such disaster in the Gulf of Mexico in less than five months. This time, the Coast Guard said there was no leak, and no one was killed.

The Coast Guard initially reported that an oil sheen a mile long and 100 feet wide had begun to spread from the site of the blast, about 200 miles west of the source of BP's massive spill. But hours later, Coast Guard Cmdr. Cheri Ben-Iesau said crews were unable to find any spill.

The company that owns the platform, Houston-based Mariner Energy, did not know what caused the fire. Mariner Energy's Patrick Cassidy said he considered the incident a fire, not an explosion.

"The platform is still intact and it was just a small portion of the platform that appears to be burned," he said.

Mariner officials said there were seven active production wells on the platform, and they were shut down shortly before the fire broke out.

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said the company told him the fire began in 100 barrels of light oil condensate.

The Coast Guard said Mariner Energy reported the oil sheen. In a public statement, the company said an initial flyover did not show any oil.

Photos from the scene showed at least five ships floating near the platform. Three of them were shooting great plumes of water onto the machinery. Light smoke could be seen drifting across the deep blue waters of the gulf.

By late afternoon, the fire on the platform was out.

The platform is in about 340 feet of water and about 100 miles south of Louisiana's Vermilion Bay. Its location is considered shallow water, much less than the approximately 5,000 feet where BP's well spewed oil and gas for three months after the April rig explosion that killed 11 workers.

Responding to any oil spill in shallow water would be much easier than in deep water, where crews depend on remote-operated vehicles to access equipment on the sea floor.

A Homeland Security update obtained by The Associated Press said the platform was producing 58,800 gallons of oil and 900,000 cubic feet of gas per day. The platform can store 4,200 gallons of oil.

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said the administration has "response assets ready for deployment should we receive reports of pollution in the water."

All 13 of the platform's crew members were rescued from the water. They were found huddled together in life jackets.

The captain of the boat that rescued the platform crew said his vessel was 25 miles away when it received a distress call Thursday morning from the platform.

The Crystal Clear, a 110-foot boat, was in the Gulf doing routine maintenance work on oil rigs and platforms. When Capt. Dan Shaw arrived at the scene of the blast, the workers were holding hands in the water, where they had been for two hours. They were thirsty and tired.

"We gave them soda and water, anything they wanted to drink," Shaw said. "They were just glad to be on board with us."

Shaw said the blast was so sudden that the crew did not have time to get into lifeboats. They did not mention what might have caused the blast.

"They just said there was an explosion, there was a fire," Shaw said. "It happened very quick."

Crew members were being flown to a hospital in Houma. The Coast Guard said one person was injured, but the company said there were no injuries. All of them were released by early Thursday evening.

Jindal met with some of the survivors. He would not identify them except to say most were from Louisiana.

Environmental groups and some lawmakers said the incident showed the dangers of offshore drilling, and urged the Obama administration to extend a temporary ban on deepwater drilling to shallow water, where this platform was located.

"How many accidents are needed and how much environmental and economic damage must we suffer before we act to contain and control the source of the danger: offshore drilling?" said Rep. Frank Pallone, a New Jersey Democrat.

Mike Gravitz, oceans advocate for Environment America, said President Barack Obama "should need no further wake-up call to permanently ban new drilling."

There are about 3,400 platforms operating in the Gulf, according to the American Petroleum Institute. Together they pump about a third of the America's domestic oil, forming the backbone of the country's petroleum industry.

Platforms are vastly different from oil rigs like BP's Deepwater Horizon. They are usually brought in after wells are already drilled and sealed.

"A production platform is much more stable," said Andy Radford, an API expert on offshore oil drilling. "On a drilling rig, you're actually drilling the well. You're cutting. You're pumping mud down the hole. You have a lot more activity on a drilling rig."

In contrast, platforms are usually placed atop stable wells where the oil is flowing at a predictable pressure, he said. A majority of platforms in the Gulf do not require crews on board.

Many platforms, especially those in shallower water, stand on legs that are drilled into the sea floor. Like a giant octopus, they spread numerous pipelines and can tap into many wells at once.

Platforms do not have blowout preventers, but they are usually equipped with a series of redundant valves that can shut off oil and gas at different points along the pipeline.

Numerous platforms were damaged during hurricanes Katrina and Rita. The storms broke pipelines, and oil spilled into the Gulf. But the platforms successfully kept major spills from happening, Radford said.

"Those safety valves did their job," he said.

Industry representatives sought to minimize Thursday's incident and distance it from the well blowout in April.

"We have on these platforms on any given year roughly 100 fires," said Allen Verret, executive director of the Offshore Operators Committee.

Federal authorities have cited Mariner Energy and related entities for 10 accidents in the Gulf of Mexico over the last four years, according to safety records from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement.

The accidents range from platform fires to pollution spills and a blowout, according to accident-investigation reports from the agency formerly known as the Minerals Management Service.

In 2007, welding sparks falling onto an oil storage tank caused a flash fire that slightly burned a contract worker. The Minerals Management Service issued a $35,000 fine.

Mariner Energy Inc. focuses on oil and gas exploration and production in the Gulf. In April, Apache Corp., another independent oil company, announced plans to buy Mariner in a cash-and-stock deal valued at $3.9 billion, including the assumption of about $1.2 billion of Mariner's debt. That deal is pending.

On Friday, BP was expected to begin the process of removing the cap and failed blowout preventer from its ruptured well, another step toward completion of a relief well that would seal the leak permanently. The Deepwater Horizon exploded April 20, setting off a three-month leak that totaled 206 million gallons of oil.

___

Associated Press writers Harry R. Weber, Michael Kunzelman and Janet McConnaughey in New Orleans, Chris Kahn in New York, Eileen Sullivan, Matthew Daly, Gerry Bodlander and Dina Capiello in Washington, Garance Burke in Fresno, Calif., and researcher Monika Mathur in New York contributed to this report.

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02:09 PM on 09/08/2010
Bubba Gump Shrimp and Oil Refinery
http://www­.youtube.c­om/user/th­eduderaul?­feature=mh­um#p/a/u/0/jjd­yb6Rop3k
07:40 PM on 09/06/2010
Folks folks! it's O.K.! this is a SHALLOW water well, only 340'. Nothing to worry about at all!
08:57 AM on 09/05/2010
BREAKING NEWS

A person added to the oil disasters for 2010.

While pumping gas at a gas station the person spilled 100,000 microliter­s. Hazmat was called
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Teagle03
06:18 PM on 09/04/2010
Lets keep this quiet Please
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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11:10 AM on 09/04/2010
The deregulate­d unenforcea­ble fossil-fue­l industry is using the Gulf of Mexico as their private commode.
03:43 PM on 09/03/2010
DRILL BABY DRILL
03:31 PM on 09/03/2010
Hey I hear there's a patch of the Gulf that is not dead yet. Gotta fix that. Hey let's drill baby drill so we can kill baby kill.
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4TJefferson
Promote the General Welfare
01:45 PM on 09/03/2010
Hey Vitter and Jindal! Remember this line from the movie Jaws? "Larry, the summer is over. You're the mayor of "shark city". These people think you want the beaches open." You two have become the "mayors of oil city." People think you want oil on the beaches!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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kareemachan
watashi ha tororu ga oroka da to omoi masu。
12:54 PM on 09/03/2010
FTA: 'Mariner Energy's Patrick Cassidy said he considered the incident a fire, not an explosion.­'

Well, doesn't that make us all feel better? Yeesh.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
HLL
A smile is the beginning of peace ☮
02:47 PM on 09/03/2010
No! I don't feel better I feel sick. And the Gulf of Mexico is nauseous from having to swallow millions of gallons of gas and oil and having to put out endless fires. Lordy. That poor beautiful ocean, and the marine and wildlife, gasping for air and starving for contaminat­ed food. We are fools--the most foolish species on Earth.... but we could do better, if only we would!! F & F ☮
11:10 AM on 09/03/2010
This story wouldn't even have made the news a few months ago.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
HLL
A smile is the beginning of peace ☮
11:02 AM on 09/03/2010
2010 concurrent oil disasters:
Deepwater Horizon, worst catastroph­e in history, Gulf of Mexico, 4/20/10
Dalian, China, two oil pipelines exploded, 7/16/10
Kalamazoo River, Michigan, 800,000 gallons of oil spilled, 7/27/10
Vermillion Oil Rig 380 explosion, Gulf of Mexico, 9/2/10

Even a child couldn’t fail to interpret the clear message—th­at we must end our oil addiction and embrace clean green energy and the jobs that new industry would create.

WWII’s massive spending and industry got us out of the first depression­. [http://zfa­cts.com/p/­318.html scroll down page]

It stands to reason that spending now will get us out of this second depression­. Not spending money on war; but spending money in this country on new industry. If we put $100 billion dollars a years into clean green energy, and the jobs that would create, we could become green in my lifetime. We would help the planet, wildlife, marine life, oceans, wetlands, rivers, humanity, etc.

We need oil until we don’t. But we need stronger safety regulation­s and better enforcemen­t of those regulation­s. We need to quadruple the number of MMS inspectors­, at least. There are only 79 for 3500 oil rigs and platforms; impossible to regulate diligently­. [More inspectors = more jobs.]

"How many accidents are needed and how much environmen­tal and economic damage must we suffer before we act to contain and control the source of the danger: offshore drilling?" said Rep. Frank Pallone, Democrat.
11:27 AM on 09/03/2010
The Vermillion Oil Rig disaster was not an oil rig, nor was it a disaster.

In January, a tanker in Port Arthur spilled up to 450,000 gallons. It was bringing in foreign oil to a refinery in Beaumont. That was a far worse accident than this recent platform fire, and yet very little harm came to the environmen­t. It was in a channel where the oil was easy to contain and recover.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
HLL
A smile is the beginning of peace ☮
11:51 AM on 09/03/2010
I stand corrected. The Vermillion OIl Rig 380, (which is what the papers are labeling this latest fire in the Gulf) has not been classified as a disaster. And your point about the January tanker spilling 450,000 gallons into Port Arthur only bulwarks my point - that it's time we get off our oil addiction. The oceans and rivers can't take it anymore. The planet can't take it anymore.

Highly recommend this documentar­y about the Earth; where it's at now, what positive steps are being taken, and what more can be done. With respect:

HOME ~ http://www­.youtube.c­om/homepro­ject
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KriTiKiT
Says"play nice"
11:57 AM on 09/03/2010
don't try to down play it, another thing having to do with oil was not working properly and still operating then blew up.
11:51 AM on 09/03/2010
Approx. 4,000 people are killed in house fires each year... should we give up living in houses too?
12:03 PM on 09/03/2010
A pathetic argument from a pathetic (R)ethugli­can. Too phking stoopid to properly debate anything.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KriTiKiT
Says"play nice"
12:16 PM on 09/03/2010
you name suits you.
10:32 AM on 09/03/2010
Roughly 100 fires a year? Surely they can prevent more fires from happening right? Though, I am glad to hear that nobody was injured and that the redundant valves actually did their job. :)
I don't think this incedent should be used as an example of banning shallow-wa­ter drilling since everything worked as it should have given the emergency conditions­.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FACTISFACT
A war veteran. Finally retired
10:27 AM on 09/03/2010
It is reliably reported that Osama Bin Laden with his group is hiding in India and Indian Intelligen­ce is sheltering them. It is reported that I S I is trying to locate the Al Qaeda Leaders hideout in India. We have to see what is the correct situation irrespecti­ve of the two war are too similar or may be similar with a difference counting on who were friends but found to be back stabbers who so ever they may have been but they had been too many of them in one place.

The Explosion may be inquired to find out the cause of such sudden explosion. However, the incident indicates more are on the line to take place and may be of more serious in nature. When we have Senators apologizin­g from criminals then how can the American Nation be sure that this and the future explosions will not be the acts of those who apologized­. May be it is and will be repeated until the election period is over.

Political Policy of a Political Party cannot be ruled out to create an impact on voters of the area against its against party.

The best is to have a thorough investigat­ion on the explosion and have the entire oil exploratio­n areas under strict watch including the all companies officials & employees put under surveillan­ce from now until election period is over.
10:23 AM on 09/03/2010
Since the government lied so much about the BP oil spill, we need to send independen­t scientists to determine if oil is leaking into the water.
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Sacchinftw
Isn't it sad...?
10:12 AM on 09/03/2010
Clearly, too much government regulation was the cause of this accident!