Showing posts with label oil spill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil spill. Show all posts

Friday, May 21, 2010

BP delays attempt to plug leak with mud

White House taps Graham, Reilly to lead investigative panel

Image: Gulf Coast 
Struggles With Oil Spill And Its Economic Costs
John Moore / Getty Images
Phil Radford, executive director of Greenpeace USA, inspects oil-covered reeds while visiting Venice, La., on Thursday.
By GREG BLUESTEIN
updated 32 minutes ago
ROBERT, La. - It will be at least Tuesday before engineers can shoot mud into a blown-out well at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, BP said Friday in yet another delay in the monthlong effort to stop the oil that is now washing into wetlands and onto at least one public beach. 

A so-called "top kill" has been tried on land but never 5,000 feet underwater, so scientists and engineers have spent the past week preparing and taking measurements to make sure it will stop the oil that has been spewing into the sea for a month. They originally hoped to try it as early as this weekend. 

BP spokesman Tom Mueller said there was no snag in the preparations, but that the company must get equipment in place and finish tests before the procedure can begin. BP already has three deepwater rigs and other equipment near the blown-out well. 

 

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

'Small portion' of slick in Loop Current - Florida Next?

Image: Oil clings from fishing net
Gerald Herbert / AP
This net was dipped into a marsh by Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal on Wednesday to show the extent of the spill damage in Pass a Loutre, La. "This is heavy oil in our wetlands," he said during a boat tour.
msnbc.com staff and news service reports
updated 3:30 p.m. CT, Wed., May 19, 2010
 
WASHINGTON - The latest satellite and overflight data shows a "small portion" of the BP oil slick has reached the Loop Current "in the form of light to very light sheens," the federal government said Wednesday.

But the update also cautioned that "in the time it would take for oil to travel to the vicinity of the Florida Straits, any oil would be highly weathered and both the natural process of evaporation and the application of chemical dispersants would reduce the oil volume significantly."

 

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Oil spill clouds future of energy, climate bill

WASHINGTON - The Gulf oil spill has dealt a big blow to expanded offshore drilling, leaving the nation's energy problems as murky and unsettled as ever.

The disaster may bolster arguments for greater energy conservation and renewable energy sources such as wind and solar, environmentalists say. But it's hard to see any other political beneficiaries, and under the best of scenarios, few experts think the nation's thirst for foreign oil will abate for years to come.

Apart from the deaths of 11 oil rig workers and the environmental damage to the Gulf and southeastern coastlines, the spill has hurt an array of political causes. At best it's an embarrassment to President Barack Obama. He recently had embraced expanded offshore drilling in hopes of winning Republican support for a broad-ranging energy bill that would include efforts to limit heat-trapping gases.

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