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Factbox: How BP's containment cap works, next steps

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LOUISIANA | Mon Jun 7, 2010 6:18pm EDT

LOUISIANA (Reuters) - BP Plc says its containment cap on a seabed oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico has ramped up to collecting 11,100 barrels a day, according to the company's most recent tally.

As the global energy giant slowly increases that rate, it is moving to re-use equipment installed for a previous failed attempt to clog up the pipe known as "top kill." The equipment will now be adapted to siphon more of the leak and to interrupt containment efforts if a hurricane blows through the Gulf.

Here is an explanation of how both operations are supposed to work, as well as other technologies BP is using to try to bring the well under control:

CONTAINMENT CAP

* On June 3, BP placed the cap with a seal on the remnant of the pipe jutting from the top of a lower marine riser package, or LMRP, which sits atop a failed blowout preventer at the wellhead.

* Oil and gas continued to gush from under the cap because four vents were open as BP pumps nitrogen and methanol into the cap through a pipe attached to a drillship one mile above at the ocean's surface.

* The chemicals are intended to stabilize pressures and combat cold temperatures as the pumping action helps expel seawater from the cap.

* The aim is to prevent seawater from mixing with the gas, which can form ice-like hydrates and block the flow of oil and gas to the drillship.

* About 1,000 barrels a day of oil was flowing to the drillship as of early Friday. In subsequent days, the amount rose to 6,000, then 10,500 and then 11,100 as of midnight on Sunday.

* If the nitrogen lowers pressure as intended, the vents will close, the flow to the drillship will increase and the amount of oil gushing from the cap should decrease. On Sunday, BP closed one of the vents.

* U.S. government scientists estimated the leak's flow could increase by 20 percent before the seal works as intended. They are analyzing data to determine if that estimate turned out to be right.

* BP chief operating officer Doug Suttles estimated the cap could corral 90-plus percent of the oil. That is higher than previous estimates of about 80 percent.

* Oil that is channeled to the drillship will be stored for later processing at a refinery ashore and the natural gas is being flared. As of midnight on Sunday, a total of 27,700 barrels of oil had been collected and 54.7 million standard cubic feet of gas flared.

BACKUP CAPS/DOMES

* If the first containment cap fails, BP has several backup caps with and without seals of varying sizes at the seabed, on the way or being manufactured.

ENHANCEMENT TO LMRP CAP PLAN

* BP will use seabed equipment installed to conduct the top kill to enhance the containment cap system.

* The top kill involved pumping heavy drilling fluid into the failed blowout preventer to try to smother the leak. Mud was pumped from a ship to a service rig and down to a manifold, which routed the fluid to "choke and kill" hoses connected to the blowout preventer.

* With the system expected to be ready by mid-June, BP will reverse direction and pull oil and gas from the blowout preventer through the hoses and manifold to a vessel at the surface.

HURRICANE PREPAREDNESS

* BP also is planning a system to allow the drillship connected to the containment cap to suspend operations and move if a hurricane approaches.

* BP will use "free-floating" pipe stretches from the LMRP to about 300 feet below the drillship. Then a hose will connect the pipe to the ship.

* The system would involve a new, bigger cap to replace the current containment cap designed to have a tighter seal.

* Described by BP as a "long-term option," the system would allow the company to disconnect the hose from the pipe and move the ship out of a storm's path, then return when the weather calms to resume the operation.

* When disconnected, the leak would spew from the end of the pipe, according to U.S. Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen.

* The system is expected to be implemented in late June or early July.

* The Atlantic hurricane season began on June 1.

THE RELIEF WELLS

* Drilling continues on two relief wells intended to intercept and cap the leaking well beneath the seabed. The first was begun on May 2 and the second on May 16. Both are expected to be finished in August.

(Reporting by Kristen Hays; Editing by John O'Callaghan)

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Comments (5)
hsvkitty wrote:
http://www.wkrg.com/gulf_oil_spill/spill_cams/

Everyone is falling asleep, BP is capturing oil rather then trying to close off the well and they are capturigng too little to matter.

it is still swpewing like a volcano and it looks as though fissures are opening around the well aas the underground pipes may be leaking.

This isn’t fixed… it isn’t over… look at the streaming video and judge what you see three, not what BP is telling you. They had a mandate to plug the leak and here they are still trying to capture oil… and not doing well in that regard either…

Call your representative… therir are 10k suggestions and other countries willing and able to help. BP should be using their help and technology to get it done!

Jun 07, 2010 11:50pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
Alkan wrote:
Alkan here:

hsvkitty, I have been watching the cameras several hours a day and especially those that show the seabed 5 stories below the single leak. So far I have not seen any leak from the cement job around the well head or at the seabed… thank goodness.

The previous “top kill” for days I watched with pressure equalizing the sub seabed pressure… and there was never any leak seen then.

The integrity of the well below the seabed… as long as the pressure is not tested more than the Monster formation… will hold as it was tested during “top kill” for days.

This simply means that if the single leak were contained by simple methods, like a proper compression clamp and proper soft metal gaskets to seal with, then the pipe at the sea surface could be shut in and even used to plug this well by several means. Alternatively it could be produced.

Most domestic people in the USA would rather see it plugged then followed by stopping the dangerous relief wells.

Usually the Large-Ocean Intervention III ROV 2 camera viewed here often shows the seabed and the lower well head next to the seabed below the 5 story tall BOP. The only leak now is at the top of the 5 story tall BOP. See:

http://www.gulfcleanupfund.org/LiveVideo/All12CamerasAutoStart.aspx

Jun 08, 2010 1:36am EDT  --  Report as abuse
DonCiccio wrote:
Alkan,

You are assuming they want to catch all of the oil……

If the gasket is loose or not a perfect fit then its very difficult to estimate the amount of oil which has been flowing into the gulf.

If they get a perfect seal and collect all the entire flow then the whole world will know exactly that 30K+ barrels a day have been leaking, i.e then BP will have to PAY MORE MONEY.

I suggest a loose gasket would be just the job to cloud exactly how much is coming out of that wellhead.

Jun 08, 2010 5:03am EDT  --  Report as abuse
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