WRAPUP 6-Weather hinders oil cleanup, revised moratorium due

Thu Jul 1, 2010 7:39pm EDT

* Bad weather still a problem after Alex hits land

* Storm pushes more oil farther inland along Gulf Coast

* Revised drilling moratorium due soon - White House

* BP shares up 2 percent, top fund acquires oil bonds (Adds oil pushed farther inland; House action on compensation bill; BP executive quotes; closing price on BP shares)

By Kristen Hays

HOUSTON, July 1 (Reuters) - Tropical storm Alex slowed oil spill clean-up and containment work in the Gulf of Mexico and drove more petroleum into fragile Gulf wetlands and beaches on Thursday, with any permanent fix to BP Plc's ruptured deep-sea well still several weeks away.

More than 10 weeks into the crisis, oil continued spewing into the Gulf, clean-up success remained limited and a proposal by the Obama administration to halt all deep-water drilling for the next six months remained in limbo.

Washington's attention has also been distracted by the recent firing of U.S. Army General Stanley McChrystal as commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan and the fate of a huge financial reform bill.

This week nature added to the problems as Alex crossed the Gulf. The storm made landfall as a hurricane over northeastern Mexico well to the west of the spill site, but its high winds and rough seas thwarted plans by BP (BP.L)(BP.N) to expand the volume of oil it is siphoning from the well. [ID:nN01117871]

The bad weather also pushed more oil-polluted water onto the shoreline of the U.S. Gulf Coast and forced the halt of skimming, spraying of dispersant chemicals and controlled burns of oil on the ocean surface.

"It has brought in oil, unfortunately, from the panhandle of Florida to Louisiana, right now, at a higher rate than it has been over the last few days," Robert Dudley, chief of BP's Gulf Coast restoration efforts, said of the storm's effect in a live PBS online interview.

He said the storm had spawned waves of 8 to 12 feet (2.4 to 3.7 meters) in some parts of the Gulf.

The worst oil spill in U.S. history, entering its 73rd day on Thursday, has unleashed an environmental and economic disaster of epic proportions along the Gulf Coast, idling much of the region's fishing and tourism industries, soiling its beaches and marshlands and killing wildlife.

Millions of barrels of crude oil have gushed nonstop from the floor of the Gulf, about 50 miles off Louisiana, since an April 20 explosion that demolished the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig and killed 11 crewmen. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ For full spill coverage link.reuters.com/hed87k Special Report: Oil spill gushes for lawyers[ID:nN29258627] Breakingviews [ID:nLDE65R1P7] Insider TV link.reuters.com/ned73m Graphics r.reuters.com/qam39k ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

BP says the target date for two relief wells to intercept and plug the blown-out well remains early to mid-August.

The British energy giant drew harsh criticism earlier in the crisis, but some of the political heat has cooled since President Barack Obama pressured the company to set up a $20 billion fund for damages and lawmakers hammered BP executives at congressional hearings.

REVERBERATIONS IN THE CAPITAL

In Washington on Thursday, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill to give families of those killed in the oil rig explosion greater latitude to sue for damages. And the House Transportation Committee met to negotiate proposed legislation to hold vessels and facilities more accountable for oil spills.

The White House, meanwhile, said it expected to release details of a revised offshore oil drilling moratorium in the next few days.

A federal court order last week blocked the government's initial ban on drilling exploratory and development wells in waters more than 500 feet (152 meters) deep, and a revised plan could still face legal challenges.

In an interview with Reuters, International Energy Agency head Nobuo Tanaka said a moratorium "makes sense" while a presidential commission investigates the spill's cause. But he said the world still relied on oil and gas, and that rigs idled in the Gulf should leave to search for resources elsewhere.

BP's market capitalization has shrunk by about $100 billion and its shares have lost more than half their value since the spill began. But shares have shown signs of stabilizing. They closed nearly 2 percent higher in New York on Thursday, after ending the day up almost 3 percent in London.

Pacific Investment Management Co. (PIMCO), which manages the world's biggest bond fund, said on Thursday it is buying more debt of some of the companies involved in the oil spill disaster, though it did not cite specific corporations.

Separately, Mark Kiesel, head of the PIMCO corporate bond portfolio management group, wrote in an article that BP had hefty amounts of cash on hand, strong operating cash flow and could sell assets to raise money if needed.

ROUGH SEAS

In the Gulf of Mexico, seas were still too rough on Thursday to allow skimming to resume, and Coast Guard officials said they doubted it would be calm enough on Friday, either.

"The weather today, unfortunately, looks much the same as yesterday. Operations will likely be curtailed," Coast Guard Commander Charles Diorio said on a conference call.

"We expect the seas to start to calm down as we get into Friday and further into the weekend," Diorio said.

In bays and estuaries, work crews were replacing boom dislodged or damaged by the storm, but the Coast Guard had no estimate on the extent of damage.

The storm surge from Alex also pushed oil more toward the northwest, in the direction of Mississippi and Louisiana, after a week in which the slick had crept mainly toward the northeast, washing up on Florida Panhandle beaches.

The weather delayed BP plans to boost containment capacity at the undersea well, but relief well drilling continued.

A government spokeswoman said on Thursday a massive ship converted into a "super skimmer" had arrived in the Gulf to assist with the cleanup. The 1,100-foot (335 meter) vessel, dubbed the "A Whale," was provided by its owner, TMT Shipping of Taiwan, officials said. [ID:nN01150876]

Government officials estimate 35,000 barrels (1.47 million gallons/5.56 million liters) to 60,000 barrels (2.5 million gallons/9.5 million liters) of oil pour from the ruptured wellhead each day.

BP's containment systems can handle up to 28,000 barrels daily and its planned addition could raise that to 53,000. (Additional reporting by Matt Bigg in Boothville, Louisiana, John Parry in New York, Jane Sutton in Miami, Alyson Zepeda, Bruce Nichols and Eileen O'Grady in Houston, and Richard Cowan, Matt Spetalnick and Alistair Bell in Washington; writing by Steve Gorman; editing by Todd Eastham)

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Comments (4)
There is a media blackout and BP and the government are censoring what you see and what you know about the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

Learn more: http://site.pollyandcrackers.com/blog/2010/06/28/us-government-and-bp-ignore-health-issues-censor-and-blackout-media-lie-to-public-concerning-gulf-oil-spill-disaster/

Jul 01, 2010 12:43pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
Alkan wrote:
Alkan here:

The news services had been reporting that BP and the cost guard were planning to announce approval of using the new “overshot tool” yesterday Wednesday. Anyone that knows the ancient methods of parts that fir and compression to match and hold the leak pressure knows that this almost has to work if done correctly.

No wonder that news helped the Market Speculation about the leak being sealed, as it makes sense.

There however was no announcement of the green light for using the overshot tool however yesterday or even today.

That decision will possibly be put off or abandoned for unknown reasons only known to Admiral Allen and BP.

After sending several suggestions to BP to use the two ages old principles to fix pressure leaks, there appeared to be a hint of response from BP and Admiral Allen. Sadly we hear nothing. Why can’t the Media report why why why?

The plan was reported to remove the present containment cap that sits on the irregular cut and pinched off riser. Then they plan to replace it with a larger better fitting cap that fits the top of the BOP and uses screw compression to bolt to the top of the BOP… so it will not unseat like when a little ROV hit it, and they had to replace it back on its precarious seat.

The name they are using is “overshot tool” and it will not just use weight to sit atop the cut and pinched off riser stump. It will actually use a screw mechanism to bolt it to the BOP and hold it in there place… with enough compression to withstand the pressure of the well. This stands a great chance to completely allow the well to be shut in.

My “overshot tool” idea that I sent BP, and they acknowledged was being considered, was similar to the text description of the new system they might decide on using. News reports said they thought that by mid July this might even completely seal the well… leading to the Stock Market speculation.

Anything that uses 1.) parts that fit and 2.) screw mechanism to set and hold compression will work. The descriptions of the new larger cap did not state however if the overshot was to use a soft metal liner to compress and “exactly fit” the top edge of the BOP flange — like my suggestions used. I hope it incorporates that simple method to get a complete shut off of the leak.

The news report even mentioned a Y top to the overshot (like in diagrams I drew) to run each side of the Y to a different ship.

Instead of merely producing the well, once there is no leak, I hope they will plug it once it can hold shut in pressure. See one of my suggestions I sent by highlight, copy, and paste in a browser:

http://i1000.photobucket.com/albums/af122/alkanalkan/BP-Fix-It.jpg?t=1277656919

The new “overshot” method reported sounded like it uses exactly the two principles of 1.) parts that fit and 2.) compression to match and hold the pressure of the leak using screw mechanism. I have been screaming about this since this disaster happened.

The part with the lowered clamp and large overshot cap could be fitted with downward pointing bolts. Then as it is lowered to fit the lower clamp around the BOP, the lower clamp could have threaded holes to screw these downward pointing bolts into. I do hope they use that method to make things fit simpler and “fool proof”.

I wanted to thank the people in charge for finally actually considering something that could allow quickly plugging the well before the two dangerous relief wells that could blow out are deep enough to be a threat of two more uncontrolled gushers. Now there is no follow up at all. A waiting World and Stock Market, are left hanging by the News Media, Admiral Allen, and BP. Why?

It all depends on their decision to use the overshot method.

Please do it right this time BP.
Plug it after a leak seal is made using slow pumping of heavy mud.
Cement it.
Then abandon it.
Plug the other two potential gushers… now drilling.
Clean up the Gulf.
Pay your fines.
Fire your personnel that cut corners and cause disasters.
Rebuild your reputation.
Preserve the pensions of millions invested in your stock.
Forget being a “rogue Oil Company” and become a “model Oil Company”.

We don’t hate your company, we hate those that set its risky policy.

Live and let live.

BP should learn from, survive, and transform after this sad mistake.

After plugging and abandoning this well, they need to get rid of those that created the disaster…as very next step.

Just decide “Yes” on the overshot method.

Jul 01, 2010 12:43pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
Alkan wrote:
“There is a media blackout and BP and the government are censoring what you see and what you know about the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. PollyNCrackers ”

PollyNCrackers, I can see from your statement that you are very very pessimistic about government, the news media, and big companies conspiring together.

I agree that on the surface, there might be that appearance. Certainly things have to change. Just like why was there no follow up by the media about the use of the overshot tool to stop the leak… and many other public worries?

The way I look at it is that for many many years lobbies have squeezed out representatives into doing what business lobbies, foreign government lobbies, and many many lobbies will pay to get people they want elected. Even our Supreme Court has failed to reverse this status quo on lobbies that for decades have used business as usual. You also have to look at who controls the media and their motives. I also agree the present system is not in the average person’s interest. There is no true Peoples Party to vote for that might change things.

My personal interest is why our government regulatory agency allows BOPs to be used that have no top flange with bolt holes that allows such an “overshot tool” that the media will not even mention as a common sense precaution. If such a Blow Out Preventer had been fitted to this well, the leak would be over and sealed within hours of the internal BOP failure. Just set it over the top, bolt it and the leak is gone. Parts that are not designed to work hurts the public.

I hate to point fingers but I do think the Media should investigate and publish all the facts available.

It may be this is just an innocent set of circumstances. I think it is the Media, the Government, and the Big Companies just doing business as usual.

But who knows it could just be blamed on stupidity and “not knowing” how to do things in the public interest.

Jul 01, 2010 3:17pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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