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WRAPUP 7-Oil invades more wetlands as surf pounds Gulf coast
* Bad weather still a problem after Alex hits land
* Storm pushes more oil farther inland along Gulf Coast
* Cleanup operations not expected to resume until Saturday
* BP shares up 2 percent, top fund acquires oil bonds (Adds BP executive saying cleanup likely to resume Saturday; Mississippi closes remainder of waters to fishing)
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 Gulf surface for a third straight day.
"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, and that oil cleanup and containment efforts were unlikely to resume until Saturday.
Coast Guard officials also said they doubted conditions would be calm enough to restart full-scale operations Friday.
"Operations will likely be curtailed," Coast Guard Commander Charles Diorio said in a conference call. "We expect the seas to start to calm down as we get into Friday and further into the weekend," Diorio said.
The worst oil spill in U.S. history, entering its 73rd day on Thursday, has unleashed an unprecedented environmental and economic disaster 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 bays and estuaries, work crews were replacing containment 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.
Mississippi officials on Thursday closed down the last open portion of that state's territorial marine waters to all commercial and recreational fishing, citing an increase in the amount of oil driven ashore by the storm.
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, Leigh Coleman in Mississippi, and Richard Cowan, Matt Spetalnick and Alistair Bell in Washington; writing by Steve Gorman; editing by Todd Eastham)
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Going to any beach with oil on it is like chewing razor blades! The oil is loaded with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) . The introduction of chemical dispersants increases the amount of carcinogens in the oil. The federal government should be passing out Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS) . They are designed to provide both workers and emergency personnel or people on the beach picking up or walking on tar balls with the proper procedures for handling hazardous material. The oil is a toxic material.
Some people who have breathed or touched mixtures of PAHs and other chemicals for long periods of time have developed cancer. Some PAHs have caused cancer in laboratory animals when they breathed air containing them (lung cancer), ingested them in food (stomach cancer), or had them applied to their skin (skin cancer).
We know this from an oil spill eight years ago in Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts. On April 27, 2003, eight years ago the Bouchard Barge B-120 hit an obstacle in Buzzards Bay, creating a 12-foot rupture in its hull and discharging an estimated 100,000 gallons of No. 6 oil. The oil is known to have affected an estimated 90 miles of shoreline, numerous bird species, and recreational use of the bay, such as shell fishing and boating.
Just Google Matt Simmons. The poor guy is in a frenzy that BP is covering it all up. Of course they are and Obama is clueless about how to handle what is going on.
It should all be coming out in the next few weeks.
BP, nice job showing that small well puffing out that nice tiny leak! You deserve an Oscar for that one.
They say only a nuclear blast will close it, just like the Russians did several times before. Hey, we use to blow those off all the time after WWII. What’s worse:
1) 6 more months of 100,000 barrels a day?
2) some radiation but no more oil leak?



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