Saturday, May 29, 2010

By Mail Foreign Service

Protestors pour a mixture of water and paint resembling oil on themselves during a demonstration at a BP gas station in Manhattan yesterday


Two days after BP began a risky effort to stop a gushing oil well in the Gulf of Mexico, company officials refused to say whether America's worst oil spill would end any time soon.

BP warned that it could be Sunday or later before it becomes clear whether its bid to plug the well through an effort known as a 'top kill' is working.

Experts said they could see incremental progress at best from BP's 'spillcam' of mud, gas and oil billowing from the seafloor.

The hypnotic video has become an Internet sensation.


Black stuff: The Manhattan protest came as BP continued its latest effort to stop the oil spill


The group condemned BP for its response to the oil spill and the damage company is causing to the environment


Scientists say the images may offer clues to whether BP is getting the upper hand in its struggle to contain the oil, said Tony Wood, director of the National Spill Control School at Texas A&M University in Corpus Christi.

If the stuff coming out of the pipe is jet black, it is mostly oil and BP is losing. If it is whitish, it is mostly gas and BP is also losing.

If it is muddy brown, as it was much of Friday, that may be a sign that BP is starting to win, he said.

That 'may in fact mean that there's mud coming up and mud coming down as well,' which is better than oil coming out, Wood said.

Philip Johnson, an engineering professor at the University of Alabama, said the camera appeared to show mostly drilling mud leaking from the well Friday morning, and two of the leaks appeared a little smaller than in the past, suggesting the top kill 'may have had a slight but not dramatic effect.'

But Bob Bea, a professor of engineering at University of California at Berkeley who has studied offshore drilling for 55 years, said late Friday that what he saw didn't look promising.


Damage control: U.S. President Barack Obama at Fourchon Beach today. Facing criticism that his government is not doing enough to stop the oil spill crisis, he has stepped up personal involvement


Crude oil as it escapes from the Deepwater Horizon BP oil well in the Gulf of Mexico. Hundreds of thousands of gallons of oil continue to escape as BP and federal officials try to stop it


Crews conduct controlled burns near the Deepwater Horizon/BP incident site in the Gulf of Mexico


He likened the effort to pushing food into a reluctant baby's mouth - it only works if the force of the stuff going down is more than the force of what's coming up.

'It's obvious that the baby's spitting the baby food back' because the pressure pushing up from the well is stronger, Bea said.

Meanwhile, President Barack Obama visited the coast yesterday to see the damage as he tried to emphasize that his administration was in control of the crisis, which began on April 20 when the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform blew up and killed 11 workers.

'I'm here to tell you that you are not alone, you will not be abandoned, you will not be left behind,' he told people in Grand Isle, where the beach has been closed by gobs of oil and the frustration and anger are palpable.

'The media may get tired of the story, but we will not. We will be on your side and we will see this through.'

He also urged the public to volunteer to join the cleanup and for tourists to help by visiting the majority of the region's coastline that is untouched.

Hundreds of workers hit the beaches ahead of Obama's visit, cleaning debris from the shoreline before they hopped on buses and left soon after the president arrived.

'This is the cleanest I've ever seen the beach,' Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said. 'We saw a surge of activity the last couple of days. Let's hope it continues now that he's gone.'

The top kill operation began on Wednesday, with BP pumping heavy drilling mud into the blown-out well in an effort to choke off the source of the spill which has released anywhere from 18 million gallons to 40 million gallons of oil by the government's estimate.


Oil impacts Redfish Bay in Louisiana's birdsfoot delta, where the Mississippi River empties into the Gulf of Mexico


BP CEO Tony Hayward takes a first hand look at the recovery operations aboard the Discover Enterprise drill ship in the Gulf of Mexico 55 miles south of Venice, Louisiana


The black area shows the extent of the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico


Coast Guard spokesman Thad Allen said the denser-than-water mud had pushed down the oil and gas that's forcing its way up from underground, but the mud had not overwhelmed the gusher.

BP has brought in about 2.5 million gallons of drilling mud for the top kill. BP chief operating officer Doug Suttles said yesterday the procedure was going basically as planned, though the pumping has stopped several times.

'The fact that it's stopped and started is not unusual,' Suttles said. 'We're going to stay at this as long as we need to.'

He said the company has also shot in assorted junk, including metal pieces and rubber balls, which seemed to be helping to counter pressure from the well. The first infusion of junk was on Thursday evening.

A top kill has never been attempted 5,000 feet underwater, and public fascination is high.





A large drilling vessel floats near the Deepwater Horizon disaster area, where the BP leased oil platform exploded last month


A pelican tries to clean its wings while standing in the water on an island littered with protective orange and white booms near Grand Isle, Louisiana


BP, under pressure from Congress, made available a live video feed of what is going on underwater, and about 3,000 websites were showing a version of it that the PBS 'Newshour' offered for free.

On Thursday alone, show spokeswoman Anne Bell said, more than a million people watched it. Many found it hypnotic.

'It made me wonder how I use energy and if this situation could teach us how much energy we use ourselves,' said Jeb Banner, 38, a web design and marketing company owner in Indianapolis who has been looking at the feed every hour or so since before the top kill started. 'It felt like a historic moment.'

BP says the best way to stop the oil for good is a relief well, but it won't be complete until August.

The company had been drilling a second relief well as a backup - Obama said on Thursday his administration pushed for it in case the first one did not stop the oil - but work on that has stopped while the rig that had been drilling it works on another option for stopping the oil.

'We actually started that well before this job started, so you shouldn't read that as any indication of anything about the top kill job,' BP's Suttles said.

Billy Ward, a developer who was building a gated fishing community that is now on hold because of the spill, said that Obama's visit was for show and that there was really nothing the president could do.

'It's the unknown that's killing us,' said Ward, who comes to Grand Isle with his family every weekend to stay in their beach house. 'We don't know if it's going to be six months or six years before we get back to normal, if ever. All we can do is pray.'





source: dailymail

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