What a cluster and right during the vulnerable breeding season. Mother Nature is not cooperating on the weather, either. The gulf coast can't catch a break.
What a cluster and right during the vulnerable breeding season. Mother Nature is not cooperating on the weather, either. The gulf coast can't catch a break.
Biggest question I have is, why didn't the blowout preventer stop the flow of oil instead of allowing it to free flow into the ocean? Surely there is an alternative available if the rig is lost to a storm or catastrophe like this one.
drill baby drill
Horrible situation but this is one of the risks with off shore drilling. The biggest issue out of this is why, like Wambo stated, did the equipment meant to prevent this stuff fail? Hopefully this thing can get capped soon and the rescue operation can get into full swing to help the environment recovery.
Eco-terrorism if you ask me.
You know, I know these things happen but it crossed my mind, too. I guess it is just the world we live in that such things would be considered a remote possibility. I even wondered if someone opposed to President Obama's decision to allow offshore drilling could have prompted someone to do this (perhaps not realizing it would get out of hand). I know, I know, crazy talk. It was just an idle thought. Anyway you look at it, it is really, really bad.
Apparently, things aren't going well on the attempted cleanup.
Weather and the currents are causing the oil to get past the barriers they erected. It seems to me I've seen in recent years about specific detergents and even some kind of a bacterial compound that can actually "eat" the oil? I wonder why those clean-up methods are not being used. I can't recall exactly what this substance was, and I haven't done recent research into it, but I just remember something to this extent.
Just tragic.
I work for an Oil & Gas services company here in OKC. Our corporate HQ is in Houston, and we've got offices/warehouses on the Louisiana Gulf Coast that we service off shore rigs from. We felt very fortunate that this was not a well that our company was servicing. There have been many emails circulating that gives us a more detailed look at the Horizon. I won't paste the entire thing here (it's huge!) but I'll paste some of the more interesting parts. If any of you would like to read the email in its entirety (it's a .pdf with before/after pics) just send me a message with your email address and I'll forward it on.
The rig belongs to Transocean, the world’s biggest offshore drilling contractor. The rig was originally contracted through the year 2013 to
BP and was working on BP’s Macondo exploration well when the fire broke out. The rig costs about $500,000 per day to contract. The full drilling spread, with helicopters and support vessels and other services, will cost closer to $1,000,000 per day to operate in the course of drilling for oil and gas. The rig cost about $350,000,000 to build in 2001 and would cost at least double that to replace today.
The rig represents the cutting edge of drilling technology. It is a floating rig, capable of working in up to 10,000 ft water depth. The rig is not moored; It does not use anchors because it would be too costly and too heavy to suspend this mooring load from the floating structure. Rather, a triply-redundant computer system uses satellite positioning to control powerful thrusters that keep the rig on station within a few feet of its intended location, at all times. This is called Dynamic Positioning.
It is thought that somehow formation fluids – oil /gas – got into the wellbore and were undetected until it was too late to take action. With a floating drilling rig setup, because it moves with the waves, currents, and winds, all of the main pressure control equipment sits on the seabed – the uppermost unmoving point in the well. This pressure control equipment – the Blowout Preventers, or ‘BOP’s” as they’re called, are controlled with redundant systems from the rig. In the event of a serious emergency, there are multiple Panic Buttons to hit, and even fail-safe Deadman systems that should be automatically engaged when something of this proportion breaks out. None of them were aparently activated, suggesting that the blowout was especially swift to escalate at the surface. The flames were visible up to about 35 miles away. Not the glow – the flames. They were 200 – 300 ft high.
I read the other day, I think it was a headline title, that they were going to also attempt the clean up on a "micro" level. I think this is what people was talking about on here. I didn't read the story, but I am sure they are doing something like that.
And the huge box didn't work because of methane clathrates. As disastrous as it is, the chemistry and engineering problems faced here are fascinating.
There are thousands of rigs offshore in the gulf, for the most part the service and environmental records of them have been stellar when compared to the on shore rigs and other industries. It looks like they ran across a methane bubble that was stronger than all of the blowout prevention measures which had worked many, many times before.
Hopefully they can get this thing plugged soon.
Russians say we should nuke it. The mind boggles.
Nuke that slick - Julia Ioffe - The Moscow Diaries - True/Slant
Colbert pretty much sums it up............ "No one knows what the f--k they're doing."
Colbert On Oil Containment: "No One Knows What The F--k They're Doing" (VIDEO)
Geez, this is becoming one of the biggest jokes of all time. If it wasn't so sad of a situation that is. What a **&^^%&*** cluster )(*&(*^*&^%^. No one knows what the *&^* they are doing!!!!!!!!!
Sorry, had to rant.
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