No
doubt, no doubt at all where this is coming from.
Oil
in new Gulf slick matches that of 2010 spill
The
oil in a slick detected in the Gulf of Mexico last month matched oil
from the Deepwater Horizon spill two years ago, the Coast Guard said
Wednesday night, ending one mystery and creating another.
11
October, 2012
“The
exact source of the oil is unclear at this time but could be residual
oil associated with the wreckage or debris left on the seabed from
the Deepwater Horizon incident,” the Coast Guard said.
The
Coast Guard added that “the sheen is not feasible to recover and
does not pose a risk to the shoreline.” One government expert said
the thin sheen, just microns thick, was 3 miles by 300 yards on
Wednesday.
Some
oil drilling experts said it was unlikely that BP’s Macondo well,
which suffered a blowout on April 20, 2010, was leaking again given
the extra precautions taken when it was finally sealed after spilling
nearly 5 million barrels of crude into the gulf.
BP
declined to comment. But a BP internal slide presentation said the
new oil sheen probably came from the riser, a long piece of pipe that
had connected the drilling rig to the well a mile below the sea
surface.
The
presentation said that “the size and persistence of this slick, the
persistent location of the oil slick origin point, the chemistry of
the samples taken from the slick ... suggest that the likely source
of the slick is a leak of Macondo ... oil mixed with drilling mud
that had been trapped in the riser of the Deepwater Horizon rig.”
But
Ian MacDonald, a professor of oceanography at Florida State
University and a spill expert, cautioned said that the origin of the
new oil remains uncertain. “The jury is out here,” he said,
adding that it was too early “to rule out that this is oil freshly
released from the reservoir.”
The
sheen, located about 50 miles off Louisiana’s shore in the
Mississippi Canyon block 252 where the Macondo well was drilled, was
detected in satellite images taken on Sept. 9 and Sept. 14. The Coast
Guard said the size of the sheen has varied with weather conditions.
Samples
of the crude were collected and sent to a Coast Guard laboratory in
New London, Conn. On Tuesday, the Coast Guard told BP and Transocean,
owner and operator of the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig that caught
fire and sank, that the oil from the sheen and spill matched.
In
a meeting Wednesday, the Coast Guard told the companies to come up
with a plan of action for determining the source. “No one’s 100
percent as to where it’s coming from,” said Frank Csulak,
scientific support coordinator for the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration.
Since
the disaster in 2010, which killed 11 workers, the wreckage of the
massive rig, the crumpled riser and some hardware used in the attempt
to kill the well have remained on the gulf floor. T
An
August 2011 investigation, which came after oil blobs were observed
on the surface and which included a visit to the wellhead by a
remotely operated vehicle, turned up no sign that the well was
leaking. That inspection was conducted by BP with federal government
officials observing the process.
Nonetheless,
there have been persistent rumors and allegations on blogs that
Macondo is not truly dead, and that it is continuing to spew oil into
the gulf.
Marcia
McNutt, director of the U.S. Geological Survey, said a rough
calculation showed that the riser, if full of oil, could hold about
1,000 barrels of oil. Because it’s open on two ends it is unlikely
to have that much oil, she said.
McNutt
said it’s unlikely that oil came from the deep reservoir. The well
was plugged from both the top and the bottom, and has a mile of
cement crammed into it.
“With
what we did to it, it’s pretty hard to imagine, ” McNutt said.
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