Massive oil slick inches closer to Louisiana coast
April 30th, 2010 - 12:34 pm ICT by IANS
Washington, April 30 (DPA) A massive crude-oil slick from an exploded rig in the Gulf of Mexico inched closer to the mouth of the Mississippi river late Thursday as the government marshalled resources to protect fragile wetlands.
The estimated 5,000-sq-km slick was spreading faster than expected and could reach the shores of Louisiana as early as Thursday night. It could devastate fisheries, wildlife refuges, bird sanctuaries and tourism in Louisiana as well as Mississippi, Alabama and Florida.
The size and speed of the oil slick grew exponentially after energy giant BP Plc, which owned the Deepwater Horizon floating rig, which exploded, confirmed that its exploratory well in the Gulf of Mexico was gushing up to five times the amount of crude oil than had been originally estimated after last week’s blast.
The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration said the slick was expected to hit the east side of the Mississippi River Delta late Thursday at Pass-A-Loutre, Louisiana, home to a bird sanctuary.
“While BP is ultimately responsible for funding the cost of response and cleanup operations, my administration will continue to use every single available resource at our disposal - including, potentially, the Department of Defence - to address the incident,” President Barack Obama said Thursday.
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano declared the leak to be of “national significance”, freeing up federal agencies to get involved.
Napolitano, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson were to travel to Louisiana Friday to inspect efforts to contain the oil slick.
The estimated rate of leakage from the damaged well was raised to 5,000 barrels a day on Thursday, five times the 1,000 barrels a day previously feared to be spilling, BP said.
Salazar has ordered an “immediate inspection” of all deep-water drilling and pumping platforms in the Gulf of Mexico.
Doug Suttles, BP’s chief operating officer for exploration, estimated that drilling a relief well, which would help pump heavy fluid into the well to counteract the pressure, “could take 90 days.”
A siphoning alternative, which would funnel the gushing oil up a pipe to a drill ship, could take two to four weeks to build.
Obama had backed March 31 new drilling for oil and natural gas off parts of the US coastline as part of the solution to the country’s massive energy needs. But the oil spill could now alter those plans.
- US terms reports of BP resuming Gulf of Mexico drilling as 'misconception' - Apr 05, 2011
- Louisiana Governor Jindal declares state of emergency due to oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico - Apr 30, 2010
- US to lease out Gulf of Mexico chunk for oil drilling - Jan 27, 2012
- US allows BP to drill new Gulf deepwater wells - Oct 22, 2011
- US to hold major auction of oil and gas leases - Dec 15, 2011
- BP To Start Top Kill To Stop Oil Spill Further - May 25, 2010
- Oil spill heads for US coast - Apr 30, 2010
- Leaking US oil well capped; tests to show how effectively - Jul 13, 2010
- US oil spill could reach Louisiana shore by Friday - Apr 29, 2010
- President Obama to tour oil spill disaster area - May 02, 2010
- Obama extends drilling halt as top-kill stops oil leak - May 28, 2010
- BP working on new approach as Obama loses patience - May 15, 2010
- US to battle oil leak for 'months to come' - Jun 07, 2010
- BP's 'cost-cutting decisions' blamed for 'avoidable' Gulf of Mexico oil spill - Jan 06, 2011
- US Coast Guard says Gulf oil spill to make landfall Friday - Apr 30, 2010
Tags: agency administrator, barack obama, bird sanctuaries, bird sanctuary, bp plc, cleanup operations, department of defence, energy giant, environmental protection agency, interior secretary, janet napolitano, ken salazar, lisa jackson, louisiana coast, loutre, mississippi alabama, mississippi river, mississippi river delta, mouth of the mississippi river, national oceanographic and atmospheric administration