Author Topic: Oil spill in gulf of mexico to cause massive damage.  (Read 4079 times)

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Offline White Israelite

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Re: Oil spill in gulf of mexico to cause massive damage.
« Reply #25 on: May 10, 2010, 08:14:48 PM »
oil spill worse than BP admits to, amateur video you can see how bad the spill really is, this is not going to be contained by "humans".

!
They will get it under control I think its just a matter of getting the right equipment and people out there to get things under control... The damage from the spill is going to be another issue... It seems that the shvartza Administration is taking a very laid back response to the disaster. They should have had people out there working on this even if they have to bill BP for the expense.

problem is, there are provisions that only allow a oil company to be penalized up to 74 million dollars and no more than that. That's a drop in the bucket.

Offline White Israelite

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Re: Oil spill in gulf of mexico to cause massive damage.
« Reply #26 on: May 10, 2010, 08:18:49 PM »
Here is a blog that discusses what is happening daily for those interested.

http://bpoilslick.blogspot.com/

Offline White Israelite

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Re: Oil spill in gulf of mexico to cause massive damage.
« Reply #27 on: May 10, 2010, 08:37:33 PM »


By Noaki Schwartz and Harry R. Weber The Associated Press
Published: Saturday, May 8, 2010 at 3:30 a.m.
Last Modified: Friday, May 7, 2010 at 11:43 p.m.
( page of 4 )
ON THE GULF OF MEXICO | The deadly blowout of an oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico was triggered by a bubble of methane gas that escaped from the well and shot up the drill column, expanding quickly as it burst through several seals and barriers before exploding, according to interviews with rig workers conducted during BP’s internal investigation.

While the cause of the explosion is still under investigation, the sequence of events described in the interviews provides the most detailed account of the April 20 blast that killed 11 workers and touched off the underwater gusher that has poured more than 3 million gallons of crude into the Gulf.
Portions of the interviews, two written and one taped, were described in detail to an Associated Press reporter by Robert Bea, a University of California Berkeley engineering professor who serves on a National Academy of Engineering panel on oil pipeline safety and worked for BP PLC as a risk assessment consultant during the 1990s. He received them from industry friends seeking his expert opinion.
Seven BP executives were on board the Deepwater Horizon rig celebrating the project’s safety record, according to the transcripts. Meanwhile, far below, the rig was being converted from an exploration well to a production well.
Workers set and then tested a cement seal at the bottom of the well. Then they reduced the pressure in the drill column and attempted to set a second seal below the sea floor. A chemical reaction caused by the setting cement created heat and a gas bubble which destroyed the seal.
Deep beneath the seafloor, methane is in a slushy, crystalline form. Deep sea oil drillers often encounter pockets of methane crystals as they dig into the earth.

As the bubble rose up the drill column from the high-pressure environs of the deep to the less pressurized shallows, it intensified and grew, breaking through various safety barriers, the interviews said.
“A small bubble becomes a really big bubble,” Bea said. “So the expanding bubble becomes like a cannon shooting the gas into your face.”
Up on the rig, the first thing workers noticed was the sea water in the drill column suddenly shooting back at them, rocketing 240 feet in the air. Then, gas surfaced. Then oil.
“What we had learned when I worked as a drill rig laborer was swoosh, boom, run,” Bea said. “The swoosh is the gas, boom is the explosion and run is what you better be doing.”
The gas flooded into an adjoining room with exposed ignition sources, he said.
“That’s where the first explosion happened,” said Bea, who worked for Shell Oil in the 1960s during the last big northern Gulf of Mexico oil well blowout. “The mud room was next to the quarters where the party was. Then there was a series of explosions that subsequently ignited the oil that was coming from below.”
According to one interview transcript, a gas cloud covered the rig, causing giant engines on the drill floor to run too fast and explode. The engines blew off the rig and set “everything on fire,” the account said. Another explosion below blew more equipment overboard.
BP spokesman John Curry would not comment Friday night on whether methane gas or the series of events described in the internal documents caused the accident.
“Clearly, what happened on the Deepwater Horizon was a tragic accident,” said Curry, who is based at an oil spill command center in Robert, La. “We anticipate all the facts will come out in a full investigation.”

The BP executives were injured but survived, according to one account. Nine rig crew on the rig floor and two engineers died.
“The furniture and walls trapped some and broke some bones but they managed to get in the life boats with assistance from others,” said the transcript.
On Friday, a BP-chartered vessel lowered a 100-ton concrete-and-steel vault onto the ruptured well, an important step in an attempt to stop most of the gushing crude fouling the sea.
“We are essentially taking a four-story building and lowering it 5,000 feet and setting it on the head of a pin,” BP spokesman Bill Salvin said.
Underwater robots guided the 40-foot-tall box into place in a slow-moving drama. Now that the contraption is on the seafloor, workers will need at least 12 hours to let it settle and make sure it’s stable before the robots can hook up a pipe and hose that will funnel the oil up to a tanker.
“It appears to be going exactly as we hoped,” Salvin said on Friday afternoon, shortly after the four-story device hit the seafloor. “Still lots of challenges ahead, but this is very good progress.”
By Sunday, the box the size of a house could be capturing up to 85 percent of the oil.
The task became increasingly urgent as toxic oil crept deeper into the bays and marshes of the Mississippi Delta.
A sheen of oil began arriving on land last week, and crews have been laying booms, spraying chemical dispersants and setting fire to the slick to try to keep it from coming ashore. But now the thicker, stickier goo — arrayed in vivid, brick-colored ribbons — is drawing ever closer to Louisiana’s coastal communities.

There are still untold risks and unknowns with the containment box: The approach has never been tried at such depths, where the water pressure is enough to crush a submarine, and any wrong move could damage the leaking pipe and make the problem worse. The seafloor is pitch black and the water murky, though lights on the robots illuminate the area where they are working.
If the box works, another one will be dropped onto a second, smaller leak at the bottom of the Gulf.
At the same time, crews are drilling sideways into the well in hopes of plugging it up with mud and concrete, and they are working on other ways to cap it.
Investigators looking into the cause of the explosion have been focusing on the so-called blowout preventer. Federal regulators told The Associated Press Friday that they are going to examine whether these last-resort cutoff valves on offshore oil wells are reliable.
Blowouts are infrequent, because well holes are blocked by piping and pumped-in materials like synthetic mud, cement and even sea water. The pipes are plugged with cement, so fluid and gas can’t typically push up inside the pipes.
Instead, a typical blowout surges up a channel around the piping. The narrow space between the well walls and the piping is usually filled with cement, so there is no pathway for a blowout. But if the cement or broken piping leaves enough space, a surge can rise to the surface.
There, at the wellhead of exploratory wells, sits the massive steel contraption known as a blowout preventer. It can snuff a blowout by squeezing rubber seals tightly around the pipes with up to 1 million pounds of force. If the seals fail, the blowout preventer deploys a last line of defense: a set of rams that can slice right through the pipes and cap the blowout.
Deepwater Horizon was also equipped with an automated backup system called a Deadman. It should have activated the blowout preventer even if workers could not.
Based on the interviews with rig workers, none of those safeguards worked.
———
Associated Press writers Cain Burdeau, Vicki Smith and Ray Henry in Louisiana, Jeff Donn in Boston, Michael Graczyk in Houston and Noaki Schwartz in Los Angeles contributed to this report.


Offline White Israelite

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Offline White Israelite

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Re: Oil spill in gulf of mexico to cause massive damage.
« Reply #29 on: June 02, 2010, 05:03:01 PM »
This is only continuing to get worse, New Orleans beaches are ruined, oil just hit Alabama and tomorrow or the day after tomorrow the oil is supposed to hit here in Pensacola and the oil well still can't be capped.




































Offline MassuhDGoodName

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Re: Oil spill in gulf of mexico to cause massive damage.
« Reply #30 on: June 02, 2010, 05:38:10 PM »
What's really sick --

America was never going to get this oil anyway.

It would've all been sold on the world market to the highest paying customer.

The belief that "if we drill we will have more oil supplies to use for energy, thereby be less dependent on foreign sources" is nothing but a deceit and a falsehood - a sales pitch used by the petroleum industry to dupe gullible Americans into legislating more offshore and Arctic drilling operations for their corporate enrichment.

Does anyone on this forum truly believe that British Petroleum was going to drill for oil in the Gulf in order to make sure that Americans would pay less for an ever larger supply of oil?

It's more than likely China and India were going to end up with all of it.

In this farcical "global economy" corporations are supra-national, having no national allegiance or loyalties.

Those who will labor for less compensation than any other worker are allowed to work, and those who will consume the goods produced are those willing (and able) to pay more than any other nation.

In my opinion this catastrophe is a deliberate act of sabotage by party or parties yet to be determined.

Hussein O intends to use it as an excuse to nationalize all petroleum industries in the U.S.A. so he can be just like Hugo Chavez.

It's not inconceivable that the entire Southeastern coasts and beaches will be lost forever and be a toxic wasteland.

Hey!...Hussein O never liked those white people down south anyway.

"He that lives upon HOPE will die Fasting" - Benjamin Franklin




Offline White Israelite

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Re: Oil spill in gulf of mexico to cause massive damage.
« Reply #31 on: June 04, 2010, 02:59:12 PM »
I went to the beach earlier, the first tar balls are starting to show up on Pensacola Beach, CNN posted some pictures.





and more damage























I think more people are interested in american idol than what is happening in the gulf.
« Last Edit: June 04, 2010, 03:06:53 PM by White Israelite »

Offline White Israelite

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Re: Oil spill in gulf of mexico to cause massive damage.
« Reply #32 on: February 06, 2014, 01:45:09 PM »
Now almost 4 years after this incident, we are finding mutated crabs, fish with lesions, people with a huge list of health problems, don't eat seafood from the gulf!


http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2012/04/18/eyeless-shrimp-and-mutant-fish-raise-concerns-over-bp-spill-effects/

Offline TruthSpreader

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Re: Oil spill in gulf of mexico to cause massive damage.
« Reply #33 on: February 06, 2014, 02:48:38 PM »
I feel so sorry for those poor animals.

Dan - Stay calm and be brave in order to judge correctly and make the right decision