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Gulf spill: How 3.6 million barrels of crude can disappear

BP faces 10-billion-dollar lawsuit over Texas site: report
London (AFP) Aug 4, 2010 - BP has been hit with a 10-billion-dollar lawsuit over an alleged leak of toxic chemicals at its Texas City refinery as it struggles to recover from the Gulf oil spill, a report said Wednesday. Tony Buzbee, a Texas lawyer, filed a class action lawsuit Tuesday on behalf of 2,000 claimants linked to the alleged leak in April and May, reported Britain's Telegraph newspaper. The lawyer -- who is also representing people affected by the Gulf of Mexico spill -- told the paper his clients were seeking compensation for "health effects including all symptoms associated with acute benzene exposure." News of the lawsuit came as BP faced up to enormous costs from the spill, which has destroyed vital tourism, fishing and oil industries in the five Gulf coast states.

US government experts revealed higher than previous official estimates on Monday of the amount of oil spilt, saying 4.9 million barrels (more than 205 gallons) of crude spewed into the Gulf in the 87 days it took to cap the leak. This made the disaster the biggest maritime spill ever. If BP is found guilty of negligence, the flow rate means it could face up to 17.6 billion dollars in fines. The firm has also set up a 20-billion-dollar fund to pay claims from individuals and businesses hit by the disaster. The British oil giant began operations to permanently plug the well on Tuesday. The oil spill disaster began on April 20 when the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform exploded in the Gulf, 50 miles (80 kilometers) off the coast of Louisiana, killing 11 workers. It sank two days later.
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Aug 4, 2010
Three quarters of some 4.9 million barrels of crude disgorged into the Gulf of Mexico from BP's ruptured oil well has been neutralised by nature or human efforts, according to a US government report released Wednesday.

Only 26 percent of the oil remains close to its original form, floating on the ocean water or suspended under the surface, said the report by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

The other 74 percent has either evaporated or been burned, skimmed, recovered from the underwater wellhead or dispersed, a panel of government and independent scientists found.

"Three quarters is not surprising, indeed it is very consistent with our own preliminary estimates," said George Peigne, an expert on ocean oil spills at CEDRE, a French government pollution research centre.

"Indeed, it is possible that more than 75 percent has been eliminated," he told AFP.

Here is how the NOAA estimates breaks down:

REMOVAL AT SOURCE: After several false starts, some 17 percent of the oil was recovered directly from the busted wellhead a mile below the ocean surface using a riser pipe insertion tube and so-called "top hat" systems.

By the end of this week, the well -- ruptured after a violent explosion on April 20 -- could be sealed for good.

BURNING AND SKIMMING: Up to five percent of the crude was burned as it floated on the water, and another three percent was skimmed off the surface by a small armada of boats and ships.

NATURAL DISPERSION: NOAA estimates that 16 percent of the crude was dispersed naturally into the ocean water. As the oil gushed out of the well at high pressure, some of it sprayed apart into droplets less than 100 microns across, the diameter of a human hair.

Drops this small are neutrally buoyant and do not rise to the surface, and thus begin to biodegrade. "Oil-eating bacteria are particularly abundant in the Gulf due to the oil extraction industry and warm water temperatures," explained Peigne.

CHEMICAL DISPERSION: An additional eight percent of the oil was broken down with chemicals, leaving droplets just below the surface and deep in the water column.

As with the natural process, the oil is dispersed into tiny droplets. But until they are biodegraded, they remain potentially toxic to marine organisms.

EVAPORATION AND DISSOLUTION: The scientific panel calculated that 25 percent of the crude "quickly and naturally evaporated or dissolved into the water column".

In the latter process, individual hydrocarbon molecules in the oil separate and dissolve into the water much as sugar dissolves into coffee or tea.

For evaporation, molecules in the oil rise into the air "like an exhaust gas", said Peigne. "But they don't disappear entirely."

earlier related report
Well kill doesn't mask grim reality for Gulf fishermen
Venice, Louisiana (AFP) Aug 4, 2010 - As BP began its crucial well kill operation Tuesday in the depths of the Gulf of Mexico, on the nearest spit of land marina owner Bill Butler and his son Dylan face a grim future.

"You better peel with two hands instead of one, boy, or you're going to be here all day," Butler told his son as they shelled raw shrimp.

"I got my way," the younger man replied.

The father-and-son team didn't expect to sell any of the prawns to customers -- their 70-pound (30-kilogram) catch will go into the freezer for personal consumption.

Residents of Venice, the small fishing town at the southernmost tip of Louisiana, are eager to get back on the water, but they know it could be months or even years until the fishing trade returns to pre-spill levels.

Butler's bait and fuel business has been totally shot by the oil disaster. Just 13 fishing boats returned to the marina last weekend after the waters around Venice were reopened for fishing three weeks ago, compared to 200 boats on an average late July weekend.

Butler's 30 hotel rooms are filled with clean-up contractors working for BP, like all the other guest beds in town. His fishing business will not have a chance to pick up until the contractors have left, leaving some room for tourists to return.

"The spill isn't as bad as the media has suggested," he said, looking out into the marina's clear-looking water. "The amount of oil they've released is like a gnat on an elephant's behind."

Charter boat captain Chris Callaway hasn't taken a group out fishing since mid-April, two days before oil started leaking into the Gulf. Last year he had taken 70 trips out by this time.

"The perception is, everything down here is absolutely slap covered in oil," he said. "But that's not true. You could drive around all day and not find it."

Callaway has gone fishing in the Gulf every two or three days since the waters reopened to fishermen three weeks ago, catching redfish, shrimp, and speckled trout.

He's not concerned by environmentalists' claims that chemical dispersants released into the water by BP may have contaminated the seafood, and has been eating it every day.

"It tastes like fish," he said. "I'm not dead yet. If the government tells me it's not safe to eat, I won't eat it. But I'm not going to worry about it until someone tells me. They're the experts, I'm just a fisherman."

Up the road at the Riverside Restaurant, waitress Jamie Williams has had to sell seafood shipped in from northern Louisiana and even imported from China since the spill began.

"It's hurting our business," she said. "People come here expecting the local seafood they ate last year, and it's not the same."

The Riverside hopes to be serving some local shrimp by August, said Williams, optimistic that BP can finally plug the well and that the local produce will be certified as safe to eat again.

Joe Riotto and his family drove down Tuesday to Venice from Mississippi, where daughter Angela has just started graduate school. The family wanted to observe the oil disaster first hand, for themselves, he said.

The Riotto family took photographs next to a sign by the side of the highway that reads: "Welcome. You have reached the Southernmost point in Louisiana, Gateway to the Gulf."

The family was looking for somewhere to go and eat some shrimp, and Riotto said he too was unconcerned about contamination.

"Restaurants aren't going to sell the shrimp if they're bad," he said. "These are decent American people down here. They're not going to lie about it."



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FROTH AND BUBBLE
Research needed on underwater dispersants
Washington (UPI) Aug 4, 2010
More research is needed to understand the long-term effects of oil dispersants, especially considering their underwater use, experts and lawmakers said at a U.S. Senate committee hearing Wednesday. Experts called to testify before the Committee on Environment and Public Works assessed the use of oil dispersants in the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Dispersants are a ... read more







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