BP Kills LMRP Plan – Will Try Modified Top Hat To Cap Gulf Oil Spill
Posted by Alexander Higgins - June 3, 2010 at 1:03 am - Permalink - Source via Alexander Higgins Blog
As the BP Gulf oil spill continues to leak thousands of barrels of oil a day into the Gulf of Mexico BP has officially announced plans to drop its original LMRP plan after the Diamond saw that was cutting the flange from the BOP got snagged.
CNN is now reporting that BP will attempt to use the huge shear saw nicknamed CRAW (crab saw) to make a jagged cut on top of the BOP.
The shear saw will not be able to make a clean cut as planned using the the diamond saw so the LMRP plan will be abandoned in place of putting a modified “Top Hat” device on top of the BOP.
Since the shear saw will not be able to make a clean cut BP is reporting that their plan to allow the Gulf oil spill leak until August will now leave even more oil leaking until August than previously anticipated.
Venice, Louisiana (CNN) — BP has abandoned its original plan to use a diamond wire cutter that its engineers had hoped would cleanly cut the riser pipe spewing oil into the Gulf of Mexico. It will instead use a more effective, if less precise, cutter, the federal government’s point man on the disaster said Wednesday.
The diamond wire cutter plan was dumped after the device got stuck midway through the pipe. It was freed at 2:10 p.m. ET and taken to the surface, Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen told CNN.
The next move will be to use the sheer-cutting device that made Tuesday’s successful cut on the riser. Because the rougher surface left by that cut will not accommodate the tight seal needed for installation of the lower-marine riser package, engineers will use the “top hat” instead, he said.
That 5-foot-tall, 4-foot-diameter structure had been considered before, but engineers opted instead for an insertion tube that wound up capturing only about 20 percent of the oil from the site of the leak to the surface.
The mile-deep cutting effort, conducted by robot submarines, came as shifting weather patterns threatened to push more oil toward the shores of Mississippi, Alabama and Florida.
Alabama and Mississippi reported weathered oil and tar balls on barrier islands Tuesday, and Florida Gov. Charlie Crist warned Wednesday that the white sands of the Panhandle could start seeing crude wash ashore “in a day or two.”
In Louisiana, where oily sludge has been fouling coastal marshes for two weeks, state officials said the White House has given its blessing to a plan to dredge up walls of sand offshore, and BP agreed to fund the $360 million construction cost.
U.S. officials raised concerns about the long-term environmental effects of what would effectively amount to building dozens of miles of new barrier islands off the state’s coast.
But Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal and other officials had pushed for approval of the plan as a last-ditch effort to prevent further damage.
Read more about Jindal’s announcement
“It’s very difficult if not impossible to clean it up out of the marsh,” said Billy Nungesser, president of Louisiana’s Plaquemines Parish, which includes the mouth of the Mississippi River.
“That’s why we need this first line of defense, and we’re going to work hard, very quickly, to get that berm out there to give us the maximum protection and give us a fighting chance.”
Nungesser becomes face of grassroots effort
On Day 44 of the disaster, National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration extended fishing restrictions deeper into the Gulf and eastward along the Florida Panhandle.
The latest order means 37 percent of the Gulf is now closed to fishing due to the spill, and it moves the boundaries of the restricted zone eastward to just south of Navarre, Florida, and southward to the edge of the Dry Tortugas, off Key West.
The leading edge of the spill was within 10 miles of Pensacola, Florida, on Wednesday, with “thousands of tar balls” spotted in the water, Crist told reporters.
The state was scrambling to deploy more boom in its westernmost counties and to get skimmer boats out onto the water to scoop up as much of the oil as possible, he said.
With the help of $25 million from BP, Florida has been running ads trying to emphasize that its beaches and resorts have stayed open and oil-free. Crist said some of those ads will be edited, if necessary.
Watch Florida brace for the oil Video
“Obviously, you have to have truth in advertising,” he said. “So we want to make sure that if it does come on our shores, that we redirect the message so that it is appropriate, that it is accurate and discusses where it is — and maybe more importantly, where it is not.”
Concern has spread southward. The head of the Department of the Environment and Natural Resources in Mexico said Wednesday that five states in Mexico are monitoring the oil spill in the event it reaches land in the country, according to the state-run news agency Notimex.
Track the Gulf oil disaster
BP’s latest attempt to curtail the flow comes after several failures, including a closely watched bid to use heavy drilling fluid and cement to shut down the well.
The well erupted after an explosion and fire on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig on April 20 that killed 11 people. The rig sank two days later, leaving up to 19,000 barrels (798,000 gallons) of oil pouring into the Gulf, according to federal estimates.
The gusher may not be shut until August, when BP expects to complete relief wells that will take the pressure off the one now spewing into the Gulf.
BP , rig owner Transocean Ltd. and oilfield services company Halliburton have blamed each other for the disaster. But BP, as the well’s owner, is responsible for the costs of the cleanup under federal law. Suttles said the company has spent more than $1 billion to clean up the spill.
And BP has taken a beating in the halls of government, drawing the ire of members of Congress, officials in the Gulf states and the Obama administration, which announced Tuesday that a criminal investigation of the spill was under way.
Senators push BP to suspend dividend
Federal officials, the administration said, will no longer hold joint news briefings with the company. Before Allen’s news conference Wednesday at a BP operations center, a Coast Guard member struggled to tear a BP logo from the podium.
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Why don’t they just cut the bolts with the smaller saw we’ve seen used before?
Any clue as to why they cannot fit a "top cap" to the flange below the bad pipe cut? With all the time spent with the diamond saw trying for a clean cut, I don't know why the flange is being ignored. An adapter could be designed to fit the flange, using "ears" to lock under the flange. What goes here?
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It looks to me that BP is dragging their asses to fix this. Since installing the top hat it's been 10 hours and there is no pipe attached to it yet. It would seem to me that when they start a new plan that they would have everything in place to make it happen. By the time BP gets this under control they will have ruined the Gulf of Mexico. I have lived in Pensacola all my live and I can't believe that in my life time I would seen our Beaches ruined by a company thats full of greed and a bunch of idiots. I think they need to get them college boys out of the way and let the common sense people fix this. I realy beleive that BP intent is to ruin the Gulf of Mexico so they can have all the oil out there without protest. BOYCOTT BP, BOYCOTT BP, Don't by any of their products Who cares if they go out of business The taxpayers are going to pay for this anyway thru taxes or higher gas pump prices.
[...] Read more on Article source [...]
Scientist say the best way to clean up the oil is to just scoop it up. I would like to see a couple of dredges suck up infected water – filter it and release clean filtered water. A boat fleet 2 years that can work on the oil pollution skimming the water. Like a water plant dedicated and chemically engineered to separate the water and oil pumped threw the barge.
Finally: Close this well for good. Let the clean-up begin.
WHAT A MESS!!!
And politics and bureaucracy will not let go.
the spill is not only tainting the water with oil but also depleting oxygen levels.
So I am right we need to airrate the water. But I see no navy vessells called into action setting up such devices to help protect the United States wildlife meaning fish that need clean water.
I saw on TV the technology of filtering oil from the water, but it needs to be applied in real life right now! Not next year. Not next month. We need The United States Navy to go about the mission of equiping a fleet of navy vessels and collection barges with oil filtering pumps. A fleet of 100 boats and you can posion them near the shore line to help protect the fish that need clean water.
I saw on the news a person with a shop vac sucking up oil and getting about 90% he said. Oil is about $70 per barrell. Is there an incentive to keep what you suck up? And who is willing to buy the oil collected by clean-up people? Maybe more larger company’s would get involved if someone would buy the oil they collect from the water in The Gulf.