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6.06.2010

OIL Spew ON

Containment cap offers hope

"YET" oil spews on

Workers remove oil that has washed ashore from the Deepwater Horizon spill, Sunday, June 6, 2010 in Grand Isle, La.. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) AP – Workers remove oil that has washed ashore from the Deepwater Horizon spill, Sunday, June 6, 2010 in Grand …
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NEW ORLEANS – A device that's now sucking up significant amounts of the oil spewing from the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico offered a measure of optimism Sunday even as the government's point man on the spill warned problems would persist for months.

Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen said on CBS' "Face the Nation" that the spill, which is ravaging beaches and wildlife, will not be contained until the leak is fully plugged and that even afterward "there will be oil out there for months to come."

The disaster, which began with an oil rig explosion in mid-April, will persist "well into the fall," Allen said.

A containment cap placed on the gusher near the sea floor trapped about 441,000 gallons of oil Saturday, BP spokesman Mark Proegler said, up from around 250,000 gallons of oil Friday. It's not clear how much is still escaping; an estimated 500,000 to 1 million gallons of crude is believed to be leaking daily.

BP chief executive Tony Hayward told the BBC on Sunday that he believed the cap was likely to capture "the majority, probably the vast majority" of the oil gushing from the well. The gradual increase in the amount being captured is deliberate, in an effort to prevent water from getting inside and forming a frozen slush that foiled a previous containment attempt.

The next step is for BP engineers to attempt to close vents on the cap that allow streams of oil to escape and prevent that water intake, and Hayward told the BBC that the company hopes a second containment system will be in place by next weekend. Allen told CBS that the oil would stop flowing only when the leak was plugged with cement.

Hawyard, who has faced criticism over his company's response to the spill, told the BBC that he wouldn't step down and that he had the "absolute intention of seeing this through to the end."

"We're going to clean up the oil, we're going to remediate any environmental damage and we are going to return the Gulf coast to the position it was in prior to this event," he told the BBC.

Allen took issue on CNN's "State of the Union" on Sunday with BP officials who said they were pleased with results of the latest effort. He said progress was being made, "but I don't think anybody should be pleased as long as there is oil in the water."

He said on "Fox News Sunday" that he doesn't "want to create any undue encouragement" and that "we need to underpromise and overdeliver."

While BP plans to eventually use an additional set of hoses and pipes to increase the amount of oil being trapped, the ultimate solution remains a relief well that should be finished by August.

The urgency of that task was apparent along the Gulf Coast nearly seven weeks after the BP rig exploded April 20, killing 11 workers and rupturing the wellhead a mile below the surface. Since then, millions of gallons of oil have been rising to the surface and spreading out across the sea.

The oil is coating and miring waterfowl in the sticky mess, and dead birds and dolphins are washing ashore. Scientists say the wildlife death toll remains relatively modest, though, because the Deepwater Horizon rig was 50 miles off the coast and most of the oil has stayed in the open sea.

The oil has steadily spread east, washing up in greater quantities in recent days. Small tar balls have washed up as far east as Fort Walton Beach, about a third of the way across the Florida Panhandle. Government officials estimate that roughly 23 million to 49 million gallons have leaked into the Gulf.

A line of oil mixed with seaweed stretched all across the beach Sunday morning in Gulf Shores, Ala. The oil was often hidden beneath the washed-up plants. At a cleaning station outside a huge condominium tower, Leon Baum scrubbed oil off his feet with Dawn dishwashing detergent.

Baum had driven with his children and grandchildren from Bebee, Ark., for their annual vacation on Alabama's coast. They had contemplated leaving because of the oil, but they've already spent hundreds of dollars on their getaway.

"After you drive all this way, you stay," Baum said.

At Pensacola Beach, Buck Langston and his family took to collecting globs of tar instead of sea shells on Sunday morning. They used improvised chopsticks to pick up the balls and drop them into plastic containers. Ultimately, the hoped to help clean it all up, Langston said.

"Yesterday it wasn't like this, this heavy," Langston said. "I don't know why cleanup crews aren't out here."

With no oil response workers on Louisiana's Queen Bess Island, Plaquemines Parish coastal zone management director P.J. Hahn decided he could wait no longer, pulling an exhausted brown pelican from the oil, slime dripping from its wings.

"We're in the sixth week, you'd think there would be a flotilla of people out here," Hahn said. "As you can see, we're so far behind the curve in this thing."

At the mouth of Alabama's Mobile Bay, hundreds of seagulls squawked on a beach dotted with countless small tar balls but not a cleanup crew in sight.



--
Scott's Contracting
314-243-1953
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

Oil spill siphoning picks up speed,  Yet-Still Oil Escapes!

File photo of BP CEO Tony Hayward in the Gulf of Mexico Reuters – BP CEO Tony Hayward tours the recovery operations aboard the Discover Enterprise drill ship in the Gulf …

VENICE, La/PENSACOLA BEACH, Fla (Reuters) – The latest effort to siphon oil and gas gushing from a ruptured deep-sea wellhead in the Gulf of Mexico is working well so far, U.S. officials said on Saturday, as President Barack Obama defended his handling of the environmental crisis.

British energy giant BP Plc said it collected 6,077 barrels (255,000 gallons/966,000 liters) of oil per day from the well on Friday, and that "improvement in oil collection is expected over the next several days."

After soiling wetland wildlife refuges in Louisiana and barrier islands in Mississippi and Alabama, the black tide of pollution has reached some of the famous white beaches of Florida.

The toll of dead and injured birds and marine animals, including sea turtles and dolphins, is also climbing.

But 47 days into the crisis and after several unsuccessful attempts at containment by BP, a partial solution finally appears at hand.

The containment cap that BP clamped over the leak earlier this week was siphoning oil to a waiting drill-ship at a faster rate than initially estimated, U.S. Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen said at a briefing in Theodore, Alabama.

Bob Fryar, senior vice president with BP, later told a meeting of local mayors in Alabama that the latest undersea containment effort had gone "extremely well" so far.

The collection rate is still only about one-third of one day's flow from the oil geyser, which has been estimated by the government at about 19,000 barrels (800,000 gallons/3 million liters) per day.

But it could mark a turning point in the drama that has riveted the world and forced the Obama administration to reconsider plans to expand offshore oil drilling, which was seen as way to reduce U.S. dependence on foreign oil.

Allen said the full capacity of BP's containment device was about 15,000 bpd, the "upper limit" of the current leak control effort. BP does not expect to fully halt the oil flow until August, when two relief wells are due to be completed.

He said that winds continue to push parts of the vast oil slick closer to the coastline across a wide area -- roughly from the Mississippi-Alabama border to Port St. Joe in the Florida Panhandle, or more than 200 miles.

Florida's fishermen got a glimmer of good news late on Friday when the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reopened about 16,000 square miles (41,400 sq km) that had been closed to fishing on June 2 as a precaution.

Still, fully one-third of Gulf federal waters, or 78,603 square miles (203,582 sq km), remains closed to fishing in waters off four states. The U.S. shrimp and oyster supply, in particular, is heavily concentrated in the Gulf.

OBAMA'S TEST

In his weekly radio address on Saturday, Obama defended his administration against charges it had not moved aggressively enough in its response to the worst oil spill in U.S. history, which followed an April 20 rig blast that killed 11 workers.

Obama, who made a third trip to the Gulf coast on Friday, said he has put in place the largest response to an environmental disaster in U.S. history. The government had been "mobilized on every front," he said.

Meanwhile, BP said it had no specific pre-allocated budget to pay damages claims resulting from the spill, but will pay all those "hurt, harmed or damaged" until all legitimate claims are satisfied,

"We will make these payments for as long as it takes ...There is no budget, we'll do this until it's finished," BP America Vice President of Resources Darryl Willis said in a conference call from Orange Beach, Alabama.

The company faces a U.S. criminal probe, several lawsuits, dwindling investor confidence and growing questions about its credit-worthiness. Its share price has been stripped of about one-third of its value since the crisis began.

BP Chief Executive Tony Hayward has insisted the company had plenty of money to meet its obligations, including $5 billion in cash and additional credit lines it could tap.

The company has said it had already spent $1 billion on the disaster.

It is preparing to send a second advance payment to individuals and businesses along the Gulf Coast to compensate for the loss of income as a result of the spill. About 14,000 individuals and businesses will have received about $84 million once the second payment is processed.

The company delayed a decision on Friday to suspend its quarterly dividend payments, as some U.S. politicians have demanded.

Video courtesy of ABC News. For more visit ABC News.com


SUNSHINE STATE TARRED

The far-flung but fragmented oil slick appeared to make its first landfall in Florida on Friday as tar balls and an oily sheen washed up on Pensacola Beach on the Panhandle.

Tar ball sightings were fewer on Saturday, but residents and environmental officials were still uneasy.

"BP can't stop it, I don't think the Navy or the military can stop it," said local businessman Michael Penzone. "If we can get people to come out and start praying, maybe something good can come out of this."

Local officials are bracing for more impact from the spill on Florida's $60 billion-a-year tourism industry.

Protesters planned an anti-BP rally for Sunday at a BP gas station in downtown Pensacola -- although such grass-roots actions are mostly seen as damaging to small business owners who run the stations.

In Orange Beach on Alabama's Gulf shore, BP's Fryar faced anger from local mayors about what was termed the company's sluggish response to oil clean-up on local beaches.

"We just climbed out of a hole, from two hurricanes and two years of recession. This was going to be a banner year, and BP killed it," said Tony Kennon, mayor of Orange Beach, just west of the Florida border.

WILDLIFE IMPACT GROWS

Latest figures from the U.S. government on Friday showed 527 birds across the Gulf Coast have been collected dead over a 45-day period, although not all showed signs of oil.

Tom Bancroft, chief scientist for the National Audubon Society, said the government's numbers tell only part of the story. "Some (birds) just sink under the water and will never be counted," he said.

Of particular concern, Bancroft said, are threatened shore birds that breed on Gulf Coast beaches. The spill could also be "a really bad setback" for the brown pelican, Louisiana's state bird, which was only removed from the endangered species list in 2009.

NOAA also reported many heavily oiled sea turtles in the spill zone. The turtles are being caught, cleaned and transported to an Audubon Aquarium outside New Orleans for further care. Dozens of dead dolphins have also been stranded within the spill area since late April.

(Additional reporting by Chris Baltimore in Houston, Pascal Fletcher in Miami, Jeff Mason in Kenner, La., Kelli Dugan in

Orange Beach, Alabama, Sarah Irwin in Buras, Louisiana, and Jane Ross in Pensacola; Writing by Ros Krasny; Editing by Philip Barbara and Paul Simao)



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314-243-1953
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http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

6.04.2010











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How Does BP put a $$$$$ Figure on this Cost!!!!??? heads should roll
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Missouri's 3rd Congressional District: Jun 2010

June 1, 2010

In this MegaVote for Missouri's 3rd Congressional District:

Recent Congressional Votes

  • Senate: Supplemental Appropriations Act
  • House: Patrick Murphy of Pennsylvania Amendment; National Defense Authorization Act, FY2011
  • House: America COMPETES Reauthorization Act
  • House: National Defense Authorization Act, FY2011

Editor's Note: The Senate is in recess until Monday, June 7. The House is in recess until Tuesday June 8.

Recent Senate Votes
Supplemental Appropriations Act - Vote Passed (67-28, 5 Not Voting)

The Senate passed this $58.8 billion bill providing additional funds for disaster relief and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The House will begin work on its version of the bill after the Memorial Day recess.

Sen. Christopher Bond voted YES......send e-mail or see bio
Sen. Claire McCaskill voted Not Voting......send e-mail or see bio


Recent House Votes
Patrick Murphy of Pennsylvania Amendment; National Defense Authorization Act, FY2011 - Vote Agreed to (234-194, 10 Not Voting)

During the defense authorization bill debate, the House adopted this amendment that would repeal the "don't ask, don't tell" law that prohibits openly gay men and women from serving in the military. The draft of the Senate version of the authorization bill contains a similar provision.

Rep. Russ Carnahan voted YES......send e-mail or see bio


America COMPETES Reauthorization Act - Vote Passed (262-150, 20 Not Voting)

This $85.6 billion bill would authorize a variety of science research programs over the next five years. The timetable for Senate action is unclear.

Rep. Russ Carnahan voted YES......send e-mail or see bio


National Defense Authorization Act, FY2011 - Vote Passed (229-186, 17 Not Voting)

The House passed this $760 billion bill authorizing defense spending for the upcoming fiscal year. The Senate could take up its version of the bill sometime during the summer.

Rep. Russ Carnahan voted YES......send e-mail or see bio


--
Scott's Contracting
314-243-1953
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

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