CBS/AP/ April 30, 2010, 3:39 PM

Oil Leak May be 5 Times Worse than Initial Claim

Updated at 3:51 p.m. Eastern.

A massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico that has become far worse than initially thought crept toward the coast Thursday as government officials offered help from the military to prevent a disaster that could destroy fragile marshlands along the shore.

Speaking Thursday morning to CBS News, Doug Suttles, chief operating officer for BP PLC, which leased the sunken rig, backed away from his company's denial of Coast Guard claims a day earlier suggesting the five-fold jump, telling "Early Show" co-anchor Maggie Rodriguez, "we think the range has increased" to "somewhere between 1,000 and 5,000 barrels" per day.

"In terms of our response, it actually doesn't change based on that number," Suttles said.

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Speaking to NBC, Suttles said BP was "happy" to accept an offer for military help containing the oil slick from the federal government, which his company had politely declined on Wednesday.

The federal government made the offer after it was determined the slick now poses a direct threat to the U.S. shoreline, with some of the sticky crude forecast to make landfall as soon as Friday.

Coast Guard Rear Adm. Sally Brice-O'Hara said at the White House that the government's priority was to support the oil company BP PLC in employing booms, skimmers, chemical dispersants and controlled burns to fight the oil surging from the seabed.

The Coast Guard has urged the company to formally request more resources from the Defense Department. President Obama has dispatched Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and Environmental Protection Agency administrator Lisa Jackson to help with the spill. The president said his administration will use "every single available resource at our disposal" to respond to the spill.

The Navy is sending 66,000 feet of inflatable boom and seven skimming systems, and using its bases in the region as staging areas for the operation.

But time may be running out: Oil from the spill had crept to within 12 miles of the coast.

If the well cannot be closed, almost 100,000 barrels of oil, or 4.2 million gallons, could spill into the Gulf before crews can drill a relief well to alleviate the pressure. By comparison, the Exxon Valdez, the worst oil spill in U.S. history, leaked 11 million gallons into Alaska's Prince William Sound in 1989.

Meanwhile, the Obama administration said the cost of cleaning up the spill will fall on BP.

As dawn broke Thursday in the oil industry hub of Venice, about 75 miles from New Orleans and not far from the mouth of the Mississippi River, crews loaded an orange oil boom aboard a supply boat at Bud's Boat Launch. There, local officials expressed frustration with the pace of the government's response and the communication they were getting from the Coast Guard and BP officials.

"We're not doing everything we can do," said Billy Nungesser, president of Plaquemines Parish, which straddles the Mississippi River at the tip of Louisiana.

"Give us the worst-case scenario. How far inland is this supposed to go?" Nungesser said. He has suggested enlisting the local fishing fleet to spread booms to halt the oil, which threatens some of the nation's most fertile seafood grounds.

Louisiana has opened a special shrimp season along parts of the coast so shrimpers can harvest the profitable white shrimp before the spill has an effect.

Michael Nguyen, 58, was aboard his 82-foot shrimp boat, the Night Star III, waiting for news Thursday morning on what has happening with the slick.

"My boat is ready: New nets, did repairs. I'm ready to go," he said.

He wasn't panicking, but was clearly worried.

"The oil come in everywhere, the shrimp die, the crabs die, the fish die. What do I do? Stay home a long time?"

The spill has moved steadily toward the mouth of the Mississippi River and the wetland areas east of it, home to hundreds of species of wildlife and near some rich oyster grounds.

A federal class-action lawsuit was filed late Wednesday over the oil spill on behalf of two commercial shrimpers from Louisiana, Acy J. Cooper Jr. and Ronnie Louis Anderson.

The suit seeks at least $5 million in compensatory damages plus an unspecified amount of punitive damages against Transocean, BP, Halliburton Energy Services Inc. and Cameron International Corp.

Jim Klick, a lawyer for Cooper and Anderson, said the oil spill already is disrupting the commercial shrimping industry.

"They should be preparing themselves for the upcoming shrimp season," he said. "Now they're very much concerned that the whole shrimp season is out."

Mike Brewer, 40, who lost his oil spill response company in the devastation of Hurricane Katrina nearly five years ago, said the area was accustomed to the occassional minor spill. But he feared the scale of the escaping oil was beyond the capacity of existing resources.

"You're pumping out a massive amount of oil. There is no way to stop it," he said.

More on the rig explosion:

BP Exec: Size of Leak Won't Change our Response
Crews Start Burning Gulf Oil Slick
Fighting Oil with Fire
Oil Rig Cook Haunted by Nightmares Since Blast
Oil Spill Growing off Coast after Rig Explosion
Oil Spill Continues; Will Robot Fix Leak?
Man-Made Disaster in the Gulf
New Oil-Rig Safety Rules Eyed Before Blast
Louisiana Oil Rig Explosion

Louisiana State Wildlife and Fisheries Secretary Robert Barham told lawmakers federal government projections show a "high probability" oil could reach the Pass a Loutre wildlife area Friday night, Breton Sound on Saturday and the Chandeleur Islands on Sunday.

The sinking of the Deepwater Horizon rig has re-ignited the debate over offshore drilling, reports CBS News Correspondent Don Teague. In the Gulf alone, there are more than 3,500 oil and gas platforms with about 35,000 offshore workers. They produce more than 1.7 million barrels of oil per day, almost 30 percent of total domestic production.

Environmental groups say the disaster proves offshore drilling isn't worth the risk, Teague reports.

In a reversal of his stance on the topic, Florida Gov. Charlie Crist said Thursday after flying over the oil slick in the Gulf that he would no longer seek offshore drilling for his state.

Crist said the disaster proved that oil rigs are "the opposite of safe."
© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
61 Comments Add a Comment
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bolson2010 says:
WE USE A VACUUM TRUCK TO CLEAN UP DEBRIS IN THE MAN HOLES AND ON THE GROUND WHY CAN'T THEY BUILD A VACUUM UNIT ON THE FISHING BOATS TO SUCK UP THE OIL FROM ON TOP OF THE WATER. I KNOW THAT IT WILL WORK BECAUSE WE HAVE DONE IT IN OUR COMPANY IN THE PAST. THEY CAN THEN PUMP IT UP INTO THE TANKERS. PLEASE I HOPE THAT THEY DO SOMETHING SOON.
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bolson2010 says:
maybe someone will read this comment stop the oil by hooking up a tanker to the end of the pipe and start suction to the pipe then you can go down with your armed units and patch the other leaks. it is just like when we fix a pressure pipe under water to stop a leak.
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bolson2010 says:
im a plumber that has a patent that i know will plug off the oil pipe above the valve. i have used my idea to plug off other presure piping before and to allow the pipe to be capped . i can do it if someone would like to talk to me they can reach me at this email address. i would like to help stop this oil spill now instead of watching it go on for months.my cell phone number is 260-515-5900. my name is brad.
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sciline says:
White House declares Gulf of Mexico oil spill to be of "national significance," freeing up aid.

Of "national significance," now there is a load of crap if I ever heard a load of crap. To say nothing as to "national significance" being a political euphemism for: ?Unprecedented National Disaster".
Is the White House fearful of hurting bp's feelings and bp?s public image? Or are they concerned that the public will finally realize the real dangers of off-shore drilling. Particularly when Safety Recommendations are ignored and/or not enforced? What were bp?s contingency plans for the shearing of the drill stem at that depth? If they had any, what Federal Agency evaluated them? When was the last Safety Inspection? Who conducted it? What were its conclusions? Where is the Safety Report now?
If the leaking of that oil pool cannot be stemmed soon, the entire volume of that oil pool could be bleeding into the Gulf and outward for months, if not years!
Come on! First it was 1,000 barrels/day, now 5,000/barrels/day. I?m guessing it is closer to 9,000/barrels/day!
This Century will surely become best known for: ?The Century that the insatiable GREED of Corporate Special Interests, and their compliant political allies, almost permanently destroyed our Environment?! ?Profits before people, Profits before Environment, Profits above all?, they gleefully chant at their Board Room Meetings! That goes whether they are mining coal beneath the land or oil beneath the sea! ?Safety Regulations be damned?, they cry, ?they eat into our profits!?
Tom Nass
5th Marine Division - WWII
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kmrunner122 says:
5 Times? Meaning it's over 50 times worse than they say. The US taxpayer will be tapped to clean it all up and the BP will make Billions again this year. The spill clean up will be an excuse to increasing the price of gas to fatten their golden parachutes!
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us_1776 says:
Why does it take NOAA scientific estimates of the massive oil spill to finally get BP execs to admit that the well is leaking much more oil than they were telling us?

I'm in the Gulf region and this oil-spill is just massive. It is covering almost 4,500 square miles right now and growing every minute.
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rfp1959 says:
Hey banned85times, I've got some news for you. The most liberal person of all times was Jesus Christ. He said that we should "Love one another as I have loved you", and you can't even follow that simple commandment. Jesus helped those in need, and condemned the wealthy to hell for their insensitivity for those in need. So sorry Beck, Rush, Hannity, Coulter and the rest of the right wing, you may call yourself a christian but you are still going to hell for your lack of compassion and your worshipping of the almighty dollar.
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rightbehind says:
by banned85times April 29, 2010 11:37 AM EDT
People who have worked on ofshore drilling rigs for 30 years are saying this was no accident.

I wonder if it was the Libs who blew up the coal mine, also. Timing is everything, and since they don't believe in God,. and don't think anyone should believe in God, then who the hell do they respect and fear? NO ONE!
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If you do a search for the word, "liberal" in the Bible KJV. The word "liberal" is always used in good context. You might want to open yours and actually read it. The ideology that republicans or conservatives represent is warned about from the front to the back cover.
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barbaram99 says:
We all live on this planet..It is true the military uses the most oil..The govt..Yep..It is not crying wolf..We need to be matter care takers of this planet..This is our home..It is appalling the greed. It comes down to money..Sure they could retool to build cars that don't use gas..The talk of solar, wind power. Only the rich home owners, We rent..Our high shcool class brought up the same thing in the 70s..People don't want change..They want to drive the car..Mass transport was talked about years ago..Very few people will ride it..I have to..I have to walk. So does my roommate. We will be forced off oil when it runs out..
It will. When we don't know. We never learn from the damage we cause. What kind of planet are ue leaving the ones after us..a mess.
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johndevinejr says:
DRILL BABY, DRILL!

How's that working out for ya...Teabaggers?
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doctor_know replies:
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Where can I get some crack louiville12?
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