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CBS/ AP/ May 4, 2010, 8:08 PM

BP: Oil Spill Might Have Washed Ashore in La.

Damaged vehicles of United Nations military observers are seen in this image captured from video released by the UNSMIS. An angry crowd hurled rocks and sticks at the observers' vehicles as they approached Syria's mountainous Haffa region June 12, forcing them to turn back.

Damaged vehicles of United Nations military observers are seen in this image captured from video released by the UNSMIS. An angry crowd hurled rocks and sticks at the observers' vehicles as they approached Syria's mountainous Haffa region June 12, forcing them to turn back. / UNSMIS/Youtube

Updated at 5:47 p.m. ET

The winds and waves eased in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday, an encouraging development for crews trying clean up a massive oil spill, yet an official with BP PLC said more than 20 boats were looking into an unconfirmed report of oil coming ashore in Louisiana.

People along the beaches and bayous waited anxiously to find out just how badly it might damage the delicate coast.

A Coast Guard official said forecasts showed the oil wasn't expected to come ashore for at least three more days and that the calm weather was allowing cleanup crews to put out more containment equipment and repair some of the booms that were damaged in the rough weather. They also hope to again try to burn some of the oil on the water's surface.

"We do have the gift of time. It's a gift of a little bit of time. I'm not resting," U.S. Coast Guard Rear Adm. Mary Landry said.

The cleanup crews will soon have some reinforcements. The Pentagon announced Tuesday it has approved the federal mobilization of up to 17,500 National Guard troops to help various states with the oil spill.

BP Chief Operating Officer Doug Suttles said boats were dispatched to Chandeleur Island to look for the oil coming ashore, but so far haven't been able to find it.

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The Associated Press reported Thursday that some oil washed ashore at the mouth of the Mississippi River along the Louisiana coast.

So far only sheens have reached some coastal waters. The oil has lingered in the Gulf for two weeks, despite an uncapped seafloor gusher.

The slow movement has given crews and volunteers time to lay boom in front of shorelines, an effort stymied by choppy seas over the weekend.

Rig operator BP PLC continued to try to cap one of the smaller of three leaks, which if successful, could make it easier to install a containment system over the well.

BP's chief executive said a containment dome designed to cover the principal leak will be on the seabed Thursday, and will be hooked up to a drill ship over the weekend.

CEO Tony Hayward stressed to reporters in Washington that the procedure had never been done before at a depth of nearly a mile below the water's surface.

"So we'll undoubtedly encounter some issues as we go through that process," he said. "But if that was a good outcome, then you would have the principal leak contained by the early part of next week. But there's no guarantees."

The plan is to cover the leak with a 98-ton concrete-and-metal box structure known as a cofferdam, and funnel the oil to the surface. Hayward also said that chemical dispersants being used on the oil have significantly reduced the amount of oil coming to the surface.

The uncertainty has been trying for people who live along a swath of the Gulf from Louisiana to Florida. The undersea well has been spewing 200,000 gallons a day since an April 20 explosion aboard the drilling rig Deepwater Horizon that killed 11 workers. The rig was owned by Transocean Ltd.

"You mentally want to push it back to the west, and then you feel guilty for doing so," said Jan Grant, manager at the St. George Inn on St. George Island, Fla., about the path the spill might take.

"The waiting is the hardest part," said Dodie Vegas, 44, who rents rooms in her Bridge Side Cabins complex in Grand Isle, the southernmost tip of Louisiana.

She said 10 guests have already canceled their rooms, worried about the oil slick.

"I understand their point. You can't be mean about it," she said. "That's their week off, and if they can't get another week, they've got to decide where they're going."

BP has been unable to shut off the well, but crews have reported progress with a new method for cutting the amount of oil that reaches the surface. They're using a remotely operated underwater vehicle to pump chemicals called dispersants into the oil as it pours from the well, to break it up before it rises. Results were encouraging but the approach is still being evaluated, BP and Coast Guard officials said.

The latest satellite image of the slick, taken Sunday night, indicates that it has shrunk since last week, but that only means some of the oil has gone underwater.

The new image found oil covering about 2,000 square miles, rather than the roughly 3,400 square miles observed last Thursday, said Hans Graber of the University of Miami.

Fishing has been shut down in federal waters from the Mississippi River to the Florida Panhandle, leaving boats idle Monday in the middle of the prime spring season. A special season to allow boats to gather shrimp before it gets coated in oil will close Tuesday evening.

"We're in trouble," Peter Young, a local fishing boat captain, told CBS News Correspondent Mark Strassmann. "We're in big trouble."

The effect on wildlife is still unclear. No oil has been found on 29 dead endangered Kemp's ridley turtles that were examined by experts after washing up on the beaches along the Mississippi coast over the past few days.

(NOAA)
But Moby Solangi, director of the Institute for Marine Mammal Studies in Gulfport, said tissue samples would be sent off to labs for further review. Experts have warned that just because no oil is found on the turtles that doesn't mean they didn't consume contaminated fish or come into contact with toxins.

Meanwhile, crews haven't been able to activate a shutout valve underwater. And it could take another week before a 98-ton concrete-and-metal box is placed over one of the leaks to capture the oil.

Worse, it could take three months to drill sideways into the well and plug it with mud and concrete to stop the worst U.S. oil spill since the tanker Exxon Valdez ran aground in Alaska, leaking nearly 11 million gallons of crude.

Those nowhere near the Gulf who drink coffee, eat shrimp, like fruit or plan to buy a new set of tires could also end up paying for the disaster.

A total shutdown of Mississippi River shipping lanes is unlikely. But there could be long delays if cargo vessels that move millions of tons of fruit, rubber, grain, steel and other commodities in and out of the nation's interior are forced to wait to have their oil-coated hulls power-washed to avoid contaminating the Mississippi. Some cargo ships might choose to unload somewhere else in the U.S. That could drive up costs.

"Let's say it gets real bad. It gets blocked off and they don't let anything in. They lose time, and they are very concerned about that," said river pilot Michael Lorino. "It's going to be very costly if they have to unload that cargo in another port and ship it back here because it was destined for here."

BP said Monday it would compensate people for "legitimate and objectively verifiable" claims from the explosion and spill, but President Obama and others pressed the company to explain exactly what that means.

(AP Photo)
For the tourism industry, the spill couldn't come at a worse time. Restaurant owners and inkeepers said they are already getting calls about the spill.

"It's the beginning of the booking season, the beginning of the summer season," said Marie Curren, sales director for Brett/Robinson, a real estate firm in Gulf Shores, Ala. "The only thing that could make it worst now is a hurricane."

(At left, a sign on a fishing camp in Hopedale, La., along a bayou leading to the Gulf of Mexico, expresses unfriendly sentiment towards BP PLC May 3, 2010.)

Florida Gov. Charlie Crist toured an Escambia County emergency operations center and said while the Panhandle would see the first impact from the spill, the entire state should be prepared.

"If and when it gets into the Gulf Stream, that will take it around the Gulf of Mexico potentially down to the Keys and around the Atlantic side. Now, I don't want to be an alarmist, but I want to be a realist. And I just think we all need to be prepared to do whatever we can to protect our state. It's precious."

Dana Powell expects at least some lost business at the Paradise Inn in Pensacola Beach, Fla., and could see a different type of guest altogether: Instead of families boating, parasailing and fishing, workers on cleanup crews will probably be renting her rooms.

"They won't be having as much fun," she said, "but they might be buying more liquor at the bar, because they'll be so depressed."

And what will she serve in her restaurant? Hamburgers and chicken fingers instead of crab claws.

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal and other officials kept up their criticism of BP and the Coast Guard, saying they never provided plans to protect the Louisiana coast from an oil spill.

Jindal and Sen. David Vitter said local leaders have stepped in to come up with their own solutions and officials are waiting for the Coast Guard to approve the plans and BP to fund them.

"If it were up to the BP and the feds, we would not yet have plans," Vitter said.

By all accounts, the disaster is certain to cost BP billions. But analysts said the company could handle it; BP is the world's third-largest oil company and made more than $6 billion in the first three months of this year. The oil spill has drained $32 billion from BP's stock market value.
CBS/ AP
41 Comments Add a Comment
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archmunster says:
Did anyone see the blockbuster interview with Sarah Palin tonight? She revealed her four step plan to end the crisis in the Gulf. Must see tv: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6PsnrGWMVxU
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us_1776 says:
QUOTE: chemical dispersants being used on the oil have significantly reduced the amount of oil coming to the surface.

All that does is hide the oil from view by keeping the oil underwater where it can raise havoc with the food chain and ocean sealife.

I think this leak has already leaked far more than the Exxon-Valdez did. I think a large quantity of the oil is not on the surface. And oil that sinks to the bottoms ruins shrimping, oysters, bottom fish.
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Skruffy1 says:
Is this story confusing as hell because of the total ineptitude of the USA's mainstream media, or because of lies from BP? I suspect it is both. Is "the oil spill MIGHT have washed ashore" supposed to convey that it's no big deal... and such a small thing that we supposedly can't tell if "it" washed ashore or not? Dear BP: "it" is not a little thing that you're going to be able to identify as "it", put it in a box and dispose of. And CBS, "it" is not something you'll be able to interview and ask stupid questions of. "IT" is a gigantic amount of crude oil that is in the ocean forever, even if it does not wash up on a shore where you can take a picture of it and show an idiotic correspondent squishing through. Even if "it" gets somewhat diluted, it is in the ocean forever... as is the oil leaked all the time from all your leaks. Watching some of the TV coverage, one gets the idea "it" is a hurricane that's going to make landfall with crashing waves, and once the spectacular images have been viewed it ceases to matter.
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Overruled1 says:
BOYCOTT EXXON
BOYCOTT BRITISH PETROLEUM
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Overruled1 says:
BP IS PROTECTED BY CORRUPTED LAW OF 1990 THAT LIMITS ITS LIABILITY TO A LOUSY $75,000,000.
They are required to pay for all the clean up cost, but after the Exxon Valdez oil spill corrupted politicians allows legislation that betrays the victims of all oil disasters.
THIS IS UNACCEPTABLE AND WE MUST CHANGE THAT UNCONSTITUTIONAL LAW THAT DOES NOT ADEQUATELY COMPENSATES THE VICTIMS.
FURTHERMORE, CRIMINAL LEGISTLATION IS TO BE REQUIRED.
LOOK BACK AT THE PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND OIL SPILL....
TO THIS DAY, EXXON HAS REFUSED TO PAY OUT TO THE VICTIMS, ALL THIS TIME LATER, WE HAVE A WORSE SPILL, A COMPANY IN DENIAL, AND THEY ARE ALREADY PLAYING LEGALESE.

BOYCOTT EXXON, BOYCOTT BP
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pjk12354 says:
An open pipe at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico has been puking 200,000 gallons of crude oil a day into the Gulf. Now BP says it may reach shore.

Doesn't that give you a warm fuzzy!
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texas_liberal says:
the New menu features Shrimp salad ala BP.
comes pre seasoned with natural crude flavorings.
mmmmmm mmmmmm. now thats tasteeeyyyy ayyyyyyyyyeeeeeeeeeee
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sdemaggie says:
I don't live along the Gulf Coast. I don't like seafood. I really don't care about Lousianna, Alabama or Mississippi. I'm tired of listening to these folks whine about there problems demanding the rest of the US pay for they're problems. No Federal funds for this mess. Call off the Navy and the Coast Guard unless We are paid for the operation by Lousianna, Mississippi and Alabama. Let the states affected by the spill pay for the clean up. After all these are the states that benefit most directly by the operation of these rigs via income taxes, royalties and business taxes. It is not Our problem that these states didn't plan for this type of disaster during the good times. Why should We all pay for thier lack of planning.
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bajajohn1 says:
Republicans are a party of simple people, full of simplicity and simpletons. How does one know this? Simple, just read their comments on this blog.
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Lifeson2112 replies:
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Were you purposely trying to sound like an idiot?
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thesevenveils says:
"We do have the gift of time. It's a gift of a little bit of time. I'm not resting," U.S. Coast Guard Rear Adm. Mary Landry said.

She projects herself personally as the super hero in this cleanup operation. She is not the WHOLE Coast Guard. She is just a hole in the Coast Guard. I hope she remembers that in future public appearances.
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