May 7, 2010 8:41 AM

Oil Spill Efforts Turn to Risky Dome Operation

By
CBSNews

 

(CBS/AP)  Updated 12:52 a.m. ET

Workers eased a giant concrete-and-steel box into the Gulf of Mexico late Thursday, starting the long process of lowering the contraption over the blown-out oil well at the bottom of the sea in an untested bid to capture most of the gushing crude and avert a wider environmental disaster.

The 100-ton containment vessel is designed to collect as much as 85 percent of the oil spewing into the Gulf and funnel it up to a tanker. It could take several hours to lower it into place, after which a steel pipe will be installed between the top of the box and the tanker.

The 100-ton containment vessel is designed to collect as much as 85 percent of the oil spewing into the Gulf and funnel it up to a tanker. It could take several hours to lower it into place by crane, after which a steel pipe will be installed between the top of the box and the tanker. The whole structure could be operating by Sunday.

The technology has been used a few times in shallow waters, but never at such extreme depths - 5,000 feet down, where the water pressure is enough to crush a submarine.

Complete Coverage: Disaster in the Gulf

The box - which looks a lot like a peaked, 40-foot-high outhouse, especially on the inside, with its rough timber framing - must be accurately positioned over the well, or it could damage the leaking pipe and make the problem worse.

Other risks include ice clogs in the pipes - a problem that crews will try to prevent by continuously pumping in warm water and methanol - and the danger of explosion when separating the mix of oil, gas and water that is brought to the surface.

"I'm worried about every part, as you can imagine," said David Clarkson, BP vice president of engineering projects.

If the box works, a second one now being built may be used to deal with a second, smaller leak from the sea floor.

"Hopefully, it will work better than they expect," first mate Douglas Peake told The Associated Press aboard the ship that brought the box to the site. The AP is the only news organization on board the vessel.

The well blew open on April 20 when the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform exploded 50 miles out in the Gulf of Mexico, killing 11 workers. The well has been spewing an estimated 200,000 gallons a day in the nation's biggest oil spill since the Exxon Valdez disaster in Alaska in 1989.

Oil slicks stretched for miles off the Louisiana coast, where desperate efforts were under way to skim, corral and set the petroleum ablaze. People in Mississippi, Alabama and Florida watched in despair.

CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann toured the slick by sea plane early Thursday and saw rolling ribbons of oil, some that looked a mile long, approaching the Chandeleurs. Down below, shrimp boats with absorbent booms looked mismatched against approaching slicks.

As the oil drifts toward shore, it changes over time, getting less toxic and more sticky. Eventually it becomes like tar, and clings to almost anything. Its stickiness becomes the big threat to wildlife and marshland, Strassman reports.

CBS News gave a bottle of spilled crude to Ed Overton, an oil spill expert at Louisiana State University. It was scooped from the slick on Tuesday.

Tests in Overton's lab confirmed that two weeks in the Gulf had diluted the oil's toxicity, but Overton said, "It looks like it's going to stick to everything."

On Thursday, oil reached several barrier islands off the Louisiana coast, many of them fragile animal habitats. Several birds were spotted diving into the oily, pinkish-brown water, and dead jellyfish washed up on the uninhabited islands.

"It's all over the place. We hope to get it cleaned up before it moves up the west side of the river," said Dustin Chauvin, a 20-year-old shrimp boat captain from Terrebonne Parish, La. "That's our whole fishing ground. That's our livelihood."

More Oil Spill Coverage:

Oil Washing Ashore at Island Off Louisiana Coast
Can 100-Ton Box Curb Oil Leak? Crew "Anxious"
Marine Food Chain Seen at Risk After Oil Spill
Oil Containment Domes Ready
Crews Taking Oil Containment Dome to Gulf
Oil Spill Burning Again as Weather Cooperates
Oil Spill Close to Shore, Satellite Images Show
Can Congress Raise BP's Oil Spill Liability?
Hidden Costs of Oil Revealed; Will it Matter?
1 of 3 Oil Well Leaks Capped; Dome Heads to Gulf
BP Still Can't Stop Leaks
Exxon-Valdez Revisited
Virtual Reality Deployed to Deal with Oil Spill
Oil Spill Sparks New Debate: To Drill or Not to Drill?
How Much Does BP Owe for Gulf Oil Spill?
Oil Spill Threatens Wildlife

An Associated Press reporter saw a pinkish oily substance washing up Thursday on the sands and into the marshland at this part of the Chandeleur barrier islands chain.

It was at least the second time the AP has confirmed oil coming ashore. Oil was seen washing up at the mouth of the Mississippi last week.

On New Harbor Island, birds are diving into the oily waters, but they didn't seem to be in any distress. It's nesting time for sea gulls and pelicans and the danger is they may be taking contaminated food or oil on feathers to their young.

There are also numerous dead jellyfish, including some that have washed up on the beach.

As BP burned off more oil, environmentalists worry all the unseen damage: the marine life that swims near the surface. BP has also fought the leak with more than 160,000 gallons of chemical dispersants. Molecules in the dispersants attach to the oil and break up its density. The oil droplets then sink to the ocean floor.

But dispersants include toxic chemicals - so toxic, critics say they do more harm than the oil itself, Strassmann reports.

The dropping of the box is just one of many strategies being pursued to stave off a widespread environmental disaster. BP is drilling sideways into the blown-out well in hopes of plugging it from the bottom. Also, oil company engineers are examining whether the leak could be shut off by sealing it from the top instead.

The technique, called a "top kill," would use a tube to shoot mud and concrete directly into the well's blowout preventer, BP spokesman Bill Salvin said. The process would take two to three weeks, compared with the two to three months needed to drill a relief well.

@katiecouric: Oil Spill's Impact on Gulf Coast Wildlife:


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During a visit to Biloxi, Miss., Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said of the containment vessel: "I hope it works. But we are still proceeding as if it won't. If it does, of course, that will be a major positive development."

"We are facing an evolving situation," she warned. "The possibility remains that the BP oil spill could turn into an unprecedented environmental disaster. The possibility remains that it will be somewhat less."

Meanwhile, a six-member board composed of representatives of the Coast Guard and the federal Minerals Management Service will begin investigating the accident next week.

And a federal judicial panel in Washington has been asked to consolidate at least 65 potential class-action lawsuits claiming economic damage from the spill. Commercial fishermen, business and resort owners, charter boat captains, even would-be vacationers have sued from Texas to Florida, seeking damages that could reach into the billions.

"It's just going to kill us. It's going to destroy us," said Dodie Vegas, who owns a motel and cabins in Grand Isle, La., and has seen 10 guests cancel.

CBS/AP
Add a Comment See all 34 Comments
by porcine_aviator May 6, 2010 11:10 PM EDT
"Risky dome operation"?

That makes no sense. If you do nothing, the problem gets worse. If you try it and it doesn't work, then you get the same outcome, and but maybe a few million in wasted money (a pittance compared to the 10's of billions in damage already caused). If it works, then there's immense benefit.

Risk requires downside. At this point, ANYTHING is better than the status quo, so there is NO RISK in trying this out.
Reply to this comment
by Chimney_fish May 7, 2010 1:38 AM EDT
Actually no.....if they make a mistake in lowering this 100-ton contraption and bust off the pipes and valves that are presently containing the leak to three places, we could get an uncontrolable eruption of up 5 times the present spill rate....so yes it is risky
by PR_in_Alabama May 6, 2010 10:02 PM EDT
what a catastrophe....
Reply to this comment
by greco99-2009 May 6, 2010 4:48 PM EDT
Is it the GREECE or the OIL ?

A deeper economic issue - beyond the tens of billions in total damage done by BP/Transocean/Halliburton - is the issue that corporations may have to clean-up after themselves or assume liability for the damage they cause.

If companies like BP/Transocean/Halliburton cannot operate without taxpayer subsidies in the form of 'disaster bailouts', then their profits are phony (actually their profits are subsidized by the disaster bailouts).

This is good news for alternative energy industries - total costs may actually now be lower than oil when all is taken into account. This will be the case soon enough anyway.

I also am guessing that insurance companies will take a pretty big hit here as well. Also local and state tax revenues will be hit hard because of the immense secondary economic harm caused by BP/TransOcean/Halliburton.

BTW, there are all foreign companies that pay little or no income tax and rely on numerous government benefits and subsidies from use of public roads and infrastructure to targeted cash grants and lucrative insider contracts available only to them.
Reply to this comment
by greco99-2009 May 6, 2010 5:08 PM EDT
to be more clear: BP/Transocean/Haliburton are all foreign companies that pay little or no U.S. income taxes and rely on numerous government benefits and subsidies from use of public roads and infrastructure to targeted cash grants and lucrative insider contracts available only to them. Pretty amazing what they have tried to get away with.
by greco99-2009 May 6, 2010 4:40 PM EDT
Is it the GREECE or the OIL ?

Any estimates on:

1. The loss of tourist revenue in the gulf over memorial day weekend ?

2. Loss of tourist revenue for an extended period, say 3 months?

3. Loss to beach front property value ? Consider also if the oil hits Miami.

4. Damage to boats, docks, and shipping. The shuttle launch was delayed because of closed shipping lanes.

5. Health problems from toxic oil and dispersant, especially to children. A particular concern is long-term low-concentration contamination to seafood.

6. Overall secondary business loss ?

Maybe the US should put a lien on all the hard assets of these companies...
Reply to this comment
by P0ST1ING_AWAY May 6, 2010 4:12 PM EDT
by brian1920 May 6, 2010 4:00 PM EDT
Obviously you know nothing about business or the oil industry. You do not know what you are talking about at all. You statements, for anybody who has been there, are just nutty.
===========================================
Dudely - You might do a little research.
BP had a nasty accident at one of their Texas refineries
a little while back. Easily preventable.
Their approach to preventing / dealing with accidents
leaves a lot to be desired.
Notice they had no disaster plan for a catastrophic failure
at a deep sea well ????
Reply to this comment
by retm-w May 6, 2010 4:27 PM EDT
And all the laws and regulations are being enforced? Just like Massey with all their violations and 29 miners died. The Federal and State inspectors should have shut the mine down until the violations were corrected.Same with this drilling operation if there were violations, it should have been shut down. I think it's past time to make these civil servants accountable.
by displeased May 6, 2010 3:14 PM EDT
greco- beneath the surface, the ocean is unaffected by hurricanes. I suspect that within 90 days, they will have the relief well in place and since this will precede hurricane season, your question is hypothetical.
by brian1920 May 6, 2010 2:49 PM EDT



BTW, hurricane season begins June 1st. The first storm last year developed May 28th in the Caribbean.
Reply to this comment
by displeased May 6, 2010 3:10 PM EDT
greco- beneath the surface, the ocean is unaffected by hurricanes. I suspect that within 90 days, they will have the relief well in place and since this will precede hurricane season, your question is hypothetical.
by brian1920 May 6, 2010 2:49 PM EDT


Not true! An example, the Spiegel Grove was sunk in 2002 to create an artificial reef off Key Largo. The ship is 510 feet long and 85 feet wide. When they sunk it, it landed on it's side. It took the surge from Hurricane Dennis to flip it upright. One end of the boat is 70 feet deep, the other is 130 feet. Not quite the surface!
Reply to this comment
by PatDaddy67 May 6, 2010 4:21 PM EDT
70 feet to 130 feet is not comparable to a mile deep. Down there you do not see much in the way of wind driven flow. Deep ocean currents are caused by gradients in the density of water resulting from differences in salinity, temperature and turbidity.
by Observer1504 May 6, 2010 3:05 PM EDT
Something to consider before Americans go on the war path to stop offshore drilling. We get our oil from countries that pretty much hate us and could at anytime easily cut us off. They do not need America as a customer because China, India and other developing nations would buy all they can pull out of the deserts. This horrible accident will be investigated and the cause will be determined and steps will be taken to prevent a similar incident. Could it happen again, sure it could, providing energy sources is and allways has been a dangerous business.
Reply to this comment
by jxknowles May 6, 2010 2:53 PM EDT
by brian1920 your disrespect for oil companies and what they have to go through to get you your gasoline obviously is not appreciated. Start walking buddy, you don't deserve another gallon.

How about you drink a big glass of that oil-tainted sea water and see how far you make it? These companies circumvented long standing regulations with help from the Bush administration and neglected to install proper shutoff gear. This saved them $500,000 per rig. This disaster is going to cost everyone a helluva lot more. I'm not against oil companies. I'm against greedy buttholes trying to save a few pennies at the expense of our health and prosperity. Wall street did it. So does big oil.
Reply to this comment
by tsigili May 6, 2010 1:32 PM EDT
The odds are no better than 50-50, and the real question is, what happens when the tanker gets full, and the oil keeps flowing????
Reply to this comment
by rickwar May 6, 2010 1:40 PM EDT
you call the next ship in early turn off the spigot re-connect the ship, turn on spigot.
by greco99-2009 May 6, 2010 2:00 PM EDT
What happens in bad weather, tropical storm, hurricane?

Also, will the tropical storms will spew the oil inland?
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