CBS/AP/ July 19, 2010, 4:41 AM

Cap on Oil Well Kept Shut Despite Leak, Seepage

Updated 6:37 p.m. ET

Oil and gas are leaking from the cap on BP's ruptured oil well but the cork will stay in place for now, the federal government's point man on the spill said Monday.

The leaks aren't "consequential," retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen said, relieving concerns that they are a sign the cap is creating too much pressure underground. That could mean the cap that's stopped oil since Thursday would have to be opened.

Allen said BP could continue testing the cap, meaning keeping it shut, for at least another 24 hours. He said BP must keep rigorously monitoring for any signs that this test could worsen the overall situation.

Special Section: Disaster in the Gulf

If there was a quick rise in pressure, the well would be vented immediately to keep from creating leaks deep underground, Allen said.

Allen repeated Monday that the next step wasn't clear.

"I'm not prepared to say the well is shut in until the relief well is done. There are too many uncertainties," he said.

The concern all along — since pressure readings on the cap weren't as high as expected — was a leak elsewhere in the well bore, meaning the cap may have to be reopened to prevent the environmental disaster from becoming even worse and harder to fix.

With the newly installed cap keeping oil out of the Gulf, this weekend offered a chance for the oil company and government to gloat over their shared success — the first real victory in fighting the spill.

Instead, the two sides have spent the past two days disagreeing over what to do with the undersea machinery holding back the gusher.

"We had some concerns ... about commitments that BP had made that we did not feel that they were adequately living up to in terms of that monitoring," said White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said. "That was dealt with last night on a call that lasted late into the evening."

The apparent disagreement began to sprout Saturday when Allen said the cap would eventually be hooked up to a mile-long pipe to pump the crude to ships on the surface. But early the next day, BP chief operating officer Doug Suttles said the cap should stay clamped shut to keep in the oil until a permanent fix.

Oil Well Cap May Be Reopened

The company very much wants to avoid a repeat of millions of gallons of oil spewing from the blown well for weeks, watched live across the country on underwater video.

If the valves are kept closed, as BP wants, it's possible that no more oil will leak into the Gulf of Mexico. Work on a permanent plug is moving steadily, with crews drilling into the side of the ruptured well from deep underground. By next week, they could start blasting in mud and cement to block off the well for good.

But the government is worried that the cap on the well is causing oil and gas to leak out elsewhere, which could make the sea floor unstable and cause the well to collapse. That's why federal officials want to pump the crude to ships on the surface. That would require opening the well for a few days to relieve pressure before the pipes could be hooked up, letting millions more gallons of oil spill out in the interim.

In Grand Isle, La., they are not waiting for answers, reports CBS News correspondent Kelly Cobiella. The boom that has been protecting the beach for months is being taken apart, stacked up and moved out for tourists. Tar-stained sand is being scrubbed clean, and the town's fire chief is now fighting to save the tourist season instead of fending off oil.

"It's not over but we are moving forward," said Grand Isle Fire Chief Aubrey Chaisson. "There is daylight at the end of the tunnel."

If there is a problem, that well will have to be reopened and oil could gush into the Gulf for a few days before containment ships could be reconnected.
© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
30 Comments Add a Comment
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underdogus2007 says:
Well, were are all the brain-dead shills and optimists now?
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seafang says:
I thought the idea was to drillfor oil. So hook up the hose to that thing and turn it on; why is it shut off; turn it on till it runs dry; that's the best way to stop the leak.
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retm-w replies:
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The price per barrel is to low, how many wells do you think are capped, and not producing. The oil companies ration how much oil goes on the market to keep the price up. If they put all that oil on the market the price would drop, unless they shut down other producing wells. If the government want's to do something, make BP pump all that oil and the profits from it be used until all legitimate claims are paid and the clean up is complete.
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thy-only_king says:
The safe action is to hook up and pump this well dry.
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ibsteve2u says:
Begs the question:

In planning the relief wells, did they include the possibility of the horizontal fracturing that they now claim would eliminate the utility of their existing cap?

That is, are the relief wells driven to the lowest useful depth in the ocean floor, below any potential horizontal faults that they now claim to fear?

Or are they relatively shallow in comparison to the current wellhead and cap, and so ALSO prone to being bypassed by the asserted horizontal fractures?
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underdogus2007 says:
........Now back to the pre-apocalypse potential BP Gulf oil & gas gusher.
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HiTor15 says:
"BP is monitoring the seabed in case any new leaks erupt from the capped well.".......................te he.....i like the word...ERUPT....lol...yeah....it aint the cap their worried about....LOLOLOL.......what greed....historic....so this is deep water drilling I guess....drill into a ....V at five thousand feet of ocean depth and 14000 feet below the ocean bottom...this is our "new" source of oil....we are in for a complete and terrible change of life style...this is what i see...unless you people come to a bright realization....soon.....its called conservation. The big expansionist dreams have just hit a concrete wall....at ninety nine miles an hour...oil is not going to be quite as easy to get to as you thought...
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DaVicar8 replies:
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"oil is not going to be quite as easy to get to as you thought..."


Sure it is . . .
just take your kitty-litter scooper down to the beach.
dimhumb replies:
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What you've said is on the surface.
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DaVicar8 says:
Seepage?

There's allways seepage.

"I WAS IN THE WATER"!!!
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thanksgreed says:
Hiding my head in the oily sand now, let me know when it's over.
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underdogus2007 says:
The good news is We're not running out of oil..The bad news is We're not running out of oil............
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DaVicar8 replies:
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Hey! Thant's the same thing!
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GRgrandma says:
I'm certainly not a math or science expert but just plain physics tells me if pressure builds up something has to give. Somehow they have to get another platform in place and start pumping oil. My uneducated guess anyway.
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DaVicar8 replies:
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You're right . . . you are not a science expert.
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