BP looks to relief well to finish oil slick kill

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NEW ORLEANS: With its runaway well in the Gulf of Mexico finally plugged with cement, BP turned yesterday to a relief well to make sure the source of the United States’ worst environmental disaster is killed for good.

“This is not the end, but it will virtually assure us that there will be no chance of oil leaking into the environment,” Thad Allen, in charge of the US response to the spill, said Thursday after BP’s Macondo well was plugged.

“I think we can all breathe a little easier,” he said.

One more step remains, though: to cut the well off from the bottom with a relief well and entomb it in mud and cement as an additional precaution.

It will likely be mid-August before that operation is complete and the well is finally “killed.”

The massive oil slick that stretched for hundreds of miles is rapidly disappearing from the Gulf, some 15 weeks after the well ruptured and 21 days after the flow was fully stemmed with a temporary cap.

But officials caution that the long-term impact of the disaster could be felt for years, even decades.

On Wednesday, BP brought the well under control, pumping heavy drilling fluid into it for eight hours until the oil was pushed back down into the reservoir miles beneath the seabed.

The British energy giant then began pumping cement at 09.15 CDT (1415 GMT), and the ‘static kill’ operation was completed in five hours.

“Monitoring of the well is underway in order to confirm the effectiveness of the procedure,” BP said in a statement.

It took 106 days to shut the well down in the wake of a devastating explosion on April 20 that killed 11 workers and sank the BP-leased Deepwater Horizon rig two days later, unleashing a torrent of oil into the Gulf.

At 4.9 million barrels — or enough oil to fill 311 Olympic-sized swimming pools — the disaster is the biggest maritime spill on record.

Heavy brown oil coated fragile coastal wetlands, sullied sandy white beaches, and smothered thousands of birds, turtles, dolphins and other marine life.

The disaster crippled the Gulf’s multibillion dollar commercial and recreational fishing industry and plunged residents of coastal communities into months of anguish over their livelihoods and the region’s future.

A government report released Wednesday found that a third of the oil was captured or mitigated through burning, skimming, chemical dispersion and direct recovery from the wellhead.

Another twenty per cent or so was ‘completely removed’ from the system through natural processes as waves and currents broke the slick up into smaller patches and the warm waters helped speed biodegradation and evaporation.

“Most of the remainder is degrading rapidly, or is being removed from the beaches,” Jane Lubchenco, head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, told a White House briefing. — AFP