Baja News Wire Latest News from Baja California, Mexico

Old 07-03-10, 08:24 AM   #1
Noticias
 
Noticias's Avatar
 
Join Date: 07-13-09
Posts: 2,515

Noticias is on a distinguished road



Post New oil drilling rules awaited from Washington (Reuters)

Reuters - Washington was preparing a revised offshore oil drilling moratorium and cleanup efforts in the Gulf of Mexico returned to normal on Friday after hurricane Alex passed through the region without doing major damage.

The vessel named "A Whale" and dubbed a "super skimmer" is operating just north of the blown out well as part of a two-day test watched by the Coastguard, said Bob Grantham, spokesman for TMT Shipping Offshore, which owns the ship.

If all goes to plan TMT hopes to sign a clean-up contract for the ship, which can remove up to 500,000 barrels (21 million gallons) of oil and water mix from the sea surface a day, according to crew members.

Efforts by BP to contain the damage returned to normal after a hurricane and the British company said its oil-capture systems at its leaking well collected or burned off 25,290 barrels of oil during operations on Friday.

The storm passed through the spill area off the coast of Louisiana without doing major damage.

But the corporate fall-out from the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history appeared far from over.

The Financial Times newspaper reported BP investors expected to see a change in the company's leadership, possibly once the leak is capped, with both Chief Executive Tony Hayward and Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg in jeopardy.

"When this is over there will be a full investigation, and we would expect some action to replace the top team," the British newspaper quoted a top 10 UK shareholder as saying in its Saturday edition.

Without steps to steady the ship, BP could become a takeover target of companies like ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell or PetroChina, the FT said, citing a source working on BP's strategy.

A BP spokesman declined to comment.

BP's market capitalization has shrunk by about $100 billion and its shares have lost more than half their value since the spill began.

Company executives have been under intense pressure since an April 20 rig explosion killed 11 workers and unleashed the torrent of oil now threatening wildlife and the tourist and fishing industries in the Gulf region.

The Obama administration has also criticized the company's response to the crisis, now in its 75th day.

The U.S. Interior Department, one of the departments spearheading Washington's response to the spill, could issue a revised offshore oil drilling moratorium for U.S. waters in the coming week.

A federal court last week lifted a six-month drilling ban imposed by the Obama administration as a result of the spill. The new moratorium is expected to be more flexible and could be adjusted to allow drilling in certain subsea fields.

WHALE SHARKS THREATENED

The supertanker works by allowing polluted water to enter 12 horizontal slits near its port and starboard bow. The liquid then enters a series of tanks where the oil is decanted and then stored for later transfer to a separate vessel.

Test results are due on Monday, Grantham said, but crew members are confident of success because of a previous test off the coast of Portugal where the ship was fitted out and because the process follows established principles of physics.

The total amount of oil and water mix from the spill remains unknown but the ship could in theory greatly boost the amount being collected each day.

Apart from economic damage, the spill is seen as an environmental catastrophe for the Gulf coast. Whale sharks, the biggest fish in the sea, may be the latest victims.

Officials at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported this week that four of the polka-dotted creatures, stretching about 40 feet in length, had been spotted swimming in oily water in search of food.

Since whale sharks are filter feeders -- scooping up plankton and small fish as they swim just beneath the surface -- scientists are concerned they could be harmed or killed from swallowing large amounts of oil.

"The problem is that these are surface feeding animals and if they digest the oil they will sink and we will not know how many are dying," said Dr. Eric Hoffmayer of the University of Southern Mississippi.

"I don't think there is any question we're going to lose whale sharks to this oil spill. That's why we need to tag these sharks so that we can determine how they are impacted by the oil," Hoffmayer told Reuters on Friday.


More...





Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Obama loses drilling moratorium appeal (AFP) Noticias Baja News Wire 0 07-09-10 02:59 AM
Total sees tougher rules as storm spreads Gulf slick (Reuters) Noticias Baja News Wire 6 07-05-10 05:44 PM
Oil firms challenge U.S. deepwater drilling ban (Reuters) Noticias Baja News Wire 9 06-22-10 12:37 PM
AZ governor says new law lit fire under Washington (AP) Noticias Baja News Wire 0 05-25-10 06:00 PM
Obama: New offshore oil drilling still key (AFP) Noticias Baja News Wire 26 05-02-10 09:34 PM