BP in new attempt to plug Gulf of Mexico oil leak
Page last updated at 18:12 GMT, Saturday, 10 July 2010 19:12 UK
The BBC's Madeleine Morris says it may take days to complete the
operation
BP has begun an operation to fit a tighter cap over its blown-out oil
well in the Gulf of Mexico.
An underwater robot has taken off the existing dome to make room for
the new sealing cap.
But the operation may last between four and seven days - meaning oil
will flow unimpeded into the sea.
Another system is also being linked up and may start collecting crude
on Sunday, BP says. It is drilling two wells to intercept and block the
leak.
It estimates the first of these wells will be finished in the first
half of August, enabling the company to intercept the damaged well "and
kill operations performed".
The explosion of the Deepwater Horizon rig in April killed 11 people.
President Barack Obama has called the leak the biggest environmental
disaster in US history.
Increased potential
BP's submersible robots are preparing to remove the current containment
cap from the ocean floor.
The new sealing cap - similar to a smaller version of the damaged
blow-out preventer - has three devices that are designed to shut the
flow, the closing rams, and multiple ports for connecting pipes to
collect crude.
According to BP, the new cap "creates the potential to increase oil and
gas containment capacity to greater than 50,000 barrels per day and
should improve containment efficiency during hurricane season by
allowing shorter disconnect and reconnect times".
The company said that "there can be no assurance that the sealing cap
will be successfully installed or installed within the anticipated
timeframe", given it has never been attempted at this depth before.
It added that contingency caps like the existing one are at the ready
on the seabed, should the replacement operation fail.
The company also said that favourable weather conditions had made it
possible to begin another operation in tandem - connecting a new ship
to the blow-out preventer.
Known as the Helix Producer, it will begin collecting oil and sending
it to a third ship being used for the purpose.
BP says this could begin "ramping up containment operations as early as
Sunday".
The containment dome currently collects about half the amount of oil
gushing out of the damaged well.
On Friday, the Coast Guard commander overseeing the response, Adm Thad
Allen, said the flow of leaking oil could be shut off by Monday. But in
that time hundreds of thousands of barrels of oil could flow unabated
into the ocean.
"We have a significant chance to dramatically reduce the oil that's
being released into the environment and maybe shut the well in
altogether in the next week," he said.
"I use the word 'contained'," said Adm Allen. "'Stop' is when we put
the plug in down below."
At the moment it is believed that BP is siphoning off only around half
the leaking oil.
Current US government estimates of the spill range from between 35,000
to 60,000 barrels a day.
On Thursday BP said its operation to drill a new relief well to stop
the Deepwater Horizon leak was ahead of schedule.
BP's bill so far has been more than $3.1bn - and it has agreed to set
up a $20bn fund to deal with compensation claims and clean-up costs.
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