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Storm Could Delay Efforts to Seal BP Well

A potential cyclone may move into the Gulf and stall BP's operations by 10 to 14 days.

Thu Jul 22, 2010 12:27 PM ET
Content provided by Alex Ogle, AFP
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THE GIST
  • Weather officials say there's a 40 percent chance a tropical cyclone will move into the Gulf of Mexico.
  • The storm could force BP to evacuate people in the Gulf working to permanently seal the oil well.
  • Such an evacuation could delay sealing efforts by 10 to 14 days.
oil spill, pelicans

Brown pelicans try to balance on an oil boom near Martin Island in St. Bernard Parish, La. A storm system may delay BP's efforts to seal the well for good. Click to enlarge this image.
AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

A potential cyclone forced managers of the BP oil disaster Thursday to draw up plans to evacuate deep-sea engineers trying to permanently seal the gusher and to protect the blown-out well.

The National Hurricane Center said a storm system over the Bahamas had a 40 percent chance of becoming a tropical cyclone and would likely move westward into the Gulf of Mexico.

The forecasting service Accuweather said the forecast track "takes the system near south Florida on Friday then into the eastern Gulf of Mexico by Saturday then into the Louisiana coast Saturday night or Sunday."

"We are having to watch the weather very, very carefully now and adjust our plans accordingly," BP senior vice president Kent Wells told reporters.

Anxiously eyeing the bad weather brewing in the Caribbean to see if it could become a tropical storm and veer towards the Gulf, US and BP officials pored over data mulling whether to order an evacuation.

But in case it has to evacuate the area around the damaged well, which lies some 50 miles off the Louisiana coast, BP also placed a special plug inside the well's casing.

The well has been capped since last Thursday and the plug, dubbed "a storm packer," was "another barrier, so that nothing can flow up or down past that plug... so that if we have to leave we have multiple barriers," Wells said.

Depending on how the system develops, officials may have to issue evacuation orders for hundreds of support ships and engineers trying to finish drilling a relief well deep under the seabed.

"If we have to evacuate the area ... we could be looking at 10 to 14 day gaps in our lines of operation," warned retired Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen, who is in charge of the US government response to the Gulf disaster.

The sealing of the leak was set for early August, but the possibility of a tropical storm disrupting events could postpone this. If severe weather were to arrive, the ships aiding response efforts would have to be evacuated, he added, and "some of these vessels move very slowly."

Any storm would be a frustrating setback as the British energy giant may be within days of permanently plugging the well, which began leaking after a deadly explosion on April 20.

Wells confirmed work had stopped Wednesday on the relief well still seen as the ultimate solution to killing the damaged well, until the weather forecast became clearer.

The final pieces of casing need to be placed on the relief well to protect it before a so-called "static kill" can begin.

Allen said earlier that depending on the weather the "static kill" could start as early as the weekend.

But BP has not yet been given permission to start the operation, and Wells was more cautious on the timing saying it would take three to four days to first finish the relief well casing.

The static kill would see BP try to drown the oil flow by pumping in mud and cement via the giant 30-foot cap which has prevented any oil from streaming into the Gulf for almost a week.

Local residents warned that efforts to choke off the well may be too late, with hundreds of miles of coastline in five Gulf states already fouled.

"There is a definite sense of doom here. Everyone seems just defeated. Every day they are being told about oiled marshes, where they grew up," said Jessica Lass, spokeswoman for the Natural Resources Defense Council, which has set up a center in the small Louisiana town of Buras.

A vast swath of the Gulf has been closed to commercial and sport fishing, a key economic lifeline for this impoverished area.

"It's the uncertainty of what's going to happen, creating this huge growth in stress levels here," spokeswoman Lisa Becnel from volunteer group C.A.R.E said.

BP has already spent close to four billion dollars on clean-up costs and compensation claims and has promised to set up a 20-billion-dollar fund to pay victims of the disaster along the US Gulf Coast.

In a sign of some potentially good news, Allen said hundreds of boats deployed to skim oil from the Gulf surface were having trouble finding any.

It is not known exactly how much oil has leaked into the sea, but if an upper estimate of over four million barrels is confirmed, the disaster would be the biggest accidental oil spill ever.

Tags: Cyclones, Disasters and Accidents, Hurricanes, Night, Oil Spill

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