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Politics : President Barack Obama -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ChinuSFO who wrote (76089)5/26/2010 12:43:09 PM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
"this spill is due to the failure of the BOP (weak batteries and hydraulic leak),"

Don't think so... it will turn out to be human error. I think the BOP did work initially to some extent.

What caused the Deepwater Horizon disaster?
Posted by aeBERMAN on May 21, 2010 - 9:28am
Topic: Geology/Exploration
Tags: deepwater horizon, gulf of mexico oil spill [list all tags]

Author’s Note: I am grateful to the many drilling and completion engineers that consulted with me on this post to arrive at plausible explanations and interpretations of what happened in the final hours on the semisubmersible drilling rig Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf of Mexico. The analysis that follows is based on these discussions as well as my own 32 years of experience as a geologist working in the oil and gas industry.

It is early in the process of discovering what really happened. Because of the gravity and potential impact of this disaster on the nation and my industry, however, I wanted to provide an early and more investigative perspective than much of what has appeared in the media to date. The risk, of course, is that more information will invalidate some of what follows. I, therefore, wish to clarify that this is a fact-based interpretation of what may have happened on the Deepwater Horizon on April 20, 2010 but, in the end, it is an interpretation. -Art BERMAN

The blowout and oil spill on the Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf of Mexico was caused by a flawed well plan that did not include enough cement between the 7-inch production casing and the 9 7/8-inch protection casing. The presumed blowout preventer (BOP) failure is an important but secondary issue. Although the resulting oil spill has potentially grave environmental implications, recent efforts to limit the flow with an insertion tube have apparently been effective. Continuous efforts to slow or stop the flow include drilling two nearby relief wells that may intersect the MC 252 wellbore within 60-90 days.
Message 26554831



To: ChinuSFO who wrote (76089)5/26/2010 1:37:54 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 149317
 
We can easily increase the degree of oversight and stiffen the regulation. In fact Obama can issue an executive order to suspend all deep sea oil drilling in the gulf until and unless there is a through review of the safety procedures at the existing rigs. The MMS needs to be overhauled with strict rules on how they provide oversight. No frateRnizing. It is not just sufficient to break into into three groups.

Yup. This is the way it has to be. There is no other way possible.

We've been very fortunate. Its clear now these drilling platforms were a disaster waiting to happen. The fact that this is the first disaster for the US in over 70 years is rather amazing.

I just keep hoping that Americans have learned from this disaster.....that oil dependency can not be our future.



To: ChinuSFO who wrote (76089)5/26/2010 1:53:10 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 149317
 
Freeze On Offshore Drilling Was Non-Binding Verbal Order
______________________________________________________________

By Ari Shapiro

May 25, 2010

President Obama's moratorium on new offshore oil drilling has turned out to be more complicated than it first seemed. The Minerals Management Service (MMS) has issued at least 17 drilling permits in the past month. Administration officials say those permits do not violate the ban. But the moratorium was not put into writing, which can make the details of the drilling freeze difficult to assess.

The administration's statements about the ban on new drilling have been straightforward. "We've announced that no permits for drilling new wells will go forward until the 30-day safety and environmental review that I requested is complete," President Obama said May 14 in the White House Rose Garden.

Testifying before Congress on May 18, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar made it sound equally clear. "The president has been very clear with me: Hit the pause button," Salazar said. "We have hit the pause button."

The day of that hearing, the AP reported that MMS had approved at least nine deepwater exploration wells in the Gulf since the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion on April 20, with minimal environmental reviews.

'Best Information'

When asked about that article, Salazar criticized what he called "facts and figures and misunderstandings" that have been "flying from all directions."

"There is no deepwater well in the OCS that has been spudded -- that means started -- after April 20," Salazar testified. The OCS is the Outer Continental Shelf in the Gulf of Mexico.

Salazar added, "We have a responsibility to come up with the best information and the best facts with respect to all these issues."

But Salazar did not have the best information or the best facts. In an e-mail, Interior Department spokesman Matt Lee-Ashley wrote that "the Secretary misspoke at the hearing."

In fact, a deepwater well was started in the Gulf after April 20. It "was on a permit that was approved prior to the explosion," according to Lee-Ashley.

The MMS website indicates that at least 17 drilling permits have been issued since April 20. Some of those are for wells in far deeper water than the rig that exploded in the Gulf.

On Monday, White House energy coordinator Carol Browner said the wells are not new; they are modifications to existing permits.

"It is quite routine, where you're currently drilling and you need to make a modification; you've encountered something you didn't anticipate, and so you go back in," Browner told reporters at the White House. "It's called a permit, but I think the better way to think about it is that it's a modification to an existing permit."

Environmental lawyers who specialize in this field say they find the administration's statements confusing.

"We're not sure what is going on," says Derb Carter of the Southern Environmental Law Center. His organization has sued to revoke the permits that were issued after the explosion in the Gulf. "We're trying to clarify now with Department of Justice attorneys exactly what actions, if any, the administration has taken that would legally revoke these permits that were issued."

The Justice Department declined to comment.

Looking For Ban Documents

One source of confusion is the apparent lack of an original document laying out all the details of the moratorium. Mike Senatore is with Defenders of Wildlife, another environmental group that is suing the administration.

"We have, in fact, been trying to locate and to actually get from the Interior Department something that actually documents that there is in fact a suspension," says Senatore.

In fact, two Interior officials tell NPR the drilling suspension was not put into writing.

"It was a straightforward verbal order to the director of MMS, which was then transmitted within MMS," said one official in an email.

Government expert Paul Light of New York University calls the decision not to put this order into writing "so ridiculous that it defies understanding."

"It could not be more important to enforce this moratorium and make absolutely clear to the oil industry what is and is not permissible," says Light. "And yet you have the execution of a critical order that appears to have been basically done through the most casual way possible under federal law."

Interior Department spokesperson Kendra Barkoff defended Salazar in a statement.

"As the department's chief executive, the secretary has the authority to direct the department's employees in performance of their duties and responsibilities," Barkoff said. "In this instance, the secretary issued the order. MMS director Liz Birnbaum saw to it that the order was carried out, and no permits to drill new wells have been issued since."

The moratorium was scheduled to last 30 days. The deadline is Thursday. After the president receives the Interior Department's environmental safety report, he will take questions from reporters at the White House.

wbur.org

Obama's Leaky Offshore Drilling Halt Raises Eyebrows

npr.org