Deepwater Horizon
Moderator: Peak Moderation
- biffvernon
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Exxon Valdez crashed in the Arctic. Environmentally very sensitive, but not over-populated by Americans who depend on clean seas and beaches for their livelihood. This could be much noisier politically, even if less oil ends up leaking out.
I can see Sarah Palin as the last woman standing, chanting Drill Baby Drill.
I can see Sarah Palin as the last woman standing, chanting Drill Baby Drill.
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If they have drilled into a resevoir and chances are thats what they were doing then the pressure could take up to 30 years to reduce enough for the well to stop flowing.goslow wrote:really, worse than Exxon Valdez? Guy on R said yesterday the oil should stop flowing quite soon once the pressure in the well had reduced. so won't be as much oil as Exxon Valdez
The only real option is to hire another rig and tow it nearby and drill a releif well into the leaking well and then pump cement down the hole.
Cheers
- biffvernon
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You're really itching to use those 'usable nukes' aren't you Vortex!!Vortex wrote:Perhaps this is the first time a civil engineering nuke should be used ...
I'm sure it would do wonders for the protection of local marine species. Forgetting the radiation for the moment, just the shockwave would kill everything within a few hundred miles radius.
Andy Hunt
http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net
http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net
Eternal Sunshine wrote: I wouldn't want to worry you with the truth.
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At least the structure will be ready for the next disaster. No matter what the environmental costs oil will still be extractedbiffvernon wrote:First step is to lower a concrete funnel-like structure over the leak to catch the oil and pump it up to a ship. A couple of weeks to fabricate this structure. Meanwhile another hole is drilled as Ziggy says but that takes a couple of months.
- biffvernon
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Of course it raises the question, why are such plan B structures not pre-fabricated and ready for use? The oil industry had 100% faith in blow-out protectors? Doesn't care? Doesn't think? Or has a duty to shareholders to maximise short term profits by minimising short term costs and thus only investing in safety when forced to by legislation?
Even if it was purely financial considerations, you would have thought keeping potential compensation pay-outs to a minimum would be a high priority.biffvernon wrote:Of course it raises the question, why are such plan B structures not pre-fabricated and ready for use? The oil industry had 100% faith in blow-out protectors? Doesn't care? Doesn't think? Or has a duty to shareholders to maximise short term profits by minimising short term costs and thus only investing in safety when forced to by legislation?
Or does insurance cover the latter?
Andy Hunt
http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net
http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net
Eternal Sunshine wrote: I wouldn't want to worry you with the truth.
- emordnilap
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It depends upon whether they can stop it. And upon whether it doesn't happen again, in some even worse spot.foodimista wrote:A local spill worse than global warming?emordnilap wrote:This could be the worst environmental disaster of all time, if you care to exclude rainforest destruction and climate change. Maybe even if you include them.
Besides, I just wanted to get in first so that, if it does turn out to be huge, I can say I was right.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
Such 'plan B items' are very expensive, and are not exactly off the shelf items: nothing in the oil is - it's all bespoke, and made for the particular application. Put an order in today for some oil production subsystem/component, find someone with production slots available and you might get it in a few months.biffvernon wrote:Of course it raises the question, why are such plan B structures not pre-fabricated and ready for use? The oil industry had 100% faith in blow-out protectors? Doesn't care? Doesn't think? Or has a duty to shareholders to maximise short term profits by minimising short term costs and thus only investing in safety when forced to by legislation?
BP might reasonably have expected that the various safety devices should have worked, they are tested regularly and they have worked regularly in the past: without the media noticing. In this case it appears none did. Most accidents occur when several things go wrong all at once.
Actually more and more safety devices cause more trouble than they are worth. Apart from the capital cost of the item, a lot of time (and lots of money) is spent having to do certified tests on them. Then there is the problem that 'one time' failsafe devices cannot really be tested as once they are tested they have to be replaced. The more interlinked safety systems there are the more complex it becomes and the likehood of one or more not working becomes higher: you end up spending most of your time endlessly doing tests on safety devices rather than doing the job!
I fail to see why BP are getting so much flak. They subcontracted the entire drilling project to Transocean who in turn subcontracted the cementing bit (which is where the problem arose) to Halliburton. All are reputable large oil field contractors. So why is this BP's fault?
It's a bit like giving your car to a garage for some work, they subcontract the bodywork repair to another outfit..whose driver has an accident in your car and then police come along and arrest you for dangerous driving.....
All safety has a cost to it. If I want some roof work done I need scaffolding according to the regulations, so in my case/house it is possible but not easy to do it without... so I do it myself. Those who wanted scaffolding effectively priced themselves out of the job. They wanted increased safety and got nothing as a result: fine by me.
- emordnilap
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- RenewableCandy
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Don't you find the level of reporting really low on this event ?
I mean up to 2pm at least today the top article on CNN site were still saying :
I mean up to 2pm at least today the top article on CNN site were still saying :
From the maps the oil has already reached some shores, plenty of stuff on the blame game, but almost no reports on site, strange ...Landfall along the Mississippi River Delta and other Gulf areas was expected as early as Saturday.
- biffvernon
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- biffvernon
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