BP, as lease operator of
Mississippi Canyon Block 252 (MC252), continues to forge ahead with a
comprehensive oil well intervention and spill response plan following
the April 22 sinking of the Transocean Deepwater Horizon drilling rig
130 miles south-east of New Orleans.
“We are attacking this spill on two fronts – at the
wellhead and on the surface offshore,” said BP Group Chief Executive
Tony Hayward, who has travelled to Texas and Louisiana this week to
meet with response personnel. “The team on the ground and those at sea
have the Group’s full resources behind them.”
BP continues to assist Transocean’s work below the surface on the
subsea equipment, using remotely operated vehicles to monitor the
Macondo/MC252 exploration well, and is planning and mobilizing to
activate the blow-out preventer.
BP is preparing to drill relief wells to permanently
secure the well. The drilling rig Development Driller III is moving
into position to drill a second well to intercept the Macondo well and
inject a specialized heavy fluid to securely prevent flow of oil or gas
and allow work to be carried out to permanently seal the well.
As of Saturday, April 24, the oil spill response team had recovered
more than 1,000 barrels of an oil-water mix of which the vast majority
is water. The material has been collected by skimming vessels and
vessels towing containment boom. Dispersants have also been applied to
the spill. Equipment available for the effort includes :
* 100,000 gallons of dispersant are ready to be
deployed, which is a third of the world’s dispersant commodity ; BP is
in contact with manufacturers to procure additional supply as
necessary.
* 32 spill response vessels (skimmers, tugs, barges, recovery vessels).
* 5 aircraft (helicopters and fixed wing including a large payload
capacity C-130 (Hercules) for dispersant deployment).
In Houma, La. where the field operations response is
being coordinated, almost 500 personnel on- and offshore have already
been deployed to coordinate the oil spill response. BP’s team of
operational and technical experts are working in coordination with
several agencies, organizations and companies including United States
Coast Guard, Minerals Management Service, Louisiana Department of
Environmental Quality, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
US Fish & Wildlife Service, Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries, and
Marine Spill Response Corporation. More teams have been mobilized in
Houston and New Orleans to support the effort.
According to Steve Benz, President and CEO of the
Marine Spill Response Corporation (MSRC), “At BP’s request we are
mounting the single, largest response effort in MSRC’s 20-year history.
The many years of working together with BP on drills and exercises has
proved invaluable to us as we move forward on this response effort."
“Given the current conditions and the massive size of our response, we
are confident in our ability to tackle this spill offshore,” Hayward
added.
Along with the response teams in action, additional
resources, both people and equipment, continue to arrive for staging
throughout the Gulf states in preparation for deployment should they be
needed.
Origine : Communiqué BP
Source : www.euro-petrole.com
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