Latest update: 09/05/2010 

- accident - environment - oil - USA


Clogged containment dome removed from leaking oil well

BP suffered a setback Saturday when flammable methane hydrates plugged up the top of its giant containment dome, preventing the company from manoeuvring it over a leaking oil well located 1,500 metres underwater in the Gulf of Mexico.

By Kathryn STAPLEY (video)
News Wires (text)
 

REUTERS - London-based BP Plc’s plan to lower a giant containment dome to trap oil from a blown-out Gulf of Mexico oil well on the sea floor hit a technical obstacle on Saturday in the form of methane hydrates, or flammable ice, a BP executive said on Saturday.

BP officials are scrambling for a solution after methane hydrates stopped up the 98-ton containment dome as they were maneuvering it into place, Doug Suttles, BP’s chief operating officer, told reporters at a briefing in Robert.

Using underwater robots, BP has capped the smallest of three valves gushing oil.

“As we were placing the dome over the leak source a large volume of hydrates formed inside the top of the dome, requiring us to move the dome to the side of the leak point,” Suttles said. “I wouldn’t say it’s failed yet.”

The four-story structure, BP’s only short-term hope of controlling the leak, is supposed to redirect the unchecked flow of crude from nearly one mile (1.6 km) below the water and, once connected, pump it to a surface tanker.

If the dome plan fails, BP faces the prospect of drilling a relief well to cut off the leaky oil well, which could take two to three months. A giant oil slick from the gush of oil threatens to create an environmental disaster for four Gulf Coast states.

"no solution yet"

Methane hydrates—a slush of frozen hydrocarbons and water that form in the deep, cold conditions at the leak site -- began clogging up the opening in the dome, forcing them to set the structure aside, Suttles said.

The dome is now resting on the ocean floor about 200 metres (660 ft) from the leak source, and it could take 48 hours or more to find a workaround, Suttles said.

Those could include using hot water to heat up the hydrates at the ocean floor, or using hydrocarbons like methanol to thin them out, Suttles said.

Suttles said BP is mulling two other short-term fixes, including installing a new blow-out preventer on the leak site and trying to clog up the existing failed blow-out preventer with an injection of rubber and other solids, known as a “junk shot.”

Hydrates are highly flammable and present a danger to BP workers on ships above the leak. If they dethaw in an uncontrolled manner, they could send a flood of natural gas to the top of the ocean surface and potentially ignite.

Ironically, methane hydrates are a promising future energy source in themselves, but researchers are still searching for ways to safely harness them.

A recent study by the Minerals Management Service pegged methane hydrate resources in the Gulf of Mexico at 21,000 trillion cubic feet of natural gas -- 100 times the country’s current proven supply.
 

Syndicate contentThe oil slick as seen from Venice, Louisiana

 

Comments (3)

Oil leak

"dethaw"??? Not only isn't it a word, but if it were, it's the opposite of what would cause the described problem. If the plug thaws, gas potentially goes "boom".

methane gas

it appears fire would comsume the oil sludge at well head.but i am just a redneck

Unrealistic goals

It seems to me a lot more than a bit unrealistic and unfair to allow and even tolerate failure from every front above water, car companies, banking, finance, Wall Street, Insurance, health care and accept their arguably predictable failures as if there was no consequence (we see no moves to prosecute those responsible) but in a difficult and exceedingly challenging environment like deep sea drilling we have no level of understanding for unpredictable consequences of disaster. If you were to ask my opinion, I'd say government has Americans trained to bark on command, like Pavlov's Dogs, to their slightest whimper without us thinking on our own. In my estimation, in this situation, it has been government that has failed to do it's job, not BP.

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