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Mind boggling
Author: Raine    Date: 05/10/2010 12:50:41

They won't call it a failure, but it sure looks that way to me. Over the weekend we were informed that the "containment dome" BP built to help stem the massive oil leak in the gulf hit a snag.

So what was the snag? Business week reports:
BP at the weekend lowered a 40-foot-tall (12 meter) steel chamber over the oil leak about a mile below the surface, hoping to capture the 5,000 barrels of crude oil leaking each day and pump it to a ship. The effort failed when an icy mixture of gas and water near the seafloor clogged the chamber, forcing the company to remove it and study how to stop the ice forming before trying again.
The chances for this dome to succeed was a long shot. This we knew. What I don't understand how those that designed and engineered this didn't take that this could happen into account. I'm not knocking engineers, mind you. This was a herculean task to design and fabricate. Was this why it was such a long shot? If that is the case, why weren't people told this?

The thing is, those gasses in Ice were the very thing that cause the rig to explode in the first place. From Saturday:
A group of BP executives were on board the Deepwater Horizon rig celebrating the project's safety record, according to the transcripts. Meanwhile, far below, the rig was being converted from an exploration well to a production well.

Based on the interviews, Bea believes that the workers set and then tested a cement seal at the bottom of the well. Then they reduced the pressure in the drill column and attempted to set a second seal below the sea floor. A chemical reaction caused by the setting cement created heat and a gas bubble which destroyed the seal.

Deep beneath the seafloor, methane is in a slushy, crystalline form. Deep sea oil drillers often encounter pockets of methane crystals as they dig into the earth.

As the bubble rose up the drill column from the high-pressure environs of the deep to the less pressurized shallows, it intensified and grew, breaking through various safety barriers, Bea said.

"A small bubble becomes a really big bubble," Bea said. "So the expanding bubble becomes like a cannon shooting the gas into your face."

Up on the rig, the first thing workers noticed was the sea water in the drill column suddenly shooting back at them, rocketing 240 feet in the air, he said. Then, gas surfaced. Then oil.

"What we had learned when I worked as a drill rig laborer was swoosh, boom, run," Bea said. "The swoosh is the gas, boom is the explosion and run is what you better be doing."

The gas flooded into an adjoining room with exposed ignition sources, he said.

"That's where the first explosion happened," said Bea, who worked for Shell Oil in the 1960s during the last big northern Gulf of Mexico oil well blowout. "The mud room was next to the quarters where the party was. Then there was a series of explosions that subsequently ignited the oil that was coming from below."
I find this to be mind boggling. I am not a scientist, geologist engineer or an expert on anything regarding offshore drilling, but if methane is found on and under the sea floor, and this dome so quickly became unstable, doesn't that mean that methane is also coming out of that gaping hole in the floor as well? It seems to me that containment dome could have caused another explosion. That's why they so quickly moved it. Didn't anyone tell those that built this containment dome about the crystalline methane in ice?

So what now?
BP’s containment system, now set aside on the seabed, was the London-based company’s plan to slow the spread of oil while it drills a so-called relief well to inject heavy mud and cement into the leak to plug it permanently. BP said it may try to jam the well by injecting pieces of rubber and installing a blowout preventer to shut off the flow.

The company is preparing a second, smaller containment dome to be lowered over the main leak. It is designed to resist the formation of large hydrate volumes, the company said in a statement. BP will also try to contain the leak using a “top kill” option after working on the well’s blowout preventer.
The sickest part of this mess, is that the only people who seem to be able to solve this disaster are the ones who created it. It's like asking an arsonist to put out a fire.

There have been reports that it may take 90 days to drill a new relief well. That will take us well into July. Hurricane season officially begins June first. We simply don't have time for any more fuckups. My mind can barely comprehend the magnitude of what is going on and the continuing ineptitude of the companies that cause this to happen. This isn't an accident. An accident is when you drop a cup, or you fall off your bike because a squirrel ran in front of you. You can't prevent an accident. This is negligent homicide. This was willful ignorance that caused deadly results.

My heart is breaking while my mind is trying to comprehend this all.

and
Raine

Regarding methane, here is a bonus click, if you can stomach it.



 

38 comments (Latest Comment: 05/10/2010 23:00:36 by Will in Chicago)
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