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Bated breath in Gulf ahead of oil well 'kill' operation

Michigan spill may impact Gateway pipeline
Calgary, Alberta (UPI) Jul 30, 2010 - An oil spill of some 1 million gallons in Michigan from a pipeline owned by Calgary-based Enbridge Energy Partners LP is intensifying the debate regarding the company's proposed pipeline to British Columbia. More than 20 miles of the Kalamazoo River in south-central Michigan were contaminated from the spill that began early in the week from the Lakehead Pipeline system that carries about 190,000 barrels of oil each day from Chicago to refineries in Sarnia, Ontario. By Thursday, the spill, reported by the company on Monday, was halfway to Lake Michigan, the Detroit Free Press reports, and the company told reporters that as many as 400 people would be working on the cleanup, with oil to be collected at 17 different boom sites. Enbridge's proposed Northern Gateway Pipeline would carry some 525,000 barrels of crude each day from Edmonton to the Kitimat port in northern British Columbia, for transport on tankers to Asian Pacific markets.

First Nations and environmental groups say the pipeline and increased tanker traffic would pose a threat to the pristine northwest coast of British Columbia. "With this latest spill, Enbridge is effectively making its own argument against the Northern Gateway Pipeline," Nikki Skuce, an energy campaigner with environmental group ForestEthics, said in a statement. The organization stresses that because it was a private citizen who reported the Michigan spill to authorities, if a leak were to occur in the remote mountains of northwest British Columbia, an even greater amount of oil would have likely spilled before Enbridge even discovered the problem. Calhoun County, Mich., officials said they received a call Sunday from a resident who smelled oil, but Enbridge did not report the oil leak until Monday, the Detroit Free Press reports.

U.S. Rep. Mark Schauer of Michigan, a member of the House subcommittee on railroads, pipelines and hazardous materials, introduced legislation Thursday that would require companies to report a spill within an hour after discovering a leak. Schauer said an Enbridge executive told the panel two weeks ago that "safety and protection of the public environment are our highest priorities." Skuce of ForestEthics said the Northern Gateway pipeline is supposed to cross 1,000 streams and rivers, including the Skeena and Fraser rivers, which are valuable wild salmon habitats and important to cultures and regional economies in British Columbia. Preliminary hearings on the proposed pipeline are scheduled for August. The Gateway Pipeline "is taking a direct hit" from the Michigan spill, Andrew Leach, associate professor at Edmonton's Alberta School of Business, told the Calgary Herald. "Any image that can put the words Enbridge and oil spill together really plays into what the movement against the pipeline has been saying, that they're not safe."
by Staff Writers
New Orleans, Louisiana (AFP) Aug 1, 2010
After months of uncertainty and frustration, crews were ramping up efforts to permanently seal the ruptured Gulf of Mexico oil well, which officials said could begin as early as Monday.

The operation is one of two bids to definitively "kill" the damaged well, which has spewed noxious crude into the sea since April, devastating fragile habitats and bringing financial ruin to many residents along the US Gulf Coast.

BP officials in recent days said they hoped the "static kill" operation would take place Tuesday, but on Sunday the US point man for the spill response, Coast Guard admiral Thad Allen, said it "could start as early as Monday night, depending on final testing of the mud injection systems."

If successful, the "static kill" will allow crews to plug the well from above with cement, but the procedure is untested and similar to a previous "kill" attempt that failed at the end of May.

Still, 104 days into the spill, Americans are desperate for a sign that the leak will soon be permanently capped, allowing the full focus of BP and government officials in the region to shift to clean-up operations and repairing the economic damage caused by the worst oil disaster in US history.

Somewhere between three million to 5.3 million barrels leaked into the Gulf between April 20 and July 15, when a cap placed over the wellhead was sealed, fully containing the flow of oil for the first time.

While locals are eager to see the well plugged for good, there are fears that a successful kill operation will prompt a mass exodus of officials brought into the region to respond to the crisis.

Crews have already begun collecting some of the millions of feet of protective boom after skimming vessels said they were having difficulty finding spilled crude on the sea surface anymore.

But the president of Plaquemines Parish in Louisiana told CNN it was too early to scale back those operations.

"The oil is out there," Billy Nungesser insisted, saying that he had ordered his parish sheriff to stop 12 trucks carrying boom from leaving the area.

BP, which leased the Deepwater Horizon rig that exploded April 20, killing 11 workers and sparking the spill, has sought to reassure residents it will remain engaged and work to restore the area.

"We've had some good news on the oil... but that doesn't mean we're done. We'll be here for years," said Bob Dudley, an American chosen to replace the gaffe-prone Brit Tony Hayward as BP's chief executive, as the energy giant tries to salvage what is left of its reputation.

Many fishermen whose grounds were closed in the wake of the spill due to food safety concerns have found work assisting the clean-up effort but face an uncertain future.

They could soon lose their jobs again as there is less oil to mop up and there are no guarantees they will be able to return to fish soon in Gulf waters that could be contaminated for months or even years to come.

Documents released by Congress Saturday detailing the use of chemical dispersants in the Gulf added to concerns about the long-term effects for the region.

"BP carpet-bombed the ocean with these chemicals, and the Coast Guard allowed them to do it," said Democratic Representative Edward Markey, chairman of the House energy and environment subcommittee.

BP and the US response team have said more than 1.8 million gallons of dispersants have been used to break up the oil, but Markey said studies show the amount could be far higher.

"The validity of those numbers are now in question," he said.

Admiral Allen addressed the concerns Sunday, insisting to reporters that he was "satisfied that dispersants were only used when needed," and that it was the US government on-scene coordinator's decision to use dispersants and not BP's.

Meanwhile on Sunday engineers were carrying out final tests to ensure the integrity of the wellhead, BP said.

Once the static kill is under way, engineers will pump heavy drilling fluid called "mud" into the cap in a bid to push the oil back down into the well reservoir.

If that works, crews will then seal the well from the top with cement.

Then, as early as next weekend, BP plans to begin a "bottom kill" by intercepting the damaged well deep below the seabed with a nearly completed relief well.

Engineers plan to first drill into the pipe to check the "static kill" has worked before cementing in the outer well bore and blocking the oil reservoir once and for all.



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