BP's cap capturing 1,000 barrels per day: U.S. Coast Guard

14:53, June 05, 2010      

Email | Print | Subscribe | Comments | Forum 


Remotely operated undersea vehicles work to cut and cap the riser pipe at the site of the Deepwater Horizon oil leak as it continues to spew oil into the Gulf of Mexico in this video image taken from a BP live video feed June 3, 2010. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

A containment cap newly placed over a ruptured undersea well is collecting some 1,000 barrels of crude a day, the U.S. commander for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill said Friday.

The device is designed to corral "90-plus percent" of the oil, BP's chief operating officer Doug Suttles told CNN earlier on Friday.

Government scientists had estimated that 12,000 to 19,000 barrels of oil could be spewing into sea per day.

The amount of runaway oil could decrease when BP closes vents to maximize the oil corralled, U.S. Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen told reporters on a conference call.

The successful deployment of the cap followed BP's several failed attempts to curb the oil spill which has so far contaminated at least 225 kilometers of coastline, stopped new deep-water drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and forced the closure of a third of its fishing areas.

Suttles told CNN earlier Friday that the cap "should work." " I'd like to see up capture 90-plus percent of this flow," he said. "I think that's possible with this design."

BP's plan is to use the cap to trap most of the oil and siphon it to a tanker on the Gulf's surface until the company completes two relief wells to plug the leak. The wells are expected to be finished by mid-August.

The cap was placed over the leak following the cutting and removal of the riser pipe from the top of the BOP's lower marine riser package (LMRP).

Like its attempts, BP said this operation also has never before been deployed at 5,000 feet under water and that "the containment system's efficiency, continued operation, and ability to contain the oil and gas cannot be assured".

Source: Xinhua

(Editor:燕勐)

  • Do you have anything to say?
  • Giant red lantern lights up in Tiananmen Square to celebrate the coming National Day on Oct. 1. (Xinhua/Li Xin)
  • A ceremony is held in Taipei, southeast China's Taiwan, on Sept. 28, 2011, to commemorate the 2,562nd birthday of Confucius (551-479 BC), a Chinese thinker, educationist and philosopher. (Xinhua/Wu Ching-teng)
  • The world's first Boeing 787 Dreamliner for delivery arrives at Haneda airport in Tokyo, capital of Japan, on Sept. 28, 2011. The Boeing 787 Dreamliner, whose buyer is All Nippon Airways (ANA), will implement a flight of ANA on Oct. 26 from Tokyo's Narita Airport to Hong Kong in south China. (Xinhua/Ji Chunpeng)
  • A Libyan National Transitional Council (NTC) fighter shows what is believed to be human jawbone found inside a mass grave near Abu Salim prison in Tripoli, Libya, Spet. 27, 2011. The NTC on Sunday said they had found a mass grave containing the bodies of 1,270 people killed by Gaddafi's security forces in a 1996 massacre at Abu Salim prison in southern Tripoli. (Xinhua/Li Muzi)
  • Rescue workers and local residents search for survivors after a building collapsed in old Delhi, India, Sept. 27, 2011. At least 10 people were killed and 35 injured when an old three-storey building collapsed. More than a dozen people are still feared trapped under the debris, police said. (Xinhua/Partha Sarkar)

  • A visitor has flying experience in the windmill castle of Jinshitan National Holiday resort in Dalian, northeast China's Liaoning Province, Sept. 27, 2011. The castle is a 23-meter-high building with 21 meters in diameter. The castle uses wind tunnel to make objects floating in the air. It is the first indoor stadium in China, which enables people to have flying experience. (Xinhua/Zhang Chunlei)
http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90777/90852/7013564.pdf