330 likes | 461 Views
Oceans and Oil Spills. History of the Gulf Oil Spill. Explosion kills 11 men on rig on April 22, 2010 The Entire rig sinks on April 23, 2010 A customized containment cap was fitted to the well in early June, Oil was piped to the Discover Enterprise vessel.
E N D
History of the Gulf Oil Spill • Explosion kills 11 men on rig on April 22, 2010 • The Entire rig sinks on April 23, 2010 • A customized containment cap was fitted to the well in early June, • Oil was piped to the Discover Enterprise vessel. • A second containment system was installed in mid-June, using a manifold and hoses to carry oil and gas to the Q4000 vessel on the surface. • On July 12, a new sealing cap was installed • On July 15, a well integrity test began in which the cap’s three ram capping stack was closed, effectively shutting in the well and all sub-sea containment systems. • On August 5, BP completed cementing operations at the MC252 well, as part of the static kill procedure. • The relief well drilled by the DDIII drilling rig intercepted the annulus of the MC252 well on September 15 • Pumping of cement into the annulus on September 17, permanently sealed the well.
This Spill in Context (6 largest previous Spills) November 1, 1979, ~2.6 million gal spilled, 7.8 million gal burned August 8, 2005, >8 million gal in 250 reported spills August 10, 1993, 336,000 gal June 8, 1990, 5.1 million gal. July 30, 1984, 2.7 million gal June 3, 1979, 4.2- 12.5 million gal
Oil Pollution in our Oceans • 3.25 million metric tons of petroleum annually • Human Sources • Leaks at marine terminals • Disposal of drilling muds from offshore operations • Municipal and industrial wastes • Urban runoff into rivers • Atmospheric fallout from the incomplete combustion of oil in motor vehicles
Exxon Valdez Oil Spill • Exxon Valdez • 11.6 million Gal Spilled • Horizon Spill • 210,000–4,200,000 gal/day
How Much Oil was spilled? • Used optical plume velocimetry to estimate the velocity of fluids escaping the damaged well, • Average flow rate from 22 April to 3 June • 5.6 x 104 ±21% barrels/day • After the riser was removed • 6.8 x 104 ±19% barrels/day • Taking into account the oil collected at the seafloor • 4.4 x 106 ±20% barrels of oil was released into the ocean • ~1.8 billion gal. • Crone, TJ & Tolstoy, M, 2010 Science
Clean-up process • Use Dispersants • Collect with boom and scoop out of ocean • Burn it
Gulf Oil Spill • Escaping oil sprayed with dispersant at well head • Produced tiny droplets of oil in deep ocean • Surface oil • Collected with booms • Burned
The “Loop Current” • Initial concerns that the surface oil would enter the loop current • Winds helped to contain the oil
Hurricane Impacts on Oil Spill • Hurricanes are likely to disperse remaining oil further • Potentially oil can be driven onshore through the storm surge • BP States that deep water oil is in ppm and should not be significant
Hurricane effects on oil spill • Position and approach of hurricane will effect potential damage • Right side of hurricane can bring significant oil ashore
Gulf Oil Spill Clean-up Escaping oil sprayed with dispersant at well head Produced tiny droplets of oil in deep ocean Surface oil Collected with booms Burned
Shore Clean-up Methods Can Spray water on shore Drives oil into sediment Hot water kills micro-organisms
Meiofauna in Beach Environments Microscopic invertebrates that live in beach sands Base of the food chain Meiofauna
Pelagic Organisms Nekton may be able to avoid oily areas Plankton are unable to move away Plankton-floaters Nekton-swimmers
Benthic Organisms Organisms that live on the ocean bottom Typically in shallow water 2 types Sessile-Cannot move to avoid oil Vagile-may be able to crawl or swim short distances to escape oil residue
Turtle Strandings on Gulf Coast Green is confirmed Red are new strandings Too soon to tell how many are from oil Numbers may be inflated
Sea Turtles Collected since Spill Dead (5% oiled) Live (85% oiled)
Mammals Collected Dead (4% Oiled) Live (22% Oiled)
Volunteer Groups Capture Oiled Birds Brown pelicans are particularly susceptible Dive into water Feathers become coated with sticky mousse Too heavy to fly May die of exposure starvation drowning exhaustion Gulf Coast oiled bird
Birds Collected since Spill Dead (37% oiled) Live Note: Only live birds that were in distress were collected.
Fishing Closures October 5, 2010 October 22, 2010
Oil in the Water Column Dispersant caused oil to remain at depth Natural bacteria eats oil Oxygen is depleted at depth
BP’s Response • Amount Spent • Over $8 billion spent to date • $20 billion claims escrow fund • $100 million unemployed rig workers' fund • $500 million establishing Gulf Coast Research Initiative • Containment • 827,926 barrels of oily liquid skimmed • 265,450 barrels in controlled surface burns