What a relief? BP drill closes in on oil well, has just 1 shot

Published on July 5, 2010 by   ·   5 Comments

Latest news regarding the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico is that one of two relief wells being drilled to stop the oil spill is only day’s away from completion, although BP only has one shot at this latest attempt to stop the leak.

The first of two relief wells is within striking distance of the Macondo, about four and a half metres away from the pipe, although one wrong move as engineers break through the cement and steel pipe of the well could increase the torrent of oil into the Gulf of Mexico.

In the worst case scenario, it could even trigger a blow out in the relief well, but experts agree the chances of such a disaster are remote.

bp-oil-well-relief

“They pretty much have one shot,” said Wayne Pennington, the chair of geophysical engineering at Michigan Tech University. “Once they hit it and they try to kill it they really just have that one chance.”

It may take as few as a couple of hours or as many as five days to decide if the effort is a success or failure.

BP executives and the leading government official for oil spill response say they are confident the DDIII rig will successfully drill through its target, the blown out Macondo well, creating the relief well intended to be the ultimate solution for stopping an oil gusher in the Gulf of Mexico that has persisted for 76 days so far.

BP relief well Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill

“There is a chance, a slight chance that they could nick the wellbore,” Thad Allen, the coast guard commander, said. A nick risks starting a new small leak or possibly even a collapse of a section of the pipe given that it was damaged in the explosion in ways still not fully understood.

The relief well has bored 3.8 km beneath the seabed and BP’s plan calls for the relief well to drill further down, parallel to the blown out well, and intercept it at the bottom.

Once intercepted, BP intends to pump in heavy drilling fluid to stop the oil flow and then cement to plug the leak.

“We can’t guarantee anything, but I think the technology is there,” said Kent Wells, a BP vice president. “We’ve got the best experienced people around and we’re set up to be successful here.”

If all goes according to plan, operators will install a cement plug, sealing off the oil well for good. If there are further problems, or worse, if this attempt fails and actually increases the oil spill rate then expect hell to break loose…

Get the latest Live Oil Price headlines, choose from below:

Oil Prices | Oil Trading | Brent Oil Price | Light Oil Price | Light Oil Chart | Brent Oil Chart | Oil Trading Platforms | Oil Trading Forum

Tags:  , , , , , , , ,

Readers Comments (5)
  1. TheBigGuy says:

    Like or Dislike, Vote Now: Thumb up 3 Thumb down 3

    we are so F$#%&cked.

  2. Lousy Winner says:

    Like or Dislike, Vote Now: Thumb up 1 Thumb down 1

    The fractured oil well is still pouring oily filth into the Gulf, and will do until late August at the earliest if BP are very lucky and stop the oil leak earlier with this relief well effort thing.

  3. ken nikkola says:

    Like or Dislike, Vote Now: Thumb up 3 Thumb down 3

    we can put a man on the moon but can we stop an oil leak on earth? we need to pray kapnkenny

  4. GreyBrother says:

    Like or Dislike, Vote Now: Thumb up 3 Thumb down 2

    The official date for the relief wells to intercept the leak is still mid-August, so BP appears to be ahead of schedule – though they are understandably cautious about saying that.

    IF the leak is stopped, it will be interesting to see if criticism moves away from BP and towards US energy policy, which is, after all, the cause of the demand for dangerous deepwater drilling.

  5. not yo yo says:

    Like or Dislike, Vote Now: Thumb up 0 Thumb down 2

    Will the clean air fuel nuclear power generation people please stand up?





Please note: Comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment.

*

Oil Prices