News -> INDReporter MON, MAY 17 10:07AM by Mary Tutwiler

Monday's oil spill updates

There’s good news and bad news this morning about the oil spill in the Gulf. The good news is that BP has succeeded in inserting a tube into the spewing well, and is now collecting about one fifth of the leaking oil.

The tube, which is a mile long, siphoning oil and gas to a tanker at the surface, is collecting more than 1,000 barrels a day or 42,000 gallons, BP chief operating office Doug Suttles announced on NBC’s “Today” show, this morning. Estimates from BP are that about 200,000 gallons, or 5,000 barrels have been leaking each day since the well blowout on April 20.

Also this morning, Governor Bobby Jindal will fly over the spill area with Stuttles, and discuss a plan to rebuild barrier islands. Jindal is pushing for BP to pick up the coastal restoration tab.

But even as BP may finally be getting a handle on the leak, researchers from the University of Georgia detected giant miles-long underwater plumes of oil this weekend, drifting in the Gulf, that could become caught in the loop current and travel eastward toward the Florida keys and into the Atlantic Ocean.

The underwater oil has the potential to kill marine life in two ways. The oil itself is toxic. And even as beneficial underwater bacteria eat the oil, the microbial bloom causes oxygen depletion, which could create a dead zone, suffocating sea creatures that survive the initial spill.

In Louisiana’s coastal zone, fears that the oil will come ashore into fragile marshes seems to be less of a threat this morning, according to NOAA’s 48 hour predictions of oil spill movement. However, the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals is constantly monitoring oyster beds and shrimp catches to see if oil is turning up in the state’s fishing grounds. DHH has been opening and closing oyster beds all weekend in Terrebonne Parish. On Saturday, the Louisina Department of Wildlife and Fisheries reported oiled shrimp near Sister Lake, also in Terrebonne Parish.


Comments (6)add
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written by Morrow , May 17, 2010 - 05:15 pm
I hope it slams into Florida and soon! Then I hope it snakes around to the South Carolina beaches and stains them black! I bet those oil baron millionaires with their million dollar "second homes" WILL THEN DEMAND something be done to stop the flow! It seems as if Louisiana's coast and the Gulf Coast is okay to lose or destroy. It is not. But until Florida or the East Coast is threatened, no one is in a hurry to stop this black, sticky, damaging snake. So, if Louisiana's coast dies, I sure hope the Florida coast and the Eastern seaboard dies first!
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written by Really? , May 17, 2010 - 05:44 pm
Nice attitude...maybe its that attitude that causes people the gulf coast, but in FL, who should be your neighbors, to not give a shit.
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written by Isabella , May 17, 2010 - 07:30 pm
I hope that it will get better and wont kill the sea animals!!!!!!!!!!!!!:(((((
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written by Sunny C. , May 17, 2010 - 08:50 pm
First of all you should not wish ill upon others, and we are very concerned about the environmental damages BP has caused.
People need to consider purchasing electric cars to stop all of these greedy bastards from destroying the world!
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written by Exentialist Homme , May 18, 2010 - 02:54 am
The rats will play while the cats away ! The day the government spends as much manpower and time on inspecting and regulating the oil industry, as it does on chasing tax dodgers, the oil industry will fall in line, and use some of their profits to insure these well blow out preventive measures work..........
Any idiot can tell you the down hole treatment was poor quality...
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written by DRILLER , May 18, 2010 - 05:40 am
Bellisima Isabella, all the animals are in the jungle and safely in the Audubon Zoo, where they all asked for you !
Sunny C, You know where the sun don't shine ? Okay !
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