GOM Oil Spill - BP Stops Oil Leak

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Ptarmigan
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#601 Postby Ptarmigan » Sun Jul 25, 2010 1:17 pm

SaskatchewanScreamer wrote:Deepwater Horizon alarms were switched off 'to help workers sleep'Alarms and safety mechanisms on gulf disaster oil rig were disabled, chief technician at Transocean reveals
(522)Tweet this (480)Ed Pilkington in New York guardian.co.uk, Friday 23 July 2010 19.54 BST Article history
Transocean is under scrutiny after it emerged that Deepwater Horizon’s safety systems were off when it exploded. Photograph: Gerald Herbert/AP

Vital warning systems on the Deepwater Horizon oil rig were switched off at the time of the explosion in order to spare workers being woken by false alarms, a federal investigation has heard.

The revelation that alarm systems on the rig at the centre of the disaster were disabled – and that key safety mechanisms had also consciously been switched off – came in testimony by a chief technician working for Transocean, the drilling company that owned the rig.

Mike Williams, who was in charge of maintaining the rig's electronic systems, was giving evidence to the federal panel in New Orleans that is investigating the cause of the disaster on 20 April, which killed 11 people.

Williams told the hearing today that no alarms went off on the day of the explosion because they had been "inhibited". Sensors monitoring conditions on the rig and in the Macondo oil well beneath it were still working, but the computer had been instructed not to trigger any alarms in case of adverse readings.

Both visual and sound alarms should have gone off in the case of sensors detecting fire or dangerous levels of combustible or toxic gases.

The evidence of deliberate dilution of the rig's safety mechanisms is likely to have wide ramifications for BP and Transocean, the world's largest offshore drilling company. It switches the spotlight of blame away from BP and towards the subcontractor which took the decisions. Of the 126 crew on board the rig on 20 April, seven worked for BP and 79 for Transocean.

Williams said he discovered that the physical alarm system had been disabled a full year before the disaster. When he asked why, he said he was told that the view from even the most senior Transocean official on the rig had been that "they did not want people woken up at three o'clock in the morning due to false alarms".

Williams' testimony will raise questions about whether lives could have been saved had the alarms been properly set and the disaster mitigated.

He also revealed that a crucial safety device, designed to shut down the drill shack in the case of dangerous gas levels being detected, had been disabled, or bypassed as it is called.

When he saw that the system had been bypassed, Williams protested to a Transocean supervisor, Mark Hay, who dismissed his concerns. Hay responded: "Damn thing been in bypass for five years. Matter of fact, the entire [Transocean] fleet runs them in bypass."

In a third significant disclosure, Williams also revealed that a computer system used to monitor the drill shack was constantly freezing up, and on one occasion even produced wrong information. The system failed to indicate that a vital valve inside the blowout preventer, the device designed to shut down the well in case of problems, had been damaged.

Pressure is now likely to mount on Transocean to explain the discrepancies.

The New York Times reported earlier this week that a survey of workers carried out by Transocean shortly before the blast suggested key safety practices had not been followed.

Workers said that, while they were aware of unsafe practices on the rig, they were afraid to report mistakes for fear of reprisals.

A BP spokesman said last night: "The investigations continue to demonstrate that a range of things went wrong and that responsibility lies with a whole load of different companies."


The only thing this leads to this is complacency. Here is well written article about this very subject.
http://www.improvementguru.com/2009/07/ ... s-and.html
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#602 Postby HURAKAN » Tue Jul 27, 2010 8:10 pm

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July 21
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Re: GOM Oil Spill - BP Stops Oil Leak

#603 Postby fwbbreeze » Wed Jul 28, 2010 10:26 am

I tell you what sucks....my area(Fort Walton Beach/Destin) has had little environmental impact from the oil. Yes we have had a few tar balls and a bit of sheen wash up...but they were quickly removed. The water is as emerald green as ever and the beaches are pristine white. However...... the negative press this has received has absolutely destroyed the 2010 tourist season for my area. The "doomsday in the gulf" scenario that constantly played out when the event first occurred was inaccurate and economically devastating. With the economy already suffering and having had a terrible 08 and 09 tourist season the early bookings for this summer were outstanding. Spring numbers were up nearly double from a year ago so my area was poised to have a successful summer tourist season. Now we hope and pray BP pays out on some claims and area businesses can hold on for one more cold winter.

Now let me finished by saying I do understand the environmental/economic impact that has occurred in areas further west from my area and in no way am I making light of their issues.

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Re: GOM Oil Spill - BP Stops Oil Leak

#604 Postby somethingfunny » Fri Sep 17, 2010 10:11 am

http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_upshot/20 ... -louisiana

Image

What you see above isn't a rural gravel road. It's a Louisiana waterway, its surface completely covered with dead sea life -- a mishmash of species of fish, crabs, stingray and eel. New Orleans CBS affiliate WWL-TV reports that even a whale was found dead in the area, a stretch of coastal Louisiana hit hard this summer by oil from BP's busted Gulf well.

Fish kills are fairly common along the Gulf Coast, particularly during the summer in the area near the mouth of the Mississippi, the site of this kill. The area is rife with dead zones -- stretches where sudden oxygen depletion can cause widespread death. But those kills tend to be limited to a single species of fish, rather than the broad sort of die-off involved in this kill.

And therein lies the concern of Gulf residents, who suspect this may be yet another side effect of the catastrophic BP oil spill.


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I am not a meteorologist, and any posts made by me are not official forecasts or to be interpreted as being intelligent. These posts are just my opinions and are probably silly opinions.

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Re: GOM Oil Spill - BP Stops Oil Leak

#605 Postby MGC » Sat Sep 18, 2010 8:07 pm

Clean up crews are on the Mississippi beaches nealy every day collecting tar balls. I went to Gulf Shores last week and there were tar balls in the surf. These tar ball are going to be with us for some time....MGC
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Re: GOM Oil Spill - BP Stops Oil Leak

#606 Postby Aquawind » Sat Sep 18, 2010 8:57 pm

MGC wrote:Clean up crews are on the Mississippi beaches nealy every day collecting tar balls. I went to Gulf Shores last week and there were tar balls in the surf. These tar ball are going to be with us for some time....MGC



Glad to hear there are still crews out there and hopefully for a long time is right..Heck I expected them to be gone already..I imagine the BP promises of paying claims has dried up as well.. They will run thier TV ads and slowly walk away..
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Re: GOM Oil Spill - BP Stops Oil Leak

#607 Postby Florida1118 » Sun Sep 19, 2010 1:10 am

Aquawind wrote:
MGC wrote:Clean up crews are on the Mississippi beaches nealy every day collecting tar balls. I went to Gulf Shores last week and there were tar balls in the surf. These tar ball are going to be with us for some time....MGC



Glad to hear there are still crews out there and hopefully for a long time is right..Heck I expected them to be gone already..I imagine the BP promises of paying claims has dried up as well.. They will run thier TV ads and slowly walk away..

Thats BP. Thats Big company's. I hope The government says no no you stay and pay. Just remember Haywood and the other BP's executives will pay the price one way or another for the murder of all those animals and those 11 people. Whether it be when there still walk the earth, or are burning in you know were, they will pay.
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