Date Published: 08/04/10
'Oil in Gulf poses slight risk' says US Govt
The government is expected to announce on Wednesday that three-quarters of the
oil from the Deepwater Horizon leak has already evaporated, dispersed, been
captured or otherwise eliminated — and that much of the rest is so diluted that
it does not seem to pose much additional risk of harm.
A government report finds that about 26 percent of the oil released from BP’s
runaway well is still in the water or onshore in a form that could, in
principle, cause new problems. But most is light sheen at the ocean surface or
in a dispersed form below the surface, and federal scientists believe that it is
breaking down rapidly in both places.
On Tuesday, BP began pumping drilling mud into the well in an attempt to seal it
for good. Since the flow of oil was stopped with a cap on July 15, people on the
Gulf Coast have been wondering if another shoe was going to drop — a huge
underwater glob of oil emerging to damage more shorelines, for instance.
Assuming that the government’s calculations stand scrutiny, that looks
increasingly unlikely. “There’s absolutely no evidence that there’s any
significant concentration of oil that’s out there that we haven’t accounted
for,” said Jane Lubchenco, head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, the lead agency in producing the new report.
She emphasized, however, that the government remained concerned about the
ecological damage that has already occurred and the potential for more, and said
it would continue monitoring the gulf.
“I think we don’t know yet the full impact of this spill on the ecosystem or the
people of the gulf,” Dr. Lubchenco said.
Among the biggest unanswered questions, she said, is how much damage the oil has
done to the eggs and larvae of organisms like fish, crabs and shrimp. That may
not become clear for a year or longer, as new generations of those creatures
come to maturity.
Thousands of birds and other animals are known to have been damaged or killed by
the spill, a relatively modest toll given the scale of some other oil disasters
that killed millions of animals. Efforts are still under way in Louisiana,
Mississippi, Alabama and Florida to clean up more than 600 miles of oiled
shoreline. The government and BP collected 35,818 tons of oily debris from
shorelines through Sunday.
It remains to be seen whether subtle, long-lasting environmental damage from the
spill will be found, as has been the case after other large oil spills.
The report, which is to be unveiled on Wednesday morning, is a result of an
extensive effort by federal scientists, with outside help, to add up the total
volume of oil released and to figure out where it went.
The lead agency behind the report, the oceanic and atmospheric administration,
played down the size of the spill in the early days, and the Obama
administration was ultimately forced to appoint a scientific panel that came up
with far higher estimates of the flow rate from the well. Whether the new report
will withstand critical scrutiny is uncertain; advocacy groups and most outside
scientists had not learned of it on Tuesday.
The government announced early this week that the total oil release, from the
time the Deepwater Horizon exploded on April 20 until the well was effectively
capped, was 4.9 million barrels, plus or minus 10 percent. That estimate makes
the Deepwater Horizon disaster the largest marine spill in history. It is
surpassed on land by a 1910 spill in the California desert.
As the scientists did their calculations, they were able to rely on direct
measurements of the fate of some of the oil that spewed from the broken well.
For example, BP and its contractors succeeded in capturing about 17 percent of
it with various containment mechanisms, the report says.
The outcome for much of the oil could not be directly measured, but had to be
estimated using protocols that were scrutinized by scientists inside and outside
the government, Dr. Lubchenco said.
The report calculates, for example, that about 25 percent of the chemicals in
the oil evaporated at the surface or dissolved into seawater in the same way
that sugar dissolves in tea. (The government appears to have settled on a
conservative number for that estimate, with the scientific literature saying
that as much as 40 percent of the oil from a spill can disappear in this way.)
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