New Scientist | Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill
Another Gulf oil leak hits Louisiana waters | 28 July 2010
PhysOrg | Environment | Gulf of Mexico Oil SpillAnother oil leak, unrelated to the Deepwater Horizon blowout, hit Louisiana's coastal waters yesterday when a dredge barge being towed by a tugboat hit a shallow well. Photos show oil gushing more than 6 metres into the air.
The accident occurred some about a 100 kilometres south of New Orleans in the already hard-hit Barataria bay. Deepwater clean-up vessels were dispatched to the site and responders laid out some 1800 metres of boom to contain the spill.
It's not clear how much oil actually spilled into the Gulf of Mexico, but unlike its big brother out to sea this spill appears to have petered out by midday.
On the bright side, said Thad Allen, the retired coastguard admiral tasked with coordinating the government's response to the Deepwater spill, everybody was ready for action when the spill occurred. "One of the positive things, I suppose, about having this response going on is we have a significant amount of resources... there's skimming equipment close by and booming equipment," he said.
It all makes one wonder just how many little leaks - both natural and unnatural - regularly go unnoticed. Just over a week ago, Allen had to explain that leaks appearing 5 kilometres from the Deepwater well head were also unrelated to the blowout.
Preparations for BP well 'kill' operation move ahead | 25 July 2010
X Prize to offer millions for Gulf oil cleanup solution | 27 July 2010Engineers moved ahead on Sunday with preparations for a well "kill" operation that officials hope will permanently plug the oil leak causing the worst US environmental disaster.
A major vessel charged with drilling a relief well to finally stop the BP oil spill arrived back at the Gulf of Mexico well site on Saturday after briefly evacuating due to a tropical storm.
US Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen said the first chance to seal the well for good could come in the next few days, as response crews quickly scaled operations back up after the storm fizzled.
The returning drill rig, Development Driller 3 (DD3), was among some 10 ships that evacuated the area ahead of Tropical Storm Bonnie. It was to begin reattaching to the well site immediately, according to the US official overseeing the spill response.
A cap over the wellhead has shut in leaking oil since July 15.
Million dollar contest launched in US to clean oil spill | 29 July 2010The X Prize Foundation launches a competition this week promising millions of dollars for winning ways to clean up crude oil from the BP spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
The nonprofit group will hold a press conference in Washington on Thursday to reveal details of an Oil Cleanup X Challenge inspired by the disaster.
It added that the competition is "designed to inspire entrepreneurs, engineers, and scientists worldwide to develop innovative, rapidly deployable, and highly efficient methods of capturing crude oil from the ocean surface."
A US foundation that helped launch private spaceflight Thursday turned its gaze and pocketbook towards Earth, unveiling a 1.4-million-dollar contest to find new ways to clean up oil spills.
The year-long Wendy Schmidt Oil Cleanup X Challenge, named for the wife of Google chairman Eric Schmidt who put up the 1.4-million-dollar purse and the X Prize Foundation which is organizing the competition, kicks off Sunday.
Frustrated at watching "the messy, uncoordinated" attempts to mop up oil from the massive BP leak in the Gulf of Mexico using outdated technology, the contest aims to inspire new ways to clean up future spills, Schmidt said.
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Teams will submit a blueprint for spill-fighting technology online on the website of the X Prize Foundation (xprize.org).
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A panel of experts will evaluate the entries for feasibility, cost, how well they lend themselves to large scale deployment, efficiency and eco-friendliness among other criteria, and the field will be whittled down by mid-2011 to a few teams of finalists.
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The teams will have to clean up oil-tainted water, and the winners will get at least one million dollars. Runners-up and third place teams will earn 300,000 and 100,000 dollars respectively.