Bubble of methane triggered rig blast in Gulf?
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- JanforGore
- added this
While the cause of the explosion is still under investigation, the sequence of events described in the interviews provides the most detailed account of the April 20 blast that killed 11 workers and touched off the underwater gusher that has poured more than 3 million gallons of crude into the Gulf.
Portions of the interviews, two written and one taped, were described in detail to an Associated Press reporter by Robert Bea, a University of California Berkeley engineering professor who serves on a National Academy of Engineering panel on oil pipeline safety and worked for BP PLC as a risk assessment consultant during the 1990s. He received them from industry friends seeking his expert opinion.
A group of BP executives were on board the Deepwater Horizon rig celebrating the project's safety record, according to the transcripts. Meanwhile, far below, the rig was being converted from an exploration well to a production well.
Based on the interviews, Bea believes that the workers set and then tested a cement seal at the bottom of the well. Then they reduced the pressure in the drill column and attempted to set a second seal below the sea floor. A chemical reaction caused by the setting cement created heat and a gas bubble which destroyed the seal.
Deep beneath the seafloor, methane is in a slushy, crystalline form. Deep sea oil drillers often encounter pockets of methane crystals as they dig into the earth.
As the bubble rose up the drill column from the high-pressure environs of the deep to the less pressurized shallows, it intensified and grew, breaking through various safety barriers, Bea said.
"A small bubble becomes a really big bubble," Bea said. "So the expanding bubble becomes like a cannon shooting the gas into your face."
Up on the rig, the first thing workers noticed was the sea water in the drill column suddenly shooting back at them, rocketing 240 feet in the air, he said. Then, gas surfaced. Then oil.
"What we had learned when I worked as a drill rig laborer was swoosh, boom, run," Bea said. "The swoosh is the gas, boom is the explosion and run is what you better be doing."
The gas flooded into an adjoining room with exposed ignition sources, he said.
"That's where the first explosion happened," said Bea, who worked for Shell Oil in the 1960s during the last big northern Gulf of Mexico oil well blowout. "The mud room was next to the quarters where the party was. Then there was a series of explosions that subsequently ignited the oil that was coming from below."
According to one interview transcript, a gas cloud covered the rig, causing giant engines on the drill floor to run too fast and explode. The engines blew off the rig and set "everything on fire," the account said. Another explosion below blew more equipment overboard.
BP spokesman John Curry would not comment Friday night on whether methane gas or the series of events described in the internal documents caused the accident.
"Clearly, what happened on the Deepwater Horizon was a tragic accident," said Curry, who is based at an oil spill command center in Robert, La. "We anticipate all the facts will come out in a full investigation."
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Looks like plan cover your ass has been put into motion.
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elementalist
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I don't believe one word from an oil co.. They blame it on methane gas, yet the gas was made from chemical reaction of cement and heat produced by workers.
- 2 years ago
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elementalist
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JanforGore
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elementalist:
True, and if that really were the case, why wait so long to say it, and why have people on the rigs sign waivers? This smells.
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore
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Wetdog
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I've never heard of a natural gas drilling rig exploding before.
- 2 years ago
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Wetdog
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JanforGore
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http://readersupportednews.org/off-site-news-section/52-52/1665-rig-survivors-fe...
They are looking to escape culpability.
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore
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diode
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Interesting, still waiting on final reports before finalizing an opinion however this does seem possible to be the reason for the accident
- 2 years ago
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diode
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Kurta
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I just watched something about methane pockets sinking ships in a matter of less than a minute.
All that gas lowers the density of the water and anything floating drops like a stone.
- 2 years ago
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Kurta
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spanishinquistion [removed]
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Likely excuse. The Oil Companies are profiting off of "accidental disasters" like this one and any chance to length it is more of our money in their pockets.
Nationalise the Oil Industry!
- 2 years ago
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spanishinquistion [removed]
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JanforGore
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spanishinquistion:
And they are proftiing off of the favors of this administration as well as they did the last one.
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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http://www.democracynow.org/2010/5/5/bp_funnels_millions_into_lobbying_to
BP Funnels Millions Into Lobbying To Influence Regulation and Re-brand Image
"We speak with Antonia Juhasz, author of The Tyranny of Oil: The World’s Most Powerful Industry – and What We Must Do To Stop It. “The entire oil industry, will continue to use its vast wealth – unequaled by any global industry – to escape regulation, restriction, oversight and enforcement,” Juhasz writes. “BP, now the source of the last two great deadly US oil industry explosions, has shown us that this simply cannot be permitted.” [Includes rush transcript]"
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore
