essies
"We're all just walking each other home." Ram Dass
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Oil Spill: Now the Pressure is REALLY On
http://ecocentric.blogs.time.com/2010/07/14/oil-spill-now-the-pressure-is-really-on/
<snipped>
So Chu and his team asked for more time to go over the dataspecifically the seismic surveys of the rock around the wellbore that were done earlier this week. Allen says they wanted to know whether the surrounding geology was of the kind that might be vulnerable to this sort of catastrophic leakand whether the integrity test could unwittingly cause that cataclysm to happen. "In the interests of the safety of people and the environment, we needed to take a 24-hour break to make sure we got this right," Allen said this afternoon.
They didAllen said the additional tests "removed the possibility of a negative event," which is a statement one hopes he doesn't live to regret. Now the integrity test is going forward. Which answers at least one questionultimately, it is the U.S. government that is finally in charge of the containment procedures over the wellhead, as BP seemed perfectly ready to go forward with the process without more safety tests. BP's lack of caution is a little bit worrying in its own right and this afternoon BP vice president Kent Wells assured reporters that this is "a BP operation," though as the test unfolds every six hours the company will take the pressure data and consult with Chu and his team on whether or not to continue.
Let's keep our fingers crossed!!
http://ecocentric.blogs.time.com/2010/07/14/oil-spill-now-the-pressure-is-really-on/
<snipped>
So Chu and his team asked for more time to go over the dataspecifically the seismic surveys of the rock around the wellbore that were done earlier this week. Allen says they wanted to know whether the surrounding geology was of the kind that might be vulnerable to this sort of catastrophic leakand whether the integrity test could unwittingly cause that cataclysm to happen. "In the interests of the safety of people and the environment, we needed to take a 24-hour break to make sure we got this right," Allen said this afternoon.
They didAllen said the additional tests "removed the possibility of a negative event," which is a statement one hopes he doesn't live to regret. Now the integrity test is going forward. Which answers at least one questionultimately, it is the U.S. government that is finally in charge of the containment procedures over the wellhead, as BP seemed perfectly ready to go forward with the process without more safety tests. BP's lack of caution is a little bit worrying in its own right and this afternoon BP vice president Kent Wells assured reporters that this is "a BP operation," though as the test unfolds every six hours the company will take the pressure data and consult with Chu and his team on whether or not to continue.
Let's keep our fingers crossed!!
