The Leak Is Over: BP, USCG Declare Macondo Well Permanently Sealed
by Miles Wolf Tamboli - The Talk Radio News Service
After five months, the BP Deepwater Macondo Well has finally been permanently sealed.
“We can now state, definitively, that the Macondo well poses no continuing threat to the Gulf of Mexico,” said National Incident Commander Admiral Thad Allen in a statement released by the Deepwater Horizon Unified Command on Sunday.
Pressure testing was completed early Sunday morning, assuring crews that the well is in fact completely sealed, and that the cement has set.
“This is a significant milestone in the response to the Deepwater Horizon tragedy and is the final step in a complex and unprecedented subsea operation - finally confirming that this well no longer presents a threat to the Gulf of Mexico,” said Tony Hayward, petroleum mogul BP’s group chief executive, in a press release issued Sunday by BP.
The final plugging of the well was enabled by the drilling of a relief well, which the administration has been touting as the only final answer to the months long leak since the beginning, despite having essentially capped the well with a customized stacking cap in mid July. The relief well intercepted the Macondo’s annulus last wednesday, and began pumping a cement mixture into the open space on Friday.
The deepwater Macondo well, owned and operated by an amalgam of international corporations - including Britain’s BP and Halliburton, and the Swiss company Transocean - spewed millions of barrels of Sweet Louisiana Crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico after the rig exploded in a string of mishaps that took the lives of 11 workers aboard the Deepwater Horizon rig, and crippled the Gulf Coast’s economy, which relies heavily upon the triumvirate of fishing, tourism, and oil industries.
As of Friday, 39,885 square miles of Gulf of Mexico federal waters remain closed to fishing in response to public health and safety concerns, and approximately 600 miles of coastline are still experiencing some oil impacts, primarily in Louisiana, according to the Deepwater Horizon Joint Incident Command.
BP America Chairman and President Lamar McKay said Sunday; “BP remains committed to remedying the harm that the spill caused to the Gulf of Mexico, the Gulf Coast environment, and to the livelihoods of the people across the region.”
With BP Spill Behind Him, Thad Allen Finally Retires
Retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen announced Friday that he is stepping down from his role as the Obama administration’s point man on the effort to control the BP oil spill.
Allen said in a statement that although the “National Incident Command is disestablished…our commitment to this response and the people of the Gulf of Mexico remains.” Allen will join RAND next week, conducting research for the think tank’s Center on Homeland Security.
A decorated veteran of the Coast Guard, Allen served for 39 years before announcing his retirement at the outset of this year. However, days after the Deepwater Horizon Macando well exploded in the Gulf of Mexico on April 20th, killing 11 workers, Allen was called on by Obama to lead the effort to plug the blown-out well.
Allen worked tirelessly throughout the summer with BP and other federal officials to cap the well, which leaked a total of nearly 4 million barrels of crude oil into the Gulf. After weeks of failure, engineers were able to cement the well in August. On September 19, BP announced that it had completed a relief well, effectively ending the potential for any more oil to leak out.
In a statement Friday, Obama thanked Allen for putting off his retirement to deal with the spill.
“At a time when he could have enjoyed a well-deserved retirement from the United States Coast Guard, Admiral Allen stepped up to the plate and served his country when his skills and experience were urgently needed,” the president said. “This unprecedented response effort simply could not have succeeded without Admiral Allen at the helm, and the nation owes him a debt of gratitude.”
Because of its large and prolonged impact, the spill is considered to be the worst environmental disaster ever to occur in the U.S., and served as a catalyst to cripple the Gulf region’s economy, destroy fish and other wildlife and create a cloud of anger and frustration that blanketed the nation all summer long.