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Another oil rig explodes in the Gulf
On Thu, 2 Sep 2010 14:13:07 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote: I agree that it may not have come from the well. Seems like a distinction without a difference. Oil in the water is still oil in the water. Actually there is a huge difference if you think about it: Oil from the platform equipment is finite and will stop relatively quickly; Oil from the well can take months to control as we have seen. |
Another oil rig explodes in the Gulf
"Steve B" wrote in message ... "Jordon" wrote in message ... nom=de=plume wrote: wrote in message ... On Thu, 2 Sep 2010 10:24:08 -0700, "nom=de=plume" wrote: "Jordon" wrote in message ... http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2010/09/02/rescue-efforts-underway-after-oil-rig-accident-in-gulf/?hpt=T2 Drill baby drill Burn baby burn Lie baby lie This may actually be an example of the system working. If the reports are right there were no fatalities and no oil was spilled. That is better than the normal drive time experience in your major city. Oil rig worker is a safer job than cab driver There's a mile-long slick, according the news. An explosion is the "system working"??? Just because there's oil on the water doesn't mean it came from the well. I'm sure they have diesel generators on the rig and you need to store the fuel. The explosion could have blown that up. Yes, they use diesel on the drilling rigs to power the EMD's, but usually they are not present on a production platform, as this one was. There may have been some avgas present for the choppers. Production platforms use natural gas straight from the wells, purified a little, to run their generators and pumps. I do notice that there was hysterical reporting of a slick a mile in size. And then, a report that the slick was not even close to that big, but much much smaller. Seems like only the first story got the publicity. Since there was not a lot of blood and gore, this event will get little play. I've been on rigs, and let me tell you, to evacuate during a fire like they did, and all get away safely is a testament to their training, preparation, equipment, safety procedures, company policies, and just doing everything right. They need to be commended, that's what the press should be touting now. The press loves it more when people screw up rather than do it right. Steve Heart surgery pending? Read up and prepare. Learn how to care for a friend. http://cabgbypasssurgery And, the regulations that prevented the fire/explosion worked perfectly! |
Another oil rig explodes in the Gulf
"Steve B" wrote in message ... "A.Boater" wrote in message ... **** is CAUSED to happen. Probably, yet another cost saving measure on behalf of some corporation. a la BP Were you born an idiot, or did you just practice a lot? Have you ever been on an offshore platform in your life? No human in their right mind sets their workplace on fire when there's no land within a hundred miles. There's good money in getting oil to land, not having burnouts. Sheesh. Steve - former oilfield worker It's caused to happen by loose or non-existent enforcement of regulations or the gutting of them. Apparently, you _were_ born an idiot or you had a lot of practice! |
Another oil rig explodes in the Gulf
"Wayne.B" wrote in message ... On Thu, 2 Sep 2010 14:13:07 -0700, "nom=de=plume" wrote: I agree that it may not have come from the well. Seems like a distinction without a difference. Oil in the water is still oil in the water. Actually there is a huge difference if you think about it: Oil from the platform equipment is finite and will stop relatively quickly; Oil from the well can take months to control as we have seen. But, in the case of BP, the shutoff valves did not work. This one, from what I see, the shutoffs worked, and with the slick being finally described as less than a mile big, there wasn't a lot of fluid lost from anything. The wells seem to have "shut in". Which means the closers worked and are holding the oil back. It IS a production rig, and that means that the wells have been drilled, and oil may be coming out under its own pressure. If any natural gas is present, that stuff is highly pressurized. Have you ever been boating, and noticed how big a sheen a tiny bit of gas makes? A mile long slick could be like a few hundred gallons, maybe less. Steve Heart surgery pending? Read up and prepare. Learn how to care for a friend. http://cabgbypasssurgery |
Another oil rig explodes in the Gulf
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Another oil rig explodes in the Gulf
In article ,
says... "John H" wrote in message ... On Sep 2, 4:42 pm, "nom=de=plume" wrote: "Steve B" wrote in message ... wrote in message .. . On Thu, 2 Sep 2010 10:24:08 -0700, "nom=de=plume" wrote: "Jordon" wrote in message ... http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2010/09/02/rescue-efforts-underway-after-oi... Drill baby drill Burn baby burn Lie baby lie This may actually be an example of the system working. If the reports are right there were no fatalities and no oil was spilled. That is better than the normal drive time experience in your major city. Oil rig worker is a safer job than cab driver I have been on rigs in that area. IIRC, I would guess the water to be no more than 200' deep, which doesn't compare to the 10,000 or so for the other one. They can get a floater in there REAL QUICK to do some remediation like drilling and placing a plug. When I worked on rigs from '74 to '80, there were several fires and capsizings and collapses. It was common. Also common was dumping cuttings overboard which resulted in a sheen for miles, but back then, the tree huggers hadn't gotten out that far, or got to be so strong. Glad to see the system worked pretty well, and happy that all the men are safe. That's the main thing. Steve Heart surgery pending? Read up and prepare. Learn how to care for a friend. http://cabgbypasssurgery So, dumping crap in the ocean is fine with you. Sheesh. Fires, explosions, people having to be rescued... if that's a system that works, I'd hate to be around a system that didn't. You're around the Obama presidency. It ain't working. WAFM! I'm "around" the Obama presidency? What the heck does that mean? You're a racist and a liar. You are a moron. |
Another oil rig explodes in the Gulf
In article , says...
On 9/2/10 5:53 PM, BAR wrote: In , says... http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2010/09/02/rescue-efforts-underway-after-oil-rig-accident-in-gulf/?hpt=T2 **** happens. Another one of the "so long as corporations are doing it, it's ok" right-wing assholes. Hey, spoofer, do you think we should buy our oil from the middle east instead? |
Another oil rig explodes in the Gulf
wrote Did you read the article? "Troedson said Thursday afternoon that Coast Guard boats and aircraft have not been able to find a sheen." It was the title of the article I bet more people remember the first article than subsequent ones, though. And I love the facial, body, and voice gyrations the press go through when they are explaining something they want people to take a certain way. And they all must have breakfast at IHOP where they get the keywords of the day. Hundreds of interviews nationwide every day, and every day, there's two or three new keyword phrases that mostly are Newspeak, and not really relevant to the topic. Steve Heart surgery pending? Read up and prepare. Learn how to care for a friend. http://cabgbypasssurgery.com |
Another oil rig explodes in the Gulf
"Steve B" wrote in message ... "Wayne.B" wrote in message ... On Thu, 2 Sep 2010 14:13:07 -0700, "nom=de=plume" wrote: I agree that it may not have come from the well. Seems like a distinction without a difference. Oil in the water is still oil in the water. Actually there is a huge difference if you think about it: Oil from the platform equipment is finite and will stop relatively quickly; Oil from the well can take months to control as we have seen. But, in the case of BP, the shutoff valves did not work. This one, from what I see, the shutoffs worked, and with the slick being finally described as less than a mile big, there wasn't a lot of fluid lost from anything. The wells seem to have "shut in". Which means the closers worked and are holding the oil back. It IS a production rig, and that means that the wells have been drilled, and oil may be coming out under its own pressure. If any natural gas is present, that stuff is highly pressurized. Have you ever been boating, and noticed how big a sheen a tiny bit of gas makes? A mile long slick could be like a few hundred gallons, maybe less. Steve Heart surgery pending? Read up and prepare. Learn how to care for a friend. http://cabgbypasssurgery So, I guess that the BOP worked. Great. At the failure rate of 40%, they got lucky. Tell us again about how the system worked with a fire, explosion, and people in the water? |
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