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This is an archive article published on June 24, 2010

Problem with cap causes more oil to gush

BP suffered another setback in the Gulf of Mexico on Wednesday,when a discharge of liquid and gases forced the company to remove the containment cap that for three weeks....

BP suffered another setback in the Gulf of Mexico on Wednesday,when a discharge of liquid and gases forced the company to remove the containment cap that for three weeks had been able to capture a large portion of the oil gushing from its damaged well.

Adm Thad W Allen of the Coast Guard,at a mid-day briefing in Washington,said a remote-controlled submersible operating a mile beneath the surface had most likely bumped a vent and compromised the system. Live video from the seafloor showed oil and gas storming out of the well unrestricted.

This was yet another complication in BPs two-month-old struggle to contain the tens of thousands of barrels of oil spewing into the gulf.

On Tuesday,BP said it had been able to capture 16,665 barrels of oil through its containment cap,two-thirds of the total recovery operation. Another system,connected to a Q4000 vessel,is still operating since it is connected through a separate pipe near the seabed,rather than directly atop the failed blowout preventer. This system siphons the oil and gas and then burns it on the ship. But at 8.45 am on Wednesday,workers noticed liquids escaping from a valve connected to the Discoverer Enterprise drill ship collecting the oil.

 

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