Where’s the Oil Spill?

Where did the oil go?

That's the question being asked in the Gulf of Mexico these days. It appears the oil has dissipated much faster than expected.

As The New York Times says today, reporters flying over the Gulf are spotting "only a few patches of sheen and an occasional streak of thicker oil" while others are seeing only a few tar balls and emulsified oil "here and there."

Is the oil hiding? Or as Peter at OPNTALK facetiously asks, has it been stolen, or is it simply "lounging" below the surface? No.

It's likely that much of the Macondo's sweet crude evaporated on the water's surface, was weathered and broken down by Gulf storms, or was consumed by the oil-eating bacteria that have been living on oil from naturally-occurring seeps since the beginning of time.

The successful deployment of a tightly-fitting cap stopped the oil from flowing about two weeks ago. And soon drilling engineers will intercept Macondo with a relief well and begin to pump heavy drilling fluids and cement into the well to kill it permanently.

Today BP reported that the crew onboard the Deepwater Driller III has removed the storm packer--the device used to safely stop operations when Tropical Storm Bonnie buffeted the Gulf--and was preparing to commence drilling again. The relief well is said to be ahead of schedule and could kill the Macondo well during the first week of August.

Despite the apparent good news from the Gulf, the administration's deepwater drilling moratorium and new requirements are continuing to slow energy development. According to government data, only two new offshore wells have been approved since the Deepwater Horizon accident in April.

Comments

Related

Blog Posts

Oil Sands, Refined Products, and Exports: Just the Fact...

U.S. Crude Oil Stays in the United States. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), in 2011, 99.7 percent of...

Blog Posts

The Difference between Extreme and Efficient

There was a time in this country when the only way to access oil was to commission a boat, take it offshore, locate, engage and coa...

Blog Posts

Did Someone Mention Supply Matters?

So, a couple of weeks ago the Associated Press reported on its own special investigation into whether increased domestic oil explor...

Blog Posts

The President’s Actions, and Rising Prices

Is President Obama the “anti-energy” president, as former Gov. Pete Du Pont argues in an op-ed piece for the Wall Street Journal (s...

Blog Posts

Bunk on Oil Issues

Normally, we don’t bother with blog posts from the Center for American Progress on oil issues because, to borrow from an old saying...

Blog Posts

Raising Energy Taxes – The Wrong Approach

Update: The U.S. Senate failed to reach the 60 votes needed to invoke cloture and the motion failed 51-47. (29 Mar 2012) Today th...

Blog Posts

More on Moving Global Markets

The Marshall Institute’s William O’Keefe has a must-read on Fuel Fix for folks puzzled by the recent AP analysis that discounted th...

Blog Posts

Itching for Floor Fight Over Higher Energy Taxes

Why did energy supporters in the U.S. Senate stand aside to allow consideration of legislation they oppose – raising taxes on Ameri...

Blog Posts

Working Through the Tax Hike Spin

With the U.S. Senate getting ready to debate proposals that would raise taxes on American energy companies, the White House blog sp...

Blog Posts

Study: EPA’s Tier III Proposal Would Increase Fuel-Ma...

At a time when just everyone is understandably concerned about fuel prices, EPA apparently didn’t get the memo. Its latest thinking...

Blog Posts

‘Markets Moved By Expectations’

Opponents of increased domestic production of oil and natural gas like to point out that oil is a world-wide market – which it is –...

Blog Posts

Throwing Down An Energy Challenge

Let’s talk about a fundamental difference of opinion on the key energy issue of the day. We say crude oil supply matters – in the...

Blog Posts

To the President’s Ear on Energy

As the president hits the road to talk about energy, he should first listen to what the American people are saying, reflected in tw...

Blog Posts

Taking the President’s Energy Rhetoric to Task

The more the president talks about energy, the more heat he creates for himself. Here’s the Washington Post’s Fact Checker, weighin...

Blog Posts

Oil & Gas Development on Federal Lands and Waters

The White House had a post up last week with some numbers on production of oil and natural gas on America’s public lands and offsho...

Blog Posts

The President’s Fuzzy Energy Future

Yesterday President Obama gave a campaign speech centered around energy policy.  In it he said: “There’s a problem with a stra...

Blog Posts

Oil Supply – Yes We Can

Opponents of increased domestic oil production like to portray the U.S. as being helpless in the face of worldwide events.  This ar...

Blog Posts

A Paucity of Scarcity

Steve Maley calls it The Big Energy Lie, the continued use of reserve estimates by those who want to end the use of hydrocarbons in...

Blog Posts

Center for Offshore Safety Names Director, Former Shell...

The naming of Charlie Williams as the first executive director of the new Center for Offshore Safety marks an important milestone i...

Stay Connected