Energy News  
ENERGY TECH
Obama loses drilling moratorium appeal

US criminal probe into oil spill ongoing: attorney general
Washington (AFP) July 11, 2010 - The US Justice Department is still investigating the causes of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill to determine whether to bring criminal charges, Attorney General Eric Holder said Sunday. "The investigation is ongoing. We are in the process of accumulating documents, talking to witnesses on both the criminal side and the civil side," he told CBS "Face the Nation." But Holder said there was no timetable to decide whether charges would be brought against BP, which leased the Deepwater Horizon rig from Transocean, the world's largest offshore drilling contractor based in Houston, Texas.

The rig exploded on April 20 killing 11 workers and then sank two days later, unleashing the nation's worst ever environmental disaster with tens of thousands of barrels of crude gushing into the sea every day. "Our primary concern at this point is getting the spill stopped," Holder said, as the crisis entered it 13th week and BP engineers raced to install a new cap the British energy giant hopes will contain all the leaking crude. A system installed by robotic submarines a mile down on the sea floor has been siphoning up oil to surface vessels for the past few weeks, but the slick has washed ashore in four southern US states, devastating industries such as fishing and tourism. Holder was quick to stress that when he announced the probe on June 1, he had been careful not to mention BP by name as it was not the only party involved with the Deepwater Horizon rig.

"What I did say was that we had opened a criminal investigation but did not indicate who the subject of the investigation was," Holder said. "And that is a very serious thing because there are a variety of entities and a variety of people who are the subjects of that investigation. And for people to conclude that BP is the focus of this investigation might not be correct." At congressional hearings back in May, BP, Transocean and Halliburton blamed each other for the spill as executives from all three oil titans were grilled by US lawmakers. BP says rig owner Transocean was responsible for the failure of the giant blowout preventer valve which made it impossible to regain control of the well, but Transocean said all the operations were run by BP. The finger was also pointed at Halliburton, the oil services company which was responsible for vital cement work around the wellhead, which should have sealed the exploratory well until full production began.
by Staff Writers
New Orleans, Louisiana (AFP) July 9, 2010
The Obama administration lost its bid to keep a six-month freeze on offshore drilling, and BP was to outline Friday its next steps to cap the well gushing oil into the Gulf of Mexico.

A federal judge blocked the deepwater drilling moratorium last month after 32 oil companies and local officials argued it was causing irreparable economic harm.

The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals on Thursday denied the administration's emergency request to stay that judge's order pending appeal.

The government failed to show "a likelihood of irreparable injury if the stay is not granted," the appeals panel judges wrote in a 2-1 ruling.

The government also "made no showing that there is any likelihood that drilling activities will be resumed pending appeal."

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has said he will soon issue a new order to block deepwater drilling regardless of how the court ruled, and oil companies have not resumed operations due to the legal uncertainties.

The court noted that Salazar "has the right to apply for emergency relief if he can show that drilling activity by deepwater rigs has commenced or is about to commence."

Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal hailed the court's decision but expressed concern that the uncertainty has created a "de facto moratorium" which could cost the state 20,000 jobs.

"The federal government has an entire agency dedicated to monitoring safe drilling," Jindal said in a statement.

"It shouldn't take them six months or longer for a new national commission to ensure safety measures are in place and their laws and regulations are being followed."

Meanwhile, US officials ordered BP to outline by Friday afternoon its next steps in the fight to stop the spill, saying efforts to cap a blown out well were entering a "critical stage."

After days of high winds hampered clean-up and containment efforts, forecasters are predicting seven to eight days of good weather, and the US administration is keen to press ahead before the Atlantic hurricane season truly gets underway.

BP is preparing to replace the containment cap on the ruptured wellhead with a more secure seal and hook up a third containment ship to the system in a bid to capture nearly all the gushing oil.

"The sea is calming, which gives us the window in what... we now understand as an extremely active tropical storm and hurricane season," a senior US official told journalists.

A new well cap would give engineers greater flexibility if they have to move the containment ships quickly because of an approaching storm.

But before the administration gives BP permission to go ahead, it wants detailed timetables for the steps ahead and contingency plans in case things go wrong.

BP managing director Bob Dudley said earlier Thursday that the firm was hoping to permanently cap the gushing well ahead of schedule, as early as July 27, when the troubled energy giant reports second-quarter earnings.

It is the first time BP has set a fixed target date for ending the disaster, and is ahead of a mid-August time frame outlined by the government for completing two relief wells to seal the leak.

But US officials remained cautious about the date, stung by a string of botched efforts to contain the massive spill now in its 11th week.

If the relief wells can be completed ahead of schedule "we can all jump for joy," said Admiral Thad Allen, Washington's pointman on the disaster, adding the government's mid-August target was more of a "realistic expectation."

Dudley conceded in an interview with The Wall Street Journal that the company's "perfect case" deadkine, threatened by the rough weathers of hurricane season, was "unlikely."

An estimated two to four million barrels of oil have gushed into the Gulf of Mexico since the catastrophic April 20 explosion destroyed the BP-leased Deepwater Horizon drilling rig and killed 11 workers.

Oil has now washed up on 519 miles (835 kilometers) of shoreline across all five Gulf states -- Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida, forced the closure of vast areas of fishing grounds and threatened scores of coastal communities with financial ruin.

BP said Thursday more than 100,000 spill-related compensation claims have now been filed against the company.

Ken Feinberg, the US lawyer overseeing BP's 20-billion-dollar disaster fund, said there was "no cap" on the fund, and that the firm would still be on the hook for claims payments should they exceed the 20 billion.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


ENERGY TECH
Nigeria faces specter of new oil violence
Abuja, Nigeria (UPI) Jul 8, 2010
Recent attacks on two cargo ships off Nigeria's oil-rich Niger Delta and a resurgence of kidnappings has stirred fears the oil industry in the south faces a renewed insurgency that has slashed production by one-third. But the country's new president, Goodluck Jonathan, a southerner himself, is making a determined effort to head off a new explosion of violence in the oil fields at a time ... read more







ENERGY TECH
National Clean Fuels Angling To Be Major Player In G-20 Carbon Market

New System To Reduce Heating Costs In Cold Climates

Hydro, Wave, And Tidal Power Market Outlook Bright

EU investigating Electrabel over dominant position

ENERGY TECH
Obama loses drilling moratorium appeal

A few patches of tar empty Biloxi's white sand beaches

Oil companies reeling from drilling moratorium uncertainty

BP 'pleased' with progress of oil fix mission

ENERGY TECH
Study Shows Stability And Utility Of Floating Wind Turbines

Leading French Wind Farm Developer Says Yes To Triton

Floating ocean wind turbines proposed

China to dominate wind power

ENERGY TECH
Pennsylvania Invests 18 Million Dollars To Support Alternative Energy Projects

Understanding Solar PV Cost And Financing Estimators

Abound Solar Receieves Conditional Commitment For Loan Guarantee By US DoE

Third In Series Of Italian Solar Power Plants Now Operational

ENERGY TECH
Nuclear Power Market Outlook For Developing Countries

Canadian medical reactor gets nod to restart

Areva negotiating two more EPR reactors with China: CEO

'Atomic Anne' Lauvergeon stays in power at Areva: source

ENERGY TECH
Philippines gets funding for green energy

New Biofuels Processing Method For Mobile Facilities

Energy Crops Growing On Seawater

New Ethanol Fact Book Highlights Benefits Of U.S. Ethanol Program

ENERGY TECH
China Sends Research Satellite Into Space

China eyes Argentina for space antenna

Seven More For Shenzhou

China Signs Up First Female Astronauts

ENERGY TECH
Researchers Calculate The Cost Of Co2 Emissions, Call For Carbon Tax

Research Helps Predict Future Impact Of Climate Change

British climate change scientists cleared of dishonesty

China to host new round of climate talks in October: report


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement