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Oil rigs leaving Gulf of Mexico over drill ban: official

Costner touts technology for Gulf spill cleanup
Washington (AFP) June 9, 2010 - Hollywood star Kevin Costner urged Congress Wednesday to weigh a technology he invested more than 20 million dollars in that could be used to separate oil from water in the disastrous Gulf of Mexico spill. "I know there must be question why I am here, I want to assure every one in the room that it's not because I heard a voice in the cornfield," Costner joked, referring to his role in the film "The Field of Dreams," in which he played a farmer who heard voices telling him to build a ballpark in his corn field. Costner, star of the post-apocalyptic classic "Waterworld," said he was deeply affected by the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill and that convinced him to use personal resources to develop technologies to help people and the environment.

"Today that technology (CINC) is the most effective and efficient tool for cleaning up oil spills that you have probably never heard of," he explained. "I envisioned the machine as a safety device, compact and portable enough that it could be deployed on a small craft and rugged enough to operate reliably in rough seas." Costner said oil giant BP, struggling with the worst ever US oil spill, was interested in the technology. "Our machine is the right machine for the moment," said Costner. After successful tests, "BP is now moving to place initial orders (of) these machines and they acknowledged they do the job."
by Staff Writers
New Orleans, Louisiana (AFP) June 9, 2010
A Louisiana official said oil firms have begun pulling rigs out of the Gulf of Mexico since US President Barack Obama declared a six-month halt to deepwater drilling after an accident prompted the worst oil spill in US history.

"Already, three rigs have left or are in the process of leaving the Gulf of Mexico," Chett Chiasson, executive director of the port commission for the town of Port Fourchon, which services 90 percent of deepwater activity in the Gulf, told AFP.

"If this moratorium goes for six months, these rig operators and these oil companies will have no choice but to go somewhere else," with a devastating impact on jobs and the economy of Louisiana and the rest of the United States, said Chiasson.

A spokesman for Anadarko Petroleum Corporation, which leased and operated the three rigs, said the company had "notified three of our rig contractors that we were terminating our contract because with a six-month moratorium on exploration and appraisal drilling in the Gulf, there's no work for those rigs."

But he was unable to confirm that the rigs, which belong to three separate companies, were being physically removed from the Gulf of Mexico.

Obama extended the moratorium on deepwater drilling to give a presidential commission time to investigate what caused the April accident on a BP-leased rig that claimed the lives of 11 workers and fouled the sea and sensitive coastal areas with tens of millions of gallons of oil.

Last week BP placed a containment device over the blown out well, located 50 miles (80 kilometers) off Louisiana, and said it is capturing almost 630,000 gallons of oil a day. But large amounts of oil are still pouring into the Gulf.

All 33 rigs that are affected by the moratorium are serviced out of Port Fourchon.

In a survey conducted by the port commission, companies in Port Fourchon said the drilling moratorium could force them to lay off 50 to 60 percent of their staff, or more than 4,000 people, said Chiasson.

The moratorium comes on top of a severely curtailed fishing and shrimping season in Louisiana.

According to Chiasson, two-thirds of households in southern Louisiana work in the oil industry and the other third works in fishing.

The shutdown of the two key industries for most of this year would have "a cascading effect" on the region and would result in heavy job losses in Louisiana and around the United States, warned Chiasson.



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ENERGY TECH
US lawmakers summon top oil firm bosses
Washington (AFP) June 9, 2010
A key US House committee said Wednesday it had invited top executives from major oil companies to face drilling safety questions amid deep public anger at the catastrophic Gulf of Mexico spill. The House Energy and Environment Subcommittee sent letters to the heads of ExxonMobil, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, BP America and Shell oil calling on them to appear at a June 15 hearing, the panel said ... read more







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