A second day of Congressional hearings in Washington that focussed on the blowout preventer on the BP-drilled well that has been leaking into the Gulf of Mexico for 23 days unabated, revealed, in essence, that blowout preventer’s failure could have averted the disastrous oil slick that officials say will eclipse the Exxon Valdez in volume if the well is not capped.
Meanwhile, Mississsippi’s second highest executive dismissed concerns of citizens who have been labouring under the heat and smell of oil blowing from the south on the Gulf and over land, telling them they were only smelling lawnmowers.
The oil and gas smell over the Gulf, which has been apparent to Bellona Web reporters for three weeks. Yesterday, Mississippi lieutenant Governor Phil Bryant was at a conference in Biloxi were several people complained they ciould smell gas coming in from the Gulf.
“No, you can’t,” was his terse reply. “That is not gasoline coming out of the Gulf, this not the Exxon Valdez.” He said the smell may be coming from people’s lawnmowers.
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| Mississippi Lieutenant Governor Phil Bryant tells Mississippi Gulf residents that they are smelling lawnmowers, not oil. |
| WLOX |
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| Will shimpers’ nets go empty west of the Mississippi River? |
| Barbara Groves for Bellona Web |
Clifford “Buster” Jonhson, skipper of the Roll Tide shrimp boat based out of Bayou La Batre, Alabama earlier this week weighed the possibility of faring the often shallow and narrow labyrinth of the intra-coastal waterway to return to trawl off Texas for the rest of the season.
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| The Roll Tide’s GPS system charting the intra-continental waterway. |
| Charles Digges/Bellona |
To add insult to injury for fisherman, Congressional hearings on the spill and its three principle industrial culprits – BP, Halliburton, Transocean, which leased the Deepwater Horizon rig to BP and Cameron, which built the blowout preventer – have revealed the gushing leak which has continued unabated from 5,000 feet below the sea for 22 days, could have been prevented.
In hearings yesterday it was revealed that the blowout preventer – meant as a fail safe to oil well spills – had a dead battery in its control pod, leaks in its hydraulic system, a "useless" test version of a key component and a cutting tool that wasn't strong enough to shear through steel joints in the well pipe and stop the flow of oil.
Documents and testimony from the companies’ executives, Representative Bart Stupak of Michigan said, exposed that the fail safe blowout preventer was anything but, Washington media reported.
In one exchange, Massachussetts Representative Edward J. Markey pressed BP on why it seemed to be "flailing" to deal with a spill only 2 percent as large as what it had said it could handle in its license application.
"The American people expect you to have a response comparable to the Apollo project, not 'Project Runway,' " Markey said on remarks broadcast on C-SPAN, the Congressional television network.
Steven Newman, chief executive of Transocean, responded that the blowout preventer underwent regular tests, and ,said links to the drilling rig would have indicated if the device's batteries were dead. He said, however, that data records were lost when the rig sank.
It was the second day of congressional hearings in response to the April 20 blowout that set fire to Transocean's Deepwater Horizon drilling rig, which sank on April 22nd and killed 11. The sunken rig triggered the spill, which now looms off the coast of Gulf States.
In Louisiana 25 birds have been found "oiled" in Louisiana, including seven that survived, said Sharon Taylor of the US Fish and Wildlife Service. She also said 87 sea turtles and six dolphins have been found dead along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, but added a familiar refrain that lab tests will be needed to determine whether they died from oil or other causes.
Off the Mississippi Coast, on the nature preserve of Ship Island, Bellona Web found an oiled bird on Sunday.
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| Dead catfish continue to wash up on Dauphin Island. |
| CW Wiley for Bellona Web |