Posted on 02/03/2007 2:12:35 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Edited on 02/05/2007 6:01:59 AM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]
A plan to drop concrete balls into the mouth of a "mud volcano" in East Java to stem its flow should go into action next week, Indonesian scientists say. Hot mud and gas have been spewing out of the ground since May 2006; experts warn the torrent could continue for months, if not years, to come.
But the government-approved scheme could halt the flow within two to three months, the team behind the plan says. Other geophysicists said it was a "long shot", but "could be worth a try". Dr Umar Fauzi, who developed the idea with a team at the Bandung Institute of Technology, told the BBC News website the work was due to begin on 7 February, following approval from the government and the team managing the disaster. Engineers will drop 1,000 1.5m-long metal chains into the mouth of the mud leak. Each chain has four concrete balls suspended from it; two with a 20cm diameter and two with a 40cm diameter. They will begin slowly, Dr Fauzi explained; perhaps dropping five to 10 chains on the first day, then slowly increasing the number until they insert up to 50 chains per day. Company blamed "We aim to lower the chains deep down into the neck of the crater," he said. "This will not plug the volcano, but will force the mud to flow around the chain-balls, decreasing the mud's energy and slowing its flow." Dr Bagus Nurhandoko, who helped develop the scheme, told Nature magazine: "It will make the mud tired. We're killing the mud softly."
The team is uncertain exactly how long stemming the flow could take.
"We will monitor the reaction of the volcano as we progress," he told BBC News. "How long it will take to stop the flow depends on the reaction, but we think it will take maybe two to three months." The disaster, which began on 29 May 2006 in the Porong subdistrict of Sidoarjo in Eastern Java, close to Indonesia's second city of Surabaya, is thought to have been triggered by the drilling work of gas prospectors PT Lapindo Brantas.
The event has forced many thousand from their homes. The Indonesian government has been working to halt the mud with a network of dams and by channelling some of it into the sea, but with little success so far. The cost of this new scheme is estimated at 3 billion rupiah ($330,800); a government spokesman said PT Lapindo Brantas would pay the cost. The concrete balls method would cost less than other proposed schemes to halt the mud volcano, Dr Fauzi said. Brian Simpson, an engineer from Arup Geotechnics, said the plan was a "long shot" and would have to overcome many difficulties.
One of the problems, he said, was by slowing the mud down, you would inevitably create pressure, and this pressure could dislodge the blockage or force open another path. "However, saying that, when swallow holes or pipes form in dams, it is quite a normal procedure to throw in some fairly coarse material to gradually dam it up," he explained. What it might do, he added, would be to buy the Indonesian authorities some time to create a more effective and final solution. "However, now this volcano has been flowing for so long it is going to be extremely difficult to stop, but this scheme is probably worth a try, although I doubt it will work," he said. Professor Richard Davies, of the Department of Earth Sciences at Durham University, said: "This is completely unchartered territory - nobody has ever done this before. There is a possibility that the pressure may build, forcing open other vents, possibly exacerbating the situation." Dr Mads Huuse, a geophysicist at the University of Aberdeen, said: "I don't think this idea has ever been tried before.
"If the mud doesn't just whirl straight past these balls, it could work. "We think this is a man-made volcano caused by the drilling, and it could really go on for a very long while. Already 10,000-11,000 people are homeless," he added. "It would be wonderful for them if this works."
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Interesting way to stop a zit on the face of Mother Nature...
They only set surface casing and then continued to drill through overpressured mud to 9k feet, where they hit a high-pressure, high temp aquifer. That rocketed steam up the open hole and mobilized what could yet be years worth of plasticized clay formation 1k m thick. The cavern being created has got to be huge and has already resulted in substantial surface subsidence, so much so that two rigs working on relief wells were withdrawn. It will just flow until the system collapses on itself and snufs itself out. This baby could gush for years and the price tag is already well over $1 billion in damage. I guess sacrificing the goats and chickens to the mud gods has had no effect.
I am shaking my fist at the mud gods, but at least my goats and chickens are safe!
Thanks for editing and reposting.
Bump
Yikes! Thanks.
WOW!!
Even I am not this stupid and thackney has questioned my intelligence for years!
I thought you would find this interesting.
Awesome post, robt!
I think a small 1-2kt nuclear charge would work if detonated nearby at about 2,000' depth.
Relief wells after the initial series of screwups wpuld be the only option. Maybe they can get enough around the original bore and frac the Kujung with a frac fluid which will nail the formation up, reducing pressure to the area of the original wellbore. I have seen a bad frac wreck an otherwise good well, why not turn that around and use the same principle to damage the formation on purpose?
It would take a lot of wells, money, and time. Good luck with that.
Red Adair's guys used iron and lead balls, if I remember correctly, a couple of decades ago to help bottle up a nasty blowout in the Bay of Campeche, but it seems to me they had relief wells working it from the other direction as well, and iirc, there was casing in the hole.
I don't see them stopping this at the cavern, only getting outside of that area and stopping the formation from feeding the thing at depth.
Otherwise, it would be a real good time to find a commercial use for the mud...if nothing else, it might help fund trying to put a lid on it.
Wow. Thanks for reposting that. Dealing with corrupt 3rd worlders has to be an exasperating experience.
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