Posted on 06/30/2010 8:41:54 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
BP has confirmed that the failed blowout preventer (BOP) on its Deepwater Horizon well in the Gulf of Mexico is tilting sideways at an acute angle 12 to 15 degrees from perpendicular. Geologists and petroleum engineers are now debating the worst case scenario: growing evidence that the Macondo discovery wells casings beneath the ocean floor have been irreversibly damaged, possibly to such an extent that it may be impossible to cap the well.
The Deepwater Horizon had recently completed promising exploratory drilling to a vertical depth of about 18,000 feet (3.4 miles as measured from the rig floor), not including vertical depth to canyon floor (about 5,000 feet) when it exploded as the rig crew prepped a temporary seal for the well on April 20.
BP spokesperson Toby Odone acknowledged to reporters last week that the 45-ton BOP was tilting, which the company attributed to a shift in the collapsed riser piping (from the rig accident).
Since the failure of last months top-kill effort to stem the flow, knowledgeable scientists have argued about the potential significance of BPs inability to maintain enough topside pressure to squash the column of superheated fluids erupting upward during the plugging efforts. One popular hypothesis making the rounds online is that the underground well casing is fractured beyond repair. Some geologists and petroleum engineers argue that the top-kill failure could have resulted from too much kill mud leaking out of cracked pipe casings into the surrounding rock formation instead of flowing deeper into the well.
BP cites a broken disk inside the well as the cause of the top-kill failure. Admiral Thad Allen, the incident commander for the BP oil spill response, has confirmed on recent conference call updates that structural problems in the well casing of the sunken Deepwater Horizon rig cannot be ruled out. Commenting on BPs decision to halt the top-kill contingency, Allen President Obamas point person said:
There was some discussion at that point about the uncertainty of the of the condition of the casings in the wellbore which you would want to do is drive so much mud down there and such a pressure that you might cause a problem and the problem was they (scientific summit that included Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and Energy Secretary Steven Chu) didnt know and they still dont know the condition of the wellbore. For that reason, they erred on the side of safety on how much pressure they would exert, and when they got near those pressures without having success in killing the well killing the well, thats when they backed off.
We know little about the underlying geology of the spill site since BP has held that information close, claiming that its proprietary data. Scientists are clamoring for BP to publicly release geological survey data on the underlying Lower Teriary formations (rock layer formed 65 million to 250 million years ago). Remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) are streaming video feeds of high pressure columns of oil and gas bubbling up from fissures in the sea floor flowing from likely stress fractures in the underground piping.
A much talked-about anonymous posting at The Oil Drum, a blog often frequented by petroleum engineers and other oil-industry specialists, captures the fears of many scientists and environmentalists alike:
That the system below the sea floor has serious failures of varying magnitude in the complicated chain, and it is breaking down and it will continue to.
What does this mean? It means they will never cap the gusher after the wellhead. They cannot the more they try and restrict the oil gushing out the bop [blowout preventer]? the more it will transfer to the leaks below. Just like a leaky garden hose with a nozzle on it.
Don Van Nieuwenhuise, director of geoscience programs at University of Houston, told New Orleans Times-Picayune reporter Rebecca Mowbray that BP ran out of casing sections before it hit the reservoir of oil, so it switched to an inferior material something called liner for the remainder of the well. Consequently, the BP well has several weak spots that the highly pressurized oil could exploit. Specifically, the joints between two sections of liner pipe and the joint where the liner pipe meets the casing could be weak, said Van Nieuwenhuise.
Nieuwenhuise added that efforts by BP to try to stop the oil or gain control of it have been tantamount to repeatedly hitting the well with a hammer and sending shock waves down the pipe. I dont think people realize how delicate it is, he told the paper. Nonetheless, Van Nieuwenhuise believes oil from a blown out well rupturing the casing and bubbling up through the ocean floor is unlikely a worst-case scenario as he s never actually heard of such an occurrence.
Weak joints, shock waves down the pipe, cracks and fissures in the sea bed does a down-hole blowout seem such a remote worst-case scenario? Oh, and lets not forget the incessant, abrasive-mixed plume of oil, natural gas, and itty-bitty grains of sediment surging through the drill piping at incredible pressures. Anyone care to wager the integrity of the pipe liner aint what it used to be after having been effectively sandblasted for the last 70 days?
The late Larry Flak, an engineer recognized the world over for his acumen in containing deepwater well blowouts, presciently warned back in 1997 (before drilling at depths of 30,000+ feet was feasible) of the dangers ultra-deepwater blowouts might pose:
Underground blowout risk is substantial in ultra deepwater wells . Blowout control options in ultra-deepwater are very limited. Blowout prevention is of paramount importance.
Accusations are flying that BP has shifted its efforts from plugging the leak to outflow capture specifically in order to relieve hydrostatic pressure in the reservoir below the piping. The reservoir drive pressure, however, shows no signs of abating, as an estimated 35,000 to 60,000 barrels of oil continue billowing daily through the wellbore.
Flak does admit that nature could intervene if the strata above the reservoir is layered with more hard rock than permeable carbonate, the weight of thousands of feet of ocean and rock buckling under tremendous top-down pressure could create a natural bridge that plugs ruptured fissures in the reservoir rock.
Bob Bea, prominent petroleum engineering professor at UC Berkeley and an expert in offshore drilling and government advisor on causes of manmade disasters (like Hurricane Katrina), believes a worst-case scenario is not that far-fetched. In response to a question posed by Mowbray, Bea said, Yes there is reason to think that oil is leaking from the well outside the containment cap.
The likelihood of failure is extremely high. We could have multiple losses of containment, and thats going to provide much more difficult time of trying to capture this [oil].
The anonymous posting at Oil Drum also postulates that the weakened casing is literally clinging to the wellhead via the damaged riser piping like a clump of soil hanging to an uprooted tree. The commenter theorizes that if the 450 tons of riser containment piping and BOP equipment lean too much, the whole system would crash to the sea fool, ripping away the weakened rock. Moreover, the already weakened sea bottom beyond the wellbore (eroded by up to 100,000 pounds per square inch of corrosive fluid pressure seeking escape upward from the leaks in the undersea piping) would crack wide open like ice on a pond. Should this occur, one of three scenarios may occur (presented here from best-case scenario to worst):
Benign rockslides at nearby canyon walls, coupled with natural bridge formation, plug the oil leak. An exposed reservoir opening bleeds 150,000 barrels of oil a day daily until natural hydrostatic pressures from above and below the surface equalize think two opposing teams in a tug-of-war running out of energy and calling the game a draw turning off the leak. Weakened sand and salt layers above the reservoir simply collapse, turning a wide area of the outer continental shelf sea floor into an underwater sinkhole that could bleed 2 billion to 3 billion barrels of oil into Gulf waters. In addition, seismic-shock tremors roll in all directions for miles, with an unknown effect on other nearby fields, especially BPs Thunder Horse (18 miles) field and Shell and BPs Na Kika complex, located in Mississippi Canyon Block 474 (approximately 15 miles south-southeast of the blowout).
Tropical storm Alex rolling through Yucatan Peninsula in southeastern Mexico, and now nearing hurrican strength is another somber reminder of headwinds BP faces with cleanup and lockdown efforts: A major hurricane in Gulf waters could burst pipelines and topple drilling rigs, say scientists at the Naval Research Lab at the Stennis Space Center.
The race is on. Bottom-kill plug relief well efforts are still (at least) a month and a half away. Can the wellbore hold up that long? And, will relief wells even if successful change the outcome? Watch your undersea video feeds.
Uh, remember after the passage of Obamacare, King Barry was mocking the American people by saying, "I don't see any asteroids falling out of the sky. I don't see any cracks opening up in the earth."
His mocking was oddly creepy when he did it and worse now.
You don’t need casing to plug a well via a relief well. The operative factors include being able to introduce kill mud to shut down the flow, and cenent to plug off the producing zone. That can be done in open hole or cased hole, so long as fluid can flow through the hole from bottom to top.
We shall see.
That the system below the sea floor has serious failures of varying magnitude in the complicated chain, and it is breaking down and it will continue to.
What does this mean? It means they will never cap the gusher after the wellhead. They cannot the more they try and restrict the oil gushing out the bop [blowout preventer]? the more it will transfer to the leaks below. Just like a leaky garden hose with a nozzle on it.
IIRC, this area under the Gulf had a major earthquake in 2006. Wonder if that started a process of underground formation movement that made pipe failure likely.
Choppy isn’t a problem. Waves have a sounding depth of about about half their wavelength. You’d need a wave with a two mile wavelength to even stir the mud on the bottom a little.
When that CAP was moving a lot earlier today, the backside RV (Enterprise : ROV 1) showed some nasty up and down motion. You could just about feel the mass from that cap smashing down into the BOP. That puppies life span is getting shorter every day. Found a WSJ article that stated seas were up to 7 feet high at the site. They probably should disconnect in seas higher then 4 feet, IMHO.
bttt
Yes, this is quite odd. And the media quietly going along with it is even odder.
Flames??? 5000 feet down??? Maybe from over firing dat doob dude.
Then they will cut the entire BOP off the bore and fill the casing and drill pipe inside it with cement.
Well, that should impact illegal immigration, at least for a while. Yikes.
Well could be killed in 14 days, they think, but company sticks to August date
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/business/deepwaterhorizon/7086967.html
The boat is connected to the collection tube and the collection tube is connected to the CAP. Not moving freestanding mud. Moving a collection boat on the surface dragging a big anchor weight (CAP).
I dont know.
I heard some fellow who was big money in the business that said the casing is shot and the geology is problematic.
He concluded the relief wells will fail
Plug the damn hole!
It isn’t the waves disturbing the bottom.
It is the cables attached to the ships, and to the caps.
The waves are making moving the ships up and down. Unless you see a physics problem with that.
: )
Or perhaps you have another explanation for why the CAP was seen by me, and countless others, bouncing all over the top of the BOP.
And up through the ground came a bubblin crude.....Oil that is, black gold, Texas tea.
An earthquake would not have to be directly at the well site to nevertheless cause or put in motion future shifting and crumbling of the rock layers and formations under the Gulf.
The coast guard is well aware of these seeps, which is are the source of most tar balls that have been washing up on gulf coast beaches well before Louisiana was a wet dream in some Frenchman's mind.
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