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The First OilCane? What Happens If A Hurricane Rides Over The Oil Spill
Oil Price ^ | 6-24-2010 | Art Horn

Posted on 06/25/2010 2:10:13 PM PDT by blam

The First OilCane? What Happens If A Hurricane Rides Over The Oil Spill

Oil Price
Written by Art Horn
Thursday, 24 June 2010

The gulf oil spill is bad but it could become much, much worse and soon. The threat is a hurricane moving over the spill. If a hurricane’s violent winds track over the spill, we could witness a natural and economic calamity that history has never recorded anywhere or anytime. We will literally be in oil-soaked waters. We will have witnessed the first oilicane.

A category one hurricane (on a scale of 1 to 5) has maximum sustained winds of 74 to 95 miles per hour near the eye. A category five hurricane has maximum sustained winds of 156 to 200 miles per hour. The difference between the two storms is gigantic and non-linear. The latter hurricane may cause 250 times more damage than the former.

Water temperatures in the Atlantic Ocean are now running as warm or warmer than they did during the record setting season of 2005. This is significant. Warmer water means more heat and humidity over the tropical ocean to fuel hurricanes. Just as a car needs gasoline to fuel its engine, a hurricane needs hot, humid air because a hurricane is little more than a gigantic atmospheric engine. The warmer and more humid the air it breaths in, the faster its pistons pump and the stronger its winds become. The warmer water not only makes more hurricanes, it make more big ones. The 2005 season had a record 15 hurricanes. Nobody knows how many there will be this season. But it appears that it could be a big year.

Oil continues to gush out of the bottom of the gulf. Some progress has been made to reduce the amount escaping. Oil is washing up on shores and efforts are being made to clean it up. The good news is that most of the oil is confined to coastal areas. The bad news could come if a moderate to large hurricane rides over the spill.

The winds of a hurricane are so strong that the normal interface between ocean and atmosphere disappears. The winds begin to generate large waves. Spray is blown off the top of the waves. That spray mixes with the air so that after a short time there is no real boundary between what is ocean and what is the atmosphere. If a large hurricane moves over the spill, this chaotic mixture of water and air will inevitably also contain oil. The oil will become airborne and travel with the hurricane.

When hurricanes make landfall the winds push the ocean onto the land in what is called a storm surge. The height of the surge on land is dependent on several factors. The strength of the wind and the rate of forward motion of the storm is critical as to how much water is forced up onto the land. The diameter of the hurricane will also determine how much water is blown inland. The wider the storm the more water is pushed in and over a greater area. If the water is shallow offshore, the surge will be deeper on land. Naturally, the elevation of the land is important as well. The water off the gulf coast is shallow. The elevation inland is only a few feet. This area is prime territory for devastating and deeply penetrating storm surges.

Should a major hurricane push the spill towards the gulf coast there will be nothing that can be done to stop it. No amount of planning or engineering will help. No number of visits to the gulf by the president or any other official will stop the inevitable. The storm surge will drive the water and the oil miles inland. Everything in its path will be coated in a greasy bath of crude. Even the wind may have oil in it. In New England, I have seen hurricanes and tropical storms that have blown salt spray many miles inland from the coast. The leaves of the trees eventually turn brown and fall off. In the case of the gulf it will be oil that will spray the trees, buildings and everything else in the way. How far inland this oily mess will blow is anyone’s guess but it will be unprecedented in its economic and environmental damage.

The recovery period after a hurricane can take years. It was 10 years until some communities fully recovered from Hurricane Andrew in South Florida, some never recovered at all. The New Orleans area is still putting itself back together after Katrina in 2005. The recovery period after an oil-soaked hurricane -- or what could be called an Oilicane – is impossible to forecast but it could take years and many billions of dollars. One wonders if BP has the money to survive such a unique disaster. The human and natural losses from such an event could be historic.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bp; gulf; hurricane; oilspill
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To: blam
I've thought of two scenarios: One involves a hurricane storm surge that would send oil inland and deposit it there. With that comes the extreme danger of oil-fed wildfires. The other scenario says a hurricane could be the best thing to happen to dissolve the oil, especially if said hurricane remained at sea and never reached land. But I don't know how that could happen in the gulf. A hurricane the reaches land is NEVER a Good Thing.
21 posted on 06/25/2010 2:50:08 PM PDT by LiberConservative
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To: TwelveOfTwenty

Not calling you a liar, but.......when has a hurricane ever tracked over a gushing oil spill like the one going on in the gulf? I don’t think there has ever been one. Sure everyone (including arm chair scientists) think they know but really this will be a first if a hurricane does hit the gulf).


22 posted on 06/25/2010 2:51:00 PM PDT by stuck_in_new_orleans
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To: USFRIENDINVICTORIA

Thanks that’s what I meant. I used the other one yesterday and it was stuck in my head.


23 posted on 06/25/2010 2:52:52 PM PDT by ElkGroveDan (Now can we forget about that old rum-runner Joe Kennedy and his progeny of philandering drunks?)
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To: Anitius Severinus Boethius
Just imagine if the oil ignites, we could have a FIRECANE!

Those of us who live here can't wait to see what happens... thanks for a new - rather graphic - mental image of hell on earth for Floridians...

24 posted on 06/25/2010 2:55:35 PM PDT by GOPJ (http://www.portpublishing.com/Computer%20Based/retaildetailgmsea.htm)
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To: blam

What a pantload.


25 posted on 06/25/2010 2:56:24 PM PDT by A2J (Buck Religion)
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To: Minn
OK, this person is a bit late since i posted the theory a while back. National Hurricane Preparedness Week May 23-May 29 5/24/2010 3:45:34 AM · 12 of 45 Plumberman27 to NautiNurse Finally the season has arrived. With the oil spill that is this Obammas guys fault now we will have oil through the entire Gulf area and even far inland. He will be responsible for the greatest disaster in all of mankind. I can see the oil soaked building now. Is not it about time he got of his lazy ass and did at least one thing correct. this year. Then again a hurricane may it and sweep all the oil out to sea.

It may very beneficial to have a couple major hurricanes hit the area. The oil would be swept out to sea or blow inland and sink in the ground to be purified by natural means. Then again it might not hurt to have Little Rock Oil Rained on.

26 posted on 06/25/2010 2:57:28 PM PDT by Plumberman27
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To: ElkGroveDan
Lighten up Francis. The hurricane could break it up into a froth with droplets small enough to allow the sea water a chance to more effectively dissolve the oil. Nature is far more resilient than the liberal Pollyanna types would like to admit.

Yep, I agree with what you wrote. I'm taking notes on all the doomsday threads. Soon we will know which "experts" were right. Problem is, the doomsayers keep going strong even after they are discredited.

27 posted on 06/25/2010 3:00:13 PM PDT by BigBobber
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To: blam
The gulf oil spill is bad but it could become much, much worse and soon. The threat is a hurricane moving over the spill. If a hurricane’s violent winds track over the spill, we could witness a natural and economic calamity that history has never recorded anywhere or anytime. We will literally be in oil-soaked waters. We will have witnessed the first oilicane.

No doubt such an event would be unusual, perhaps unique.

But let's retain some perspective here. In 1931, the Yellow River in China flooded, killing as many as 4 million people. More recently, in 1970, a cyclone hit Bangladesh, killing about half a million. The Galveston hurricane of 1900 killed about 8,000.

I doubt the so-called "oilicane" would come anywhere close to those disasters in severity.

28 posted on 06/25/2010 3:01:38 PM PDT by Logophile
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To: ElkGroveDan

“... and it was stuck in my head.”

That happens to everyone.


29 posted on 06/25/2010 3:02:59 PM PDT by USFRIENDINVICTORIA
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To: Anitius Severinus Boethius

Imagine if a thunderstorm hit the slick just as a cheesey broadway musical set in the ‘50s was showing! You’ld have greased lightening!


30 posted on 06/25/2010 3:04:21 PM PDT by HospiceNurse
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To: GOPJ

Don’t you worry your little head about that. George W. Bush would never burn down the house of someone who voted for him with his FIRECANE. He only hates the poor and the Democrats.


31 posted on 06/25/2010 3:04:59 PM PDT by Anitius Severinus Boethius
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To: blam

32 posted on 06/25/2010 3:07:39 PM PDT by MARTIAL MONK (I'm waiting for the POP!)
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To: Anitius Severinus Boethius
"we could have a FIRECANE!"

We need to start spraying the Gulf with high-fructose corn syrup.

Then all we would have to worry about is the CANDYCANE.

33 posted on 06/25/2010 3:10:34 PM PDT by who_would_fardels_bear (These fragments I have shored against my ruins)
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To: stuck_in_new_orleans
when has a hurricane ever tracked over a gushing oil spill like the one going on in the gulf?

Hurricane Bob in 1979 in conjunction with the Ixtoc oil spill?

34 posted on 06/25/2010 3:10:47 PM PDT by Anitius Severinus Boethius
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To: blam

That’s not even the worst.
If the hurricane produces strong enough currents, its going to rock the 450 ton cap device they placed over the damaged well to catch some of the oil.
If that thing physicially takes out the wells blowout preventor, screw the OilCane. We are talking about an OilCANO. We are talking a complete unrestricted flow of oil out of the well. Such a quick release would not only create a mess 1000xs worse than what we have seen so far, it could actually cause an entire section of the sea floor to collapse.


35 posted on 06/25/2010 3:17:01 PM PDT by Proud_USA_Republican ("The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money.")
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To: Proud_USA_Republican

And then we all die!
Unless like in Hollywood we can find a safe place for us and our OWN family.
Oh, the Hugh Manatee!


36 posted on 06/25/2010 3:26:47 PM PDT by GOYAKLA (Flush Congress in 2010 & 2012)
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To: Proud_USA_Republican
Such a quick release would not only create a mess 1000xs worse than what we have seen so far, it could actually cause an entire section of the sea floor to collapse.

That could cause a tsunami that would wash all the way to St Louis!

37 posted on 06/25/2010 3:26:57 PM PDT by Leroy S. Mort
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To: Leroy S. Mort

Or Keokuk.


38 posted on 06/25/2010 3:34:54 PM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks (Impeachment !)
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To: ElkGroveDan

Exactly. It is certainly possible a hurricane could effectively “sweep” the Gulf and spread the oil in mist over thousands of square miles where it would basically go unnoticed by man or nature.


39 posted on 06/25/2010 3:48:51 PM PDT by Laserman
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To: skr
It certainly will disperse what’s floating around while the hurricane goes through, but the oil may be pushed further inland and upriver as well.

Correction, the oil would be pushed up rivers and inland....One could imagine tens of millions of oil coated plants and surface vegetation in 75-100 mph sustained winds, storm surges etc.......

40 posted on 06/25/2010 4:06:50 PM PDT by dragnet2
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