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BP Spill : The truth of the situation

It has nothing to do with standards, the jones act was put into place to protect US shipping interests.

Do you have a link suggesting this is a reason the jones act is not being lifted?

What requests have been granted waiving the jones act. One would think the dutch would be as capable as kevin costner at this, no?

Go to this thread and read post #46. It should answer most of your questions.
 
Now, with that information : since there's been reports involving secondary plumes found up to 20 km away, which is denied by BP (Can't find the NOAA source again, sorry)
The Associated Press: BP CEO disputes claims of underwater oil plumes

There has been a lot of what seems to be miscommunication going on between everyone in the gov, bp, and the media. I don't think NOAA found a second source of oil leaking, it seems like they have found a submersed plume miles from the leaking well... with hydrocarbon counts in the PPM-PPB range. I could be wrong here, but that is what I have concluded after gathering info from multiple sources.

is it POSSIBLE, That they had been drilling with a higher MW then was reported??

Anything is possible I guess... likely?... no.

I am pushing this because, frankly, while I don't believe this to be the result of any sort of conspiracy, I also don't believe that we the people are being entirely told the truth of the matter...

Frankly, you are right. The casing is leaking downhole and nobody at BP or within the gov is officially stating that.

there's something going on that's causing the numerous failures in actually stopping the flow of this leak.

Because of the casing leak, the efforts to kill it from the top all failed. Containment/collection until relief well intercept is the only solution that will work.
 
I read it. And I think the fear of a sailor being injured is a stretch. :shrug:

Yeah... what, we can't provide medical assistance to a foreigner that is HELPING clean up the spill? What a crock. The way I see it, no foreign help was accepted because government wanted the contracts/$$$$ to go to AMERICANS. Most of the time I would agree with this. During a disaster when time is critical, not so much.
 
There has been a lot of what seems to be miscommunication going on between everyone in the gov, bp, and the media. I don't think NOAA found a second source of oil leaking, it seems like they have found a submersed plume miles from the leaking well... with hydrocarbon counts in the PPM-PPB range. I could be wrong here, but that is what I have concluded after gathering info from multiple sources.

So, something like a portion of the original leak that caught a different current ?? I could see something like that occuring, I mean oil will generally rise to the top, but you can push a beach ball underwater.

Anything is possible I guess... likely?... no.
I'm just saying that, is the reported mud weight that's somthing that requires premade mud being shipped in and has a paper trail, or is it 'corporate trade secrets' and BP just spit out a number that would lowball the estimates so that they could try to downplay the incident... not that it could be rediculously higher, because as you pointed out, the rocks in the region create a 'speed limit' from being able to drill proper.

Frankly, you are right. The casing is leaking downhole and nobody at BP or within the gov is officially stating that.

Thank you, that's pretty much the information I was looking for... because seriously, from the moment this incident was going on, first it was a puddle of oil then 1000barrels per hour, then 10000, then 20, then 30 ,then 40, and the last articles I've been seeing are saying up to 60000. You seem to know enough about the intricacies to allow me to drill you... and that completely solves the issue of what exactly is being covered up. We can then talk about how this is being used politically to accomplish certain agendas... consider, once oil companies begin to fail because of the 'new rules' that were promised by Obama to 'kick a$$', which my bottom dollar will be some form of 'we're going to put an environmental tax for this that will hit BP really hard, it'll cost you a dollar but we'll get BP'. Then, the foot is in the door.... the carbon taxes that have been every environmentalists wet dream for the past 5 years or more (I would argue up to 30years, but for the sake of argument). It's a dollar for you in your tax bill that will barely be noticed, will promise to hit BP for millions... and if they DO fail because of the cleanup efforts, they will be 'bailed out' and suddenly Obama will take over oil companies like he's essentially nationalized GM,

Because of the casing leak, the efforts to kill it from the top all failed. Containment/collection until relief well intercept is the only solution that will work.

I would put the calulation would be along the lines of IF (Cost of containment daily * (estimated amount of oil * estimated number of days to empty) + (Cost of cleanup) > (cost of paying for that nuclear weapon that gets laughed off by the real experts)+ (Cost of drilling diagonally to an area along the pipe) + ((Cost of this all)*(the time it will take to accomplish in manhours)) + (Cost of redrilling the whole pipeline, or their next endeavor) + (Cost of cleanup) THEN carry on with the cleanup and standard attempts at fixing the leak, IF NOT then start the nuclear bomb proces... in the minds of the of the CEO's responsible whose interest is in preserving stock value through this process long enough to keep their bonuses.

I'm sure they all realize that they are likely losing their jobs... not that they wouldn't get hired for anything else...
 
So, something like a portion of the original leak that caught a different current ?? I could see something like that occuring, I mean oil will generally rise to the top, but you can push a beach ball underwater.

That's more along what I was thinking... the dispersants are a big part of it.


I'm just saying that, is the reported mud weight that's somthing that requires premade mud being shipped in and has a paper trail, or is it 'corporate trade secrets' and BP just spit out a number that would lowball the estimates so that they could try to downplay the incident...

The MW was reported by the rig operators, not BP.

Thank you, that's pretty much the information I was looking for... because seriously, from the moment this incident was going on, first it was a puddle of oil then 1000barrels per hour, then 10000, then 20, then 30 ,then 40, and the last articles I've been seeing are saying up to 60000.

Yeah they lowballed it bigtime in the beginning... but you have to remember that under these pressures and flow rates, things are eroding. The leak is probably flowing a lot more now than it was when it started.

You seem to know enough about the intricacies to allow me to drill you... and that completely solves the issue of what exactly is being covered up. We can then talk about how this is being used politically to accomplish certain agendas... consider, once oil companies begin to fail because of the 'new rules' that were promised by Obama to 'kick a$$', which my bottom dollar will be some form of 'we're going to put an environmental tax for this that will hit BP really hard, it'll cost you a dollar but we'll get BP'. Then, the foot is in the door.... the carbon taxes that have been every environmentalists wet dream for the past 5 years or more (I would argue up to 30years, but for the sake of argument). It's a dollar for you in your tax bill that will barely be noticed, will promise to hit BP for millions... and if they DO fail because of the cleanup efforts, they will be 'bailed out' and suddenly Obama will take over oil companies like he's essentially nationalized GM,

It would not surprise in the least to see the gov take advantage of this however they can. As for your predictions, we will just have to wait and see.

I would put the calulation would be along the lines of IF (Cost of containment daily * (estimated amount of oil * estimated number of days to empty) + (Cost of cleanup) > (cost of paying for that nuclear weapon that gets laughed off by the real experts)+ (Cost of drilling diagonally to an area along the pipe) + ((Cost of this all)*(the time it will take to accomplish in manhours)) + (Cost of redrilling the whole pipeline, or their next endeavor) + (Cost of cleanup) THEN carry on with the cleanup and standard attempts at fixing the leak, IF NOT then start the nuclear bomb proces... in the minds of the of the CEO's responsible whose interest is in preserving stock value through this process long enough to keep their bonuses.

Cost just doesn't matter to be honest. The nuke option has too many unknown variables, and the risk of something very bad happening is just simply too high. The Russians supposedly used this technique on gas wells. Gas wells are completely different in the fact that they don't have crude filling and flowing through the pipe at high pressure. They didn't try this technique 5000' under water where the pressure is over 2000psi and the floor is thousands of feet of silt. Also is the fact that the rock is fracturing in this region at a mudweight of under 20 #/gal. Think about that for a sec. A column of mud with a density of 20 lbs per gallon will fracture the rock. With that in mind, what do you think a nuclear blast will do to it? Especially directly above a giant reservoir/pocket/void of oil and NG. We could release the entire contents of the reservoir in very short order and wouldn't be able to do anything to stop it.

A much better last ditch solution (if the relief wells fail) would be to drill like 10-20 wells into the reservoir and empty it as fast as we can, while containing/collecting from the broken well. At some point it will bridge itself over and we could then get a handle on it.
 
That's more along what I was thinking... the dispersants are a big part of it.
The MW was reported by the rig operators, not BP.

Yeah they lowballed it bigtime in the beginning... but you have to remember that under these pressures and flow rates, things are eroding. The leak is probably flowing a lot more now than it was when it started.

I actually saw an update where Lindsey Williams has said that the pipe his eroded nearly an inch, according to his source.

It would not surprise in the least to see the gov take advantage of this however they can. As for your predictions, we will just have to wait and see.

I know these stories will all seem unrelated, but they all have enormous implications
- Israel stations nuclear missile subs off Iran - Times Online
- Fact-Checking the UN “Small Arms Treaty” | Southern Colorado Patriots Club: Blog (well sourced, read the sources if you don't want to read the blog)
- H.R.5175: DISCLOSE Act - U.S. Congress - OpenCongress (Orwellian named bills keep getting proposed / passed)
- Post Carbon: The White House's lame-duck climate strategy - Juliet Eilperin
- Pajamas Media » BREAKING: Leaked Doc Proves Spain’s ‘Green’ Policies
- Pentagon report in April never mentioned $1 trillion in Afghan wealth | Raw Story
- Obama: Gulf spill 'echoes 9/11' - Politico Staff - POLITICO.com

Cost just doesn't matter to be honest. The nuke option has too many unknown variables, and the risk of something very bad happening is just simply too high. The Russians supposedly used this technique on gas wells. Gas wells are completely different in the fact that they don't have crude filling and flowing through the pipe at high pressure. They didn't try this technique 5000' under water where the pressure is over 2000psi and the floor is thousands of feet of silt. Also is the fact that the rock is fracturing in this region at a mudweight of under 20 #/gal. Think about that for a sec. A column of mud with a density of 20 lbs per gallon will fracture the rock. With that in mind, what do you think a nuclear blast will do to it? Especially directly above a giant reservoir/pocket/void of oil and NG. We could release the entire contents of the reservoir in very short order and wouldn't be able to do anything to stop it.

Now, that's the logic that I would use... however, unless you're thinking from the mind of a CEO... something I was attempting, where the lesser of total costs becomes the preferable choice, even if there's an element of risk.

As for what would happen... I guess that depends on what nukes actually do in those conditions... I mean, if it turns to glass several feet thick, or blows out a space that collapses... or whatever, however it reacts in those conditions is simply an unknown... at a certain point being responsible for perpetual damage control may eventually get them to consider different options.


A much better last ditch solution (if the relief wells fail) would be to drill like 10-20 wells into the reservoir and empty it as fast as we can, while containing/collecting from the broken well. At some point it will bridge itself over and we could then get a handle on it.
That would be several months worth of drilling though, right?

With how abraisive oil can be on the piping, giving the pressure and that it's my understanding that unrefined oil is almost like tar, that eats away at the piping until the pipe eventually ruptures if it's not cared for.... I can't imagine that even with a pipe 2inches thick under that type of pressure.... well, how long would you figure the pipe could last?
 
Sorry for the bail out, work calls me away for weeks at a time during the warm months.

That would be several months worth of drilling though, right?

Yes... but the first relief well is a couple weeks ahead of schedule. They are within 1000 feet of the intercept point, so the big bottom kill effort will be going down soon as long as no huge delays come from the weather.

With how abraisive oil can be on the piping, giving the pressure and that it's my understanding that unrefined oil is almost like tar, that eats away at the piping until the pipe eventually ruptures if it's not cared for.... I can't imagine that even with a pipe 2inches thick under that type of pressure.... well, how long would you figure the pipe could last?

The piping itself is going to be okay. Where metal erosion will be happening the most will be at any bottleneck. You could see this in the kinked riser where the holes started out tiny and by the time they cut it off they were huge. The restrictions in the BOP probably only lasted a week or two before they were toast from the erosion. With the riser cut off and the top effectively opened up, the pressure on any leak in the casing is minimized. I don't think there will be any major problems from it IMHO.

As a disclaimer bman... since I saw you mention in an earlier post about me being an "insider" or something... I'm not in the oilpatch, but have close friends that are. I am learning all of this as I go and really didn't know much about this stuff until the "spill". I do my best to summarize what I have learned from these folks who know wtf they are talking about, and hope it helps anyone out that might be looking for good info.
 
Sorry for the bail out, work calls me away for weeks at a time during the warm months.

It's all good, I hope we all have lives outside of the debates... though sometimes I post so much you might think otherwise.

Yes... but the first relief well is a couple weeks ahead of schedule. They are within 1000 feet of the intercept point, so the big bottom kill effort will be going down soon as long as no huge delays come from the weather.

That much is good news... It still does seem as though, even though it's hardly getting mentioned, that there are already many cracks through which the oil is leaking... so, even those that were previously discussing nuke options are now putting that more as a 'final desperation move' if everything else fails.

The piping itself is going to be okay. Where metal erosion will be happening the most will be at any bottleneck. You could see this in the kinked riser where the holes started out tiny and by the time they cut it off they were huge. The restrictions in the BOP probably only lasted a week or two before they were toast from the erosion. With the riser cut off and the top effectively opened up, the pressure on any leak in the casing is minimized. I don't think there will be any major problems from it IMHO.

I really hope not.

As a disclaimer bman... since I saw you mention in an earlier post about me being an "insider" or something... I'm not in the oilpatch, but have close friends that are. I am learning all of this as I go and really didn't know much about this stuff until the "spill". I do my best to summarize what I have learned from these folks who know wtf they are talking about, and hope it helps anyone out that might be looking for good info.

Oh, well, I figured you were an 'insider' in the sense that you worked in oil and gas, but not in the boardroom level, nor in the particular wellsite. Which still makes you more of an insider then me... I'm just learning about this as I go.

Ultimately, so far most everything from the original source of this thread has turned out to be confirmed 60k barrels /day seems to be the latest estimate and is pretty close to the million gallons per day (he did say gallons, I wrote barrels). There's been more talk about the 'abiotic' nature of the oil they hit... which, if true means that they tapped into an area where a chemical reaction within the earth is generating MORE oil as it's coming out of the ground. (Though all links discussing this have been relegated to 'opinion pieces', and any news story I see sourced is a dead link).

Then there's the financial aspects :
Goldman Sachs sold $250 million of BP stock before spill | Raw Story
Other asset management firms also sold huge blocks of BP stock in the first quarter -- but their sales were a fraction of Goldman's. Wachovia, which is owned by Wells Fargo, sold 2,667,419 shares; UBS, the Swiss bank, sold 2,125,566 shares.

Wachovia and UBS also sold much larger percentages of their BP stock, at 98 percently and 97 percent respectively.

Wachova parent Wells Fargo, however, bought 2.3 million shares in the quarter, largely discounting Wachovia's sales.

Those reported buying BP's stock included Wellington Management, a large asset firm, and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

This is VERY suspect.

Now, this brings me to :
Other rig workers have also claimed that they were pressured by BP and their supervisors to cut corners. Transocean roustabout Truitt Crawford told the Coast Guard that he overheard senior management saying that BP was "taking shortcuts" by replacing drilling mud in the well with saltwater, which would have provided less weight to contain the well's surging pressure.
'The Rig's on Fire! I Told You This Was Gonna Happen!' - National - The Atlantic

Deepwater Horizon Interim Incident Investigation (BP's Washington Briefing)
On page 37 you'll see that even BP admits that there were "undocumented modifications to the hydraulic control system" as well as a "number of hydraulic leaks".

So, while we still can't say for certain precisely what happened, it seems as though 'somehow' these people KNEW it was gonna blow, OR, the people were given orders that would lead to a catastrophic incident in order for it to blow.

Why??? Well, it can be pretty easily established that BP was among the leaders in 'green' energy plans... having gone so far as modifying their name to 'beyond petroleum'. Then, suddenly there's renewed talk of 'cap and trade' schemes to 'kick a%%' on the BP issue... I mean, BP was also among the chief contributors to Obama's election donations.

I'm just saying. In the time you've been gone, it seems it's a little bit more complicated then just the oil spill proper.
 
Now, I'm going to start this off by saying that this is a serious post, and I will report anyone that's detracting from the conversation... make the jokes in the 9-11 thread... this takes precedence now anyway....

This is a conversation with Alex jones that I'll be linking to, but for the sake of argument pretend that he's NOT on the Alex Jones show and only pay attention to the words of this man.

In the times I've seen him predict oil prices with a surprising accuracy, and the results were as he described. This man wrote a book about his experiences with the oil company where the source of his information, his source, 'Mr X' is a former ceo of one of the top 3 oil companies in the world, he is a globalist, and he tells him their plans and what amount of those plans he can reveal to the public.... the prospect being that even telling the people will not change the outcome.

Now, about the BP oil spill I'll summarize this hour and a half discussion from Lindsey Williams, author of 'the energy non-crisis'.

No, in the response, let's discuss this in terms of the actual oil spill... please. If you disagree with this analysis please explain it in detail... I only put it in this thread because it would likely get kicked here anyway.

"This is a super-mega disaster the likes of which the world has ever experienced, and the pressures were so extreme"

"This was absolutely not terrorism, this was an accident. They are scared."

"The oil is ABSOLUTELY NOT the great danger. ABSOLUTELY NOT. It's what comes up WITH the oil that is deadly."

"Mr X said that the only solution would be to diagonal drill into the same strata, drop a nuclear device and set it off. If the plan works and the hole is cauterized we'll be the saviors of the world, if it's not and it opens other fissures then it will be the greatest disaster mankind has ever experienced."

"In 1970, the Russians have struck oil at the record depths of 4230 ft, Russia and it's major oil company has drilled 310 ST3 wells, it's now surpassing saudia arabia in oil production since last year. What they found was called "abiotic oil" and it is NOT a fossil fuel, it is a result of the reactions going on deep within the earth. The textbooks on oil production will have to be re-written. There is no such thing as peak oil. Russia had sense enough to drill these wells ON LAND... NOT in the gulf of mexico."

"BP, a non-american company, was so stupid as to drill so deep, offshore, on a floating platform, that is kept in place with sophisticated GPS equipment. On top of ocean sitting 5000ft deep. Then they began their drilling 25-30000 ft deep... a super-deep well. They hit something so big that they could not contain it. It was much worse then they ever thought."

"They hit a strata of oil at such high pressure that it burst ALL of their safety valves, the pressure they hit is beyond human means to contain it."

"The BP oil well has announced a very different pressure result then they had actually mesured. 1500PSI is considered a good well-head pressure. They hit between 20 000-70 000 PSI of well-head pressure. It's now releasing up to 4 MILLION barrels per day."

"NOAA, Chris baltimore, Houston, "US experts investigate reports of underseas oil plumes emanating from BPs stricken well,in the gulf of mexico concerned the presence below the surface, NOAA is confirming the presence of subsurface oil, and underseas plumes 20 miles away."

"The stuff you call oil only destroys the coastline, what's coming out with the oil is killing humans and unborn children, from the EPA this week, the tests found that the most toxic compounds are in there...
- volatile organic compounds in the air
- hydrogen sulfide : allowable 5-10 parts per Billion tested in the gulf : 1200 PPB
- Benzyne :TOXIC safe level 0-4ppb tested : 3000ppb This can cause leukemia, among a whole host of issues.
- Mythlene-Chloride : safe level 61ppb tested : 3000-3400 ppb"

*****"He told me "The only way I can see to stop this is a nuke, BUT, a nuke This strata of oil is so deep that noone has ever drilled into before, and because of the extreme pressure that's already there nothing man-made can close the fissure, and it would take months because of the angle drilling to the main fissure... but if we use a nuke and it works we will saviors of the world, but if we do nuke that strata and it opens more fissures, it will pour that same level or more oil forever and nobody will ever be able to close it untill it's empty."********

"You will NOT see this well capped in the near future."

"Obama will get across every aspect of his plan to turn america into a socialistic nation. Including his carbon tax." "Oil companies will be nationalized." "Airlines will go bankrupt" "You will see gas prices of 6-8$/gallon if they stop offshore oil drilling... SOON."

"If they nuke it and it doesn't work, they will never in the history of man be able to close it again."

"America can simply NOT afford to stop drilling."

"Fixed income and low-income people will no longer be able to drive because of the cost."

"The BP oil spill may have an event of apocalyptic proportions', a report said Russian ministry of natural ressources 'Threatening the entire eastern half of american continent with total destruction'. "The worst environmental catastrophe in all of human history." - European union times reported, "Russian scientists believe bp is pumping millions of gallons of corexite 9500 a chemical dispersing agent under the gulf of mexico waters to hide the extent of the leak now estimated to be 2.9 million gallons per day. Experts say corexite 9500 is a solvent four times more toxic of oil. 2.61 ppm toxicity. In the warm water it's molecules will be able to phase transition into a gas that can mix can be absorbed by clouds and being released as toxic rain. Leading to unimaginable environmental catastrophe."

"You might even see a full evacuation of Florida and much of the Gulf coast"

"Because of the corrosiveness of oil, it could very easily arode the pipe, and if they wait a few more months there may not be any of the pipeline left."

"The oil companies have no possible way to solve this, other then a nuke."

This situation is turning out to be far more serious then it's even still being implied in the media, but if you want the full interview;
YouTube - TheAlexJonesChannel's Channel

But please... if you're going to disagree at least make it constructive and relevant for a discussion. This man talking has a track-record of his 'predictions'...

But Let's hear the thoughts on this and the issue from your perspectives.

Just so you know on the credibility of Alex Jones. He once interviewed a Spec Ops soldier-that was involved in top secret stuff-that said he would go on average five missions every night. And that he had fought against small green men in Iraq, and that those small green men were the ones behind the Iraq war.
 
That much is good news... It still does seem as though, even though it's hardly getting mentioned, that there are already many cracks through which the oil is leaking... so, even those that were previously discussing nuke options are now putting that more as a 'final desperation move' if everything else fails.

Pretty much all of the experts agree that the bottom kill is pretty much a lock for working. John Wright has done this like 30 or 40 times, best in the biz.


Oh, well, I figured you were an 'insider' in the sense that you worked in oil and gas, but not in the boardroom level, nor in the particular wellsite.

Nope not in the oilpatch... I am in energy physics at LANL/Sandia.

Ultimately, so far most everything from the original source of this thread has turned out to be confirmed 60k barrels /day seems to be the latest estimate and is pretty close to the million gallons per day (he did say gallons, I wrote barrels).

Yup 60k is what I was hearing for the high number about a week and a half after the rig sank. The legal dept at BP really had a lot of reason to lowball any estimate, but the funny thing is the "official" estimates were coming from nobody except for the USCG. Why the USCG would cover at all for BP is simple... BP provides them with all of their fuel, lol.

There's been more talk about the 'abiotic' nature of the oil they hit... which, if true means that they tapped into an area where a chemical reaction within the earth is generating MORE oil as it's coming out of the ground. (Though all links discussing this have been relegated to 'opinion pieces', and any news story I see sourced is a dead link).

Everyone I have talked to just laughs at this one. Sorry, but it really is just a normal reservoir.


I haven't ever put much weight in these types of stories... with how much trading gets done, it seems more likely to me that there would be someone moving something around financially days or weeks before a unrelated event. To think that this oil spill was intentional is foolish IMHO.




A lot of times the rig boss does not agree with the company man. Company man usually calls the shots though, as was the case here. Nothing unusual in this one.

Deepwater Horizon Interim Incident Investigation (BP's Washington Briefing)
On page 37 you'll see that even BP admits that there were "undocumented modifications to the hydraulic control system" as well as a "number of hydraulic leaks".

Sometimes fixes are done, and sometimes people hate paperwork. Lazy?... yes. Shady?... not necessarily.

So, while we still can't say for certain precisely what happened, it seems as though 'somehow' these people KNEW it was gonna blow, OR, the people were given orders that would lead to a catastrophic incident in order for it to blow.

Lots of jumping to get to that conclusion bman. People are just human and mistakes happen everywhere. If you had been told about how often a well kicks and is brought under control you would feel a lot less safe about oil drilling. Haha. Bad decisions were made in this case and the kick was not controlled.

Why??? Well, it can be pretty easily established that BP was among the leaders in 'green' energy plans... having gone so far as modifying their name to 'beyond petroleum'. Then, suddenly there's renewed talk of 'cap and trade' schemes to 'kick a%%' on the BP issue... I mean, BP was also among the chief contributors to Obama's election donations.

I'm just saying. In the time you've been gone, it seems it's a little bit more complicated then just the oil spill proper.

I am more interested in the complete ineptitude of our government when it comes to crisis management than I am about some evil powerful group of people successfully pulling off all of the worlds disasters. This one, like 911, just doesn't make sense when you get to the roots by talking to real experts.
 
Just so you know on the credibility of Alex Jones. He once interviewed a Spec Ops soldier-that was involved in top secret stuff-that said he would go on average five missions every night. And that he had fought against small green men in Iraq, and that those small green men were the ones behind the Iraq war.

And?... five missions per day is chump change.

In addition to that, there actually IS quite the midget population over there... one of their tribal rituals is applying full-on body paint. Green is their favorite color.

Perfectly plausible.

:lol:
 
Just so you know on the credibility of Alex Jones. He once interviewed a Spec Ops soldier-that was involved in top secret stuff-that said he would go on average five missions every night. And that he had fought against small green men in Iraq, and that those small green men were the ones behind the Iraq war.

Ok, you want to debate on the credibility of Alex Jones, start a thread on the subject, and on most issues I will likely find myself supporting his positions.

Or at the least if you're gonna come up with some nonsense at least provide some way to verify this; date of broadcast, quotes, youtube link, the spec-ops soldiers NAME... something...

Thanks... That said, I'm pleased that there's been little detraction into debating the validity of sources and sticking to the important part of this discussion.
 
Pretty much all of the experts agree that the bottom kill is pretty much a lock for working. John Wright has done this like 30 or 40 times, best in the biz.
I do hope so, have they ever come out with a number on the actual depth of this strata they've tapped into??

Everyone I have talked to just laughs at this one. Sorry, but it really is just a normal reservoir.

Well, if there education told them that oil was only produced from decomposition, then the concept of 'abiotic' oil is laughable. If education reduces scientific skepticism, then it's little better then educational dogma.

I'm not saying that it is, or it isn't... but if it is, then you really would have to re-write the books on oil... end the 'peak oil' theory, and all that...


I haven't ever put much weight in these types of stories... with how much trading gets done, it seems more likely to me that there would be someone moving something around financially days or weeks before a unrelated event. To think that this oil spill was intentional is foolish IMHO.

These companies weren't selling 'oil companies in general' they were selling BP stock, and the large contingency of people dumping BP stock, including BP's CEO selling a third of his shares.... it's at least IMPLIED that they knew that there was going to be an accident soon.

Why would it be 'foolish'??? It's the Hegelian dialectic, or problem reaction solution.

PROBLEM :
They create the largest ecological disaster the world has ever seen (After 70 days, it's still around the 5th worst oil spill)... it could have been mitigated much better, those living on the coasts and relying on the fishing shouldn't have caved to federal controls, which has seen their fish hatcheries mostly destroyed. The dispersants being used were the same used in the Exxon Valdese, and the average age of those working with the chemical was 54, they are all dead now... and so everything is being done to delay the cleanup fully until the hurricanes hit and blow this oil deep into the US.

BP will fall on their swords politically, and likely go bankrupt, at the least they will use profits to create a new company and takeover BP's operations... minus the expenses.

REACTION :

The media will be used to guide the reaction, everyone will get a hate-on for BP, and then an eloquent person comes along tells us how we will take care of it if WE LET HIM. So, by giving up our power to actually handle this locally as needed we buy into a proposed...

SOLUTION :

BP has demonstrably pushed for cap and trade and / or carbon taxes for YEARS, hell, if it weren't for BP and Al Gore's (among others) efforts, the whole 'green' movement would have never gone off the ground. Now, if it's pushed as a way to 'punish' BP and it forces BP to go into bankruptcy.... the people will feel like they 'won', meanwhile BP and Al Gore are both laughing ALL THE WAY TO THE BANK. Don't worry, they might plant a tree some day with the money.

A lot of times the rig boss does not agree with the company man. Company man usually calls the shots though, as was the case here. Nothing unusual in this one.

Did you miss the part about that order being to use seawater rather then 14MW drilling mud???

Sometimes fixes are done, and sometimes people hate paperwork. Lazy?... yes. Shady?... not necessarily.

Emphasis 'not necessarily', it might not be 'shady' / ill-intent that would cause undocumented 'changes' to the piece of equipment that failed... whoever made that change, assuming they were a survivor and capable, should be made to answer some tough questions.

Lots of jumping to get to that conclusion bman. People are just human and mistakes happen everywhere. If you had been told about how often a well kicks and is brought under control you would feel a lot less safe about oil drilling. Haha. Bad decisions were made in this case and the kick was not controlled.

No, I get that it probably seems sketchy to the untrained eye... but we're talking about a concerted effort amongst the wealthy elites dumping specifically BP stocks... not other companies, just BP stocks in the days before.
a - If the timing is suspect, and
b - the volume is larger then usual, and
c - maximizes profits / minimizes losses.

Then regardless of who made the trade, this would be worthy of investigations on whether or not there was insider-trading going on. It would have been a matter of a phone call to the proper investors and say 'get rid of BP, and don't ask questions'.


I am more interested in the complete ineptitude of our government when it comes to crisis management than I am about some evil powerful group of people successfully pulling off all of the worlds disasters. This one, like 911, just doesn't make sense when you get to the roots by talking to real experts.

Seriously, ask your experts what they think of the BP drill team being forced to use seawater rather then mud.

The ineptitude of government is because we've allowed government to get so fat that it thinks it runs our lives from cradle to grave. They are completely impeding the cleanup of this disaster in most anyway they can... there's even been reports of BP 'photo ops' with cleanup crews being flown in to clean things up for an hour to get some good shots and then take off.

Look at the facts of this matter :
Copenhagen FAILED to provide a carbon tax
Al Gore's works are being shown as fraudulent
The environmental 'team' at the UN has been shown to fudge the data to get the needed results.
The science that does come in on the matter shows that environmentalists are fearmongering blowhards that on every front are demonstrated exaggerations.

SO, just when the whole 30 year agenda to get a carbon tax / cap and trade scheme is about to become a failure... suddenly, there's an oil spill involving THE COMPANY that spent the most amount of money in pushing towards that carbon tax... and in concert the government shows itself to be the inept tyrants they are, all investment companies cut most of their losses out of BP at the perfect time, Obama's prevented outside help to suck up the oil... that one tanker that can hold 500 000 barrels a day just sitting there. Hell, 3 of those ships and you wouldn't even NEED to clean it up, those 3 ships would just make a carreer out of sucking up from that spill... but NO.

I think you agreed with me some time ago that our marketplace is that of a crony capitalism?? Maybe someone else... but yes, the cronies are only barely hidden... hidden in plain view where nobody bothers to look.
 
It is a sad fact that there were things allowed due to it being under US jurisdiction, that would not have been under British, European or Australian jurisdiction.

one thing you need to look at is why the US does not have the same industrial safety standards as other developed countries.
 
I do hope so, have they ever come out with a number on the actual depth of this strata they've tapped into??

60ft is the actual height of the reservoir, depth from seafloor is a hair over 13,000ft.

I'm not saying that it is, or it isn't... but if it is, then you really would have to re-write the books on oil... end the 'peak oil' theory, and all that...

Would sure be nice if that were the case, but it isn't.

Did you miss the part about that order being to use seawater rather then 14MW drilling mud???

No. In fact, if you look back at my first post, I listed this as a step that led to the blowout.

Emphasis 'not necessarily', it might not be 'shady' / ill-intent that would cause undocumented 'changes' to the piece of equipment that failed... whoever made that change, assuming they were a survivor and capable, should be made to answer some tough questions.

Reasonable to me.

No, I get that it probably seems sketchy to the untrained eye... but we're talking about a concerted effort amongst the wealthy elites dumping specifically BP stocks... not other companies, just BP stocks in the days before.

Are you in the trading industry? How do you know that it was "specifically BP stocks, not other companies"? Have you actually looked at the data yourself to determine that there was no other trading involving other companies? Or is this like 911 and the put options where the actual volume wasn't very unusual when looking at a 5 year graph, yet all the conspiracy folk are crying about it being "unusual"?

Seriously, ask your experts what they think of the BP drill team being forced to use seawater rather then mud.

It is not only common, but necessary to displace the mud in the riser with seawater before temporary abandonment. It wasn't the act, it was the timing of it. They either didn't give enough time for the concrete to cure fully, or the nitrified cement they used created a "gas bubble" in the annulus... which in turn could have displaced the production liner upward at the wellhead connection (the plans show no lockdown collar at the top of the tapered liner). They were guilty of rushing things.

They are completely impeding the cleanup of this disaster in most anyway they can... there's even been reports of BP 'photo ops' with cleanup crews being flown in to clean things up for an hour to get some good shots and then take off.

While I do think the booming and skimming operations have been a complete failure, the cleanup crews have been doing an absolutely awesome job. I have been following posts by gulf coast locals on another forum and have seen a ton of before/after pics of affected areas. It would amaze you what those guys clean up in an hour or two.

SO, just when the whole 30 year agenda to get a carbon tax / cap and trade scheme is about to become a failure... suddenly, there's an oil spill involving THE COMPANY that spent the most amount of money in pushing towards that carbon tax... and in concert the government shows itself to be the inept tyrants they are, all investment companies cut most of their losses out of BP at the perfect time, Obama's prevented outside help to suck up the oil... that one tanker that can hold 500 000 barrels a day just sitting there. Hell, 3 of those ships and you wouldn't even NEED to clean it up, those 3 ships would just make a carreer out of sucking up from that spill... but NO.

I like to stick to what I am good at, which is the technical nature of things... so I'm not going to get into speculation games where there are no facts to go off of. As for the super tanker that "can hold 500,000 barrels"... it failed it's first test miserably by the way.

Assuming:

- 50,000 barrels/day
- For 79 days
- At 2 parts per million (after dispersant applied)
- Over an area of 20,000 mi^2

And assuming the "A Whale" has the following specs:

- 1.2 knots while skimming
- 100 yard skim width (ship is 200ft, with roughly 50ft of boom on both sides)
- 40% downtime for maintenance, weather concerns, offloading oil, transit to/from areas to be skimmed, refueling, etc...


It would take the "A Whale" 48.5 years to complete skimming operations...

Forty eight, and a half... YEARS.

I hear they are building a "B Whale" and a "C Whale". If they also come into the skimming operation, it would only take 16.2 years to skim the slick. :roll: Your notion that a few of these could fully handle the spill is way off.

I think you agreed with me some time ago that our marketplace is that of a crony capitalism?? Maybe someone else... but yes, the cronies are only barely hidden... hidden in plain view where nobody bothers to look.

Was somebody else.
 
Relief Well Intercept Schedule

Step 1 to begin at 17,874' MD, (17,120' TVD), 5' horizontal distance between WW and RW. (They are currently at 17,780' MD).

1. Start date July 12th, elapsed time 8 days.
Tasks: Run and cement 9 7/8" liner; run cased hole logs (e.g. cement bond, casing inspection, etc); test BOP and casing; drill out; leak-off test.

2. Start date July 20th, elapsed time 20 days.
Tasks: Drill 8 1/2" hole with around 4 ranging runs; intersect annulus; kill annulus; cement.

3. Start date July 30th, elapsed time 14 days.
Tasks: Drill 8 1/2" hole with around 5 ranging runs; intersect 7" casing; trip for 8 1/2" mill; cut hole in 7" casing; kill 7" casing, cement.
 
The cause of the largest disaster in America's history is not being investigated. The Democrats passed a bill to investigate, but the Republicans in the Senate killed it. Meanwhile, FEMA is 100% prepared to deal with the aftermath of the spill: evacuations, concentration camps, and even coffins, but is 0% prepared to deal with the disaster itself.

America is changing, right before our eyes, and what it becomes is anyone's guess. I suspect the change will not be for the better.
 
60ft is the actual height of the reservoir, depth from seafloor is a hair over 13,000ft.[/quote[

Transocean :: Deepwater Horizon
ok... it was a MAX depth of 30000 ft.

Are you in the trading industry?

No, but I do know a shady situation when I see one, and it's always good to keep tabs on what the usual suspects are doing.

How do you know that it was "specifically BP stocks, not other companies"?

Because then it wouldn't have been a trend worth reporting on... more important is how many institutions did sell BP stock in large quantities, all just before...

Have you actually looked at the data yourself to determine that there was no other trading involving other companies?

No, but I did look at what was reported on, and well... these major funds moving large portions of their stock essentially in unison, when there wasn't any real notifications (cause I do still read business news) lately that would suggest that it's particularly bad to be owning oil company stock, nvm BP.

Timing, quantity, and specificity are three main conditions to look for when looking for insider trading.

Or is this like 911 and the put options where the actual volume wasn't very unusual when looking at a 5 year graph, yet all the conspiracy folk are crying about it being "unusual"?

No, that's missing the point entirely, sure over a five year period there's going to be lots of movement in all different directions for any particular stock, people buying and selling in different quantities.

What is important is that there were surges in options trades for :
- The specific airlines that were to be hijacked
- The specific insurance companies that covered the world trade centers
- The specific defense contractor (suggesting knowledge that there would be a millitary retaliation)
- etc

This surge of trades was 90%+ the result of a single individual that had put together 'an investment strategy', and the 9-11 commission determined that this unnamed individual had 'no conceivable ties to al-quaida' and so was not to be investigated. However, the major traders responsible did not claim their options... and so the FBI's condition to hunt down any 9-11 profiteers was never met. Which also means that the person responsible had 60 million dollars to throw around.

So, like I said, to look at the 5 year graph is too long... the trades for that quarter maybe, but the graphs used were for that month, which was enough to illustrate where the averages would have been. Also note, in business sections at the time there were headlines like 'airline stocks set to soar'.

It is not only common, but necessary to displace the mud in the riser with seawater before temporary abandonment. It wasn't the act, it was the timing of it. They either didn't give enough time for the concrete to cure fully, or the nitrified cement they used created a "gas bubble" in the annulus... which in turn could have displaced the production liner upward at the wellhead connection (the plans show no lockdown collar at the top of the tapered liner). They were guilty of rushing things.

Yes... and the people at the functional level KNEW that the orders they were getting were going to cause the well to come in early, or blow... that's based on their testimonies.

So, it's a safe bet that the suits that were ordering this, the guys who have to know a thing or two about all aspects of the business, KNEW that their orders were going to cause major problems.

We should be having a CRIMINAL investigation against BP.... no matter how you slice it. I'm not the one to be determining guilt, but seriously, the whole matter needs to be investigated, and people thrown in jail if necessary.

It's not much different then if you're 'rushing' to get home after work and run someone over... you might not have had intention to cause problems, but because something bad happened, you might still be criminally responsible. I don't care if you wear a 5000 $ suit, there's no reason why these people should be above the law.

I mean, we should at least agree with that much.

While I do think the booming and skimming operations have been a complete failure, the cleanup crews have been doing an absolutely awesome job. I have been following posts by gulf coast locals on another forum and have seen a ton of before/after pics of affected areas. It would amaze you what those guys clean up in an hour or two.
They would have been doing an 'awesome job' if they would have had a procedure in place to prevent the oil from spreading as it has... now, you might as well get the lobster at 35$ / lb because if this spreads into the open currents, given a few years, there might not be many fisheries left.

I like to stick to what I am good at, which is the technical nature of things... so I'm not going to get into speculation games where there are no facts to go off of. As for the super tanker that "can hold 500,000 barrels"... it failed it's first test miserably by the way.

Assuming:

- 50,000 barrels/day
- For 79 days
- At 2 parts per million (after dispersant applied)
- Over an area of 20,000 mi^2

And assuming the "A Whale" has the following specs:

- 1.2 knots while skimming
- 100 yard skim width (ship is 200ft, with roughly 50ft of boom on both sides)
- 40% downtime for maintenance, weather concerns, offloading oil, transit to/from areas to be skimmed, refueling, etc...


It would take the "A Whale" 48.5 years to complete skimming operations...

Forty eight, and a half... YEARS.

I hear they are building a "B Whale" and a "C Whale". If they also come into the skimming operation, it would only take 16.2 years to skim the slick. :roll: Your notion that a few of these could fully handle the spill is way off.

Yes, well, not sure how you figured that it had failed, cause on the news sources I've looked over here are saying the 500 000 barrels a day tanker has just arrived and hasn't been able to do much with the bad weather... and you must have missed the link for the 500 000 barrel /day ship
Reuters AlertNet - Tests to start on Gulf oil 'super skimmer'
 
The cause of the largest disaster in America's history is not being investigated. The Democrats passed a bill to investigate, but the Republicans in the Senate killed it. Meanwhile, FEMA is 100% prepared to deal with the aftermath of the spill: evacuations, concentration camps, and even coffins, but is 0% prepared to deal with the disaster itself.

America is changing, right before our eyes, and what it becomes is anyone's guess. I suspect the change will not be for the better.

It's not so much of a stretch to say that there's an attempted revolution of our system of government from within government anymore, is it??

I've been warning about this for more then 10 years now... in spite of the ridicule, the insults, the threats, etc... and now what I've been warning about is starting to take shape in front of all our eyes.
 
Are there other leaks from the Deepwater Horizon well, up to 7 miles from the cap and blow out preventer? Will Relief wells be the only answer?

What did the Mir 1 Russian Submersible find on the ocean floor? What did the report say?


Russian sub 'could stop oil leak' - Worldnews.com
 
Again, I don't think you can blame the tree huggers nearly as much as you can BP or the government. Both are at fault. All environmentalist did was warn the nation/oil drill companies and coastal states of the inherent danger of drilling so close to shore. I mean, who can argue that an oil spill on shore would have a far worse environmental inpact as drilling off-shore?

Your argument against them is you can cap the well-head in shallow waters. Well, the same is true for drilling on shore. However, what isn't necessarily easy to do in shallow water compared to on-shore drilling is containing the spill and mitigating the damage. So, in comparison, the environmentalist got it right where the inherit risk between the two are concerned. Again, the idea with drilling further out to sea was that should a spill occur the damage would be minimal to shorelines and the environment provided EVERYBODY did their part and had safety and containment measures in place. They didn't where this spill is concerned and it's costing BP, the affected states, businesses large and small and the government tons!

Just an FYI, per this article, experts are beginning to see signs that the BP oil spill may have a long-term impact for the Gulf Coast sea food supply, specifically blue crabs.
 
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