Unified Command News Conference highlights:
- Attempts to actuate the BOPE have not been successful. New options are being developed and applied. 4 ROVs are working around the BOP stack. They are connecting to the stack, but have not been able to successfully actuate rams.
- The shear ram on the BOP stack should have actuated when the rig lost power and when the riser was separated from the stack by ROV.
- The responders are still estimating a 1000 bopd spill rate. This is thought to be the deepest water ever (5000′) for a significant seafloor spill.
- The leading edge of spill is 20 miles south of Venice, LA. No landfall is suggested in the next 3 days. 3740 barrels of oil water mixture have been recovered. Comment: No information has been provided on the estimated percentage of the mixture that is oil.
- The responders are prepared to remove oil from the water by burning the oil in situ within a fire boom. Comment: Good call. Burning can quickly and completely remove oil from the water if the slick is sufficiently thick. Kudos to my former colleague Ed Tennyson who was the scientific and inspirational leader in developing this response capability.
- The subsurface containment system (seafloor dome) will be ready in 2-4 weeks. Construction is underway. The recovered fluids will be transported to a production system on the Enterprise drill ship.
- The relief well permits will be approved today. The Deepwater Driller III is on location 0.5 miles from the flowing well. The plan is to intercept the 7-inch casing near total depth. Comment: This implies that BP believes the well is flowing inside the production casing and not in the annulus.
- The current cost for the response is more than $6 million per day. Comment: This could easily become the most expensive spill response operation in history.


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