Uh-Oh: Hurricane Season and the BP Oil Rig Disaster
Thursday 13 May 2010
by: Dave Lindorff, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

(Photo: US Coast Guard)
One thing you don't hear much mention of in all the coverage of the BP oil rig blowout that is now pouring 210,000 gallons of oil a day into the Gulf of Mexico, just a few dozen miles off the coast of Louisiana, is the 2010 hurricane season, which officially starts on June 1, but which can start significantly earlier.
This is, after all, an El Nino year, so storms could be more frequent and stronger than usual. In 2007, recall, the first storm of the season was Tropical Storm Andrea, which reached a size strong enough to merit a name on May 7.
Why does this matter? Because any attempt to use booms or chemicals keep the oil away from the Gulf Coast would be completely impossible in the event of a major storm entering the Gulf. The combination of high winds, storm surges and high waves would push the oil slick way inland up the bayous and onto the shelter islands that protect 40 percent of America's wetlands.
It could do worse, too. The strong winds in hurricanes, sweeping across the surging waves they have created, suck up a considerable amount of surface water and blow it inland. This time, however, those winds could also end up picking up a considerable amount of the oil slick floating on the sea's surface, which would be deposited as rain well inland, damaging croplands and forests, too.
Meanwhile, NASA and government scientists are warning that the well could end up turning into a gusher, releasing as much as 2 million gallons of oil a day into the Gulf - ten times the amount currently coming out of the broken well.
Why isn't anybody talking about this hurricane issue? A Google search for the words "hurricane season" and "BP Oil leak" turned up lots of references to the "devastation of Hurricane Katrina," but there is nary an article in a major news story about what effect this year's hurricanes might have on the clean-up effort from what is likely to be a bigger oil disaster than the Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska.
So far, it's looking increasingly likely that there will be no quick shutdown of the blown-out BP well, meaning that it could keep spewing out its contents into the Gulf, probably at an increasing rate, for several months. That would put it well into the middle of this year's hurricane season, making it almost certain that at least one hurricane or tropical storm will pass right over the area and push that giant oil slick ashore.
And that's not to mention what effect an untimely hurricane might have on any attempts to shut down the well. The most likely strategy is drilling several new wells that could both relieve the pressure on the current well, and also that could be used to pump mud or concrete or some other heavy, thick compound into the leaking well to try and stop it up. A major hurricane could wreak havoc with the new drilling rigs, particularly if only smaller ones are available for the job on short notice. A hurricane could also thwart efforts to drop a large tent over the leaking well - another scheme that is being contemplated, that would presumably funnel the rising crude oil into pipes that could deliver it to tankers for removal.
So far, all the talk has been about the urgency of getting booms in place to keep the oil slick from coming ashore, which it is starting to do now. But the real urgency should be to try to shut the thing down securely before the first hurricane hits, and to get as much of the already floating oil either chemically treated, burned off or skimmed before that hurricane arrives and blows it all ashore.
If you want a real disaster scenario, imagine this: a big hurricane - say Category 4 or 5 - enters the Gulf and heads straight for New Orleans again, and blows out the levees again. Last time, there was a fairly toxic stew of water covering much of the city. This time it would be water mixed with millions of gallons of crude oil.
The Katrina disaster would look like a picnic by comparison.
Hmmmm. No wonder neither BP nor the government are talking about hurricanes.
They really don't have much they can do except cross their fingers.
The idea that the president's expanded offshore drilling plan is still on the table is simply appalling.

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Comments
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I am terrified of our
Thu, 05/13/2010 - 09:27 — Anonymous (not verified)I am terrified of our species' inability to pull its mouth off the oil tit. If this isn't a wake up call, what is?
Thanks for the article.
S-200 and Oil Gone Easy are
Thu, 05/13/2010 - 09:50 — Anonymous (not verified)S-200 and Oil Gone Easy are the bioremediation methods that people can use inland. They are green, and they encapsulate the oil. They float oil to the surface keeping it out of the water column and are allegedly safe to use near well heads.
As these oil slicks become part of the environment, sloshed around by hurricanes, I'd investigate the possibility.
I admit my bias, as I wrote for Oil Gone Easy for a little while about a year ago. I also have an ad to contract with homeowners to clean up driveways and other spills.
Even if you use dispersants you have oily rags and oily sand... the problem just doesn't go away. People should check this stuff out and pass it along to friends.
The reason 'nobody' is
Thu, 05/13/2010 - 09:54 — frank1569 (not verified)The reason 'nobody' is talking about what might happen to Gulf Oil-geddon during hurricane season is because there is not a goddamn thing anyone can do about it.
Except move. Right f**king now.
They got branches of the
Thu, 05/13/2010 - 10:44 — Anonymous (not verified)They got branches of the Military all over this disaster, 'Murica sent in all the Kings Men.
Black rain, falling from the
Thu, 05/13/2010 - 18:50 — Anonymous (not verified)Black rain, falling from the sky.
Black rain, we all gonna die.
i guess we can't be smug
Fri, 05/14/2010 - 02:49 — Anonymous (not verified)i guess we can't be smug about Chernobyl anymore I wonder just how many sand bags it would take to bury this mother of course that might break BP ,dont believe I'll like oily shrimp
Any hurricane in the
Fri, 05/14/2010 - 16:35 — Anonymous (not verified)Any hurricane in the oil-laden area of the Gulf is bound to sop up that oily water mix high into the air, then deposit it with a lot of rain inland -- in whole of the southeast and beyond.
Black rain, indeed, folks. This one potentially affects us all with a multitude of toxic delivery mechanisms. No wonder they're not talking about it -- it's potentially catastrophic in scope!