Disaster looms as oil slick reaches US coast | World News - Hindustan Times
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Disaster looms as oil slick reaches US coast

AFP | ByErica Berenstein, Venice
May 01, 2010 12:15 PM IST

Oil from a giant Gulf of Mexico slick began washing onto Louisiana shores on Friday, threatening an environmental calamity, as President Barack Obama called for a "thorough review" of the disaster.

Oil from a giant Gulf of Mexico slick began washing onto Louisiana shores on Friday, threatening an environmental calamity, as President Barack Obama called for a "thorough review" of the disaster.

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With up to 200,000 gallons of oil a day spewing into the Gulf of Mexico from a ruptured well, the accident stemming from a sunken offshore rig may soon rival the Exxon Valdez disaster as the worst oil spill in US history.

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US federal and state officials warned British Petroleum that its resources appeared insufficient for the task at hand as southeast winds blew the first oily strands of the slick directly onto coastal wetlands in Louisiana.

"I do have concerns that BP's resources are not adequate," said Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal. "I urge them to seek more help from the federal government and others," he said at a press briefing.

The oil's approach forced Louisiana to close shrimping grounds and oyster beds, as a massive effort involving state, federal and BP resources struggled to combat the slick.

Officials declined to specify the size of the spill, which measured at least 600 squares miles (1,500 square kilometers) on Wednesday when the Coast Guard said oil was leaking at a rate of 5,000 barrels a day, five times faster than previously thought.

Obama said some 1,900 federal response personnel were in the area with 300 boats and aircraft.

"We've laid 217,000 feet of protected boom and there are more on the way," he said in Washington.

The president said he had asked Interior Secretary Ken Salazar "to conduct a thorough review of this incident and report back to me in 30 days" on precautions required to prevent a recurrence of such a disaster.

Salazar joined Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and Environmental Protection Agency chief Lisa Jackson in surveying the slick and containment efforts in Louisiana on Friday.

The White House also put new domestic offshore oil drilling on hold until the disaster has been fully investigated and dispatched teams to the Gulf Coast "to inspect all deep water rigs and platforms to address safety concerns."

The Coast Guard was coordinating vessels including skimmers, tug boats and robotic submarines, which are investigating the underwater damage.

Fresh water from the Mississippi River was also being diverted into wetlands in an attempt to push back some of the oil, Wilma Subra of the Louisiana Environmental Action Network told AFP.

"This is a very, very good measure," she said, as hundreds of miles of coastline came under threat in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida, a region that amounts to more than 40 percent of America's ecologically fragile wetlands.

British energy giant BP said meanwhile it is "taking full responsibility" for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill and will pay for "legitimate claims" stemming from the disaster.

Company spokeswoman Sheila William told AFP the energy firm was ready to assume costs related to the cleanup and to reimburse damages.

At least two lawsuits have already been filed on behalf of fisherman and shrimpers, in what is expected to be a flood of litigation from the disaster.

The region is a prime spawning ground for fish, shrimp and crabs, home to oyster beds and a major stop for migratory birds.

"For birds, the timing could not be worse; they are breeding, nesting and especially vulnerable in many of the places where the oil could come ashore," said Melanie Driscoll of the Audubon Society, a nature conservancy group.

With the ruptured well no closer to being capped, the White House went into emergency response mode to try to avoid the kind of disaster that Hurricane Katrina brought to the region in 2005.

Any "notion that somehow we're playing catch-up is badly uninformed," Obama spokesman Robert Gibbs told reporters, adding that he did not consider Katrina a proper analogy, noting that 1,800 people died as a result of the hurricane and subsequent relief mismanagement.

US officials called the event a disaster of "national significance" to better coordinate resources, as the governors of Louisiana and Florida declared states of emergency.

The Pentagon also authorized the deployment of the Louisiana National Guard, some 6,000 troops, to respond to the crisis. Many of those dependent on the region's vital fisheries and nature reserves had already given up hope due to strong onshore squalls forecast for several days to come.

Oil was still gushing unabated from near the Deepwater Horizon platform, which sank April 22 two days after a huge explosion.

BP has been operating 10 robotic submarines in a so-far unsuccessful bid to cap the ruptured well on the seabed some 5,000 feet (1,500 meters) below the surface.

At the Gulf well's current estimated rate of leakage, it would take 54 days for the amount of spilled toxic crude to surpass the 11 million gallons of oil that poured from the grounded Exxon Valdez tanker in Alaska in 1989.

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