|
DeepWater
Horizon Oil Rig Explosion Litigation
Louisiana
Attorneys for Victims of the DeepWater
BP Oil Rig Explosion in the Gulf of Mexico
The
recent oil rig explosion in the Gulf of
Mexico has is expected to cause unprecedented
environmental damage. In addition, the
explosion of the DeepWater Horizon Oil
rig is expected to cause extreme economic
loss to the businesses in Louisiana.
If
you or someone you know has been harmed
as a result of the oil spill, DIGIULIO UTLEY, LLC can help you understand your
rights and assist you in pursuing financial
compensation for your injuries, property
damage, and other losses related to the
oil spill.
*********************************************************************
Gulf
oil spill has our full attention, President
Barack Obama assures Louisiana
By Richard Rainey, The Times-Picayune
May 02, 2010, 7:07PM
Michael DeMocker / The Times-PicayunePresident
Barack Obama addresses the federal response
to the BP oil spill disaster in the Gulf
during a visit to the U.S. Coast Guard
Station in Venice on Sunday. Calling the
expanding plume of oil rising from the
floor of the Gulf of Mexico a disaster
that could set records, President Barack
Obama told Louisiana oyster farmers and
the country that the full force of the
federal government was focused on assisting
southeast Louisiana.
"We are dealing with a massive and
potentially unprecedented environmental
disaster," he said. "The oil
that is still leaking from the well can
seriously damage the economy and the environment
of our Gulf states and it could extend
for a long time. It could jeopardize the
livelihoods of thousands of Americans
who call this place home.
"That is why the federal government
has launched an all-hands-on-deck, relentless
response to this crisis from day one."
Through lashing rain during his first
visit to the threatened coastland, Obama
also repeated his assertion that BP, the
giant oil conglomerate leasing the rig
Deepwater Horizon that exploded and sunk
April 20, would be held accountable for
the clean up and paying for the economic
impact to the region's fishing industry.
Low, swiftly moving rain clouds darkened
the skies in the early afternoon as Gov.
Bobby Jindal greeted Obama on the tarmac
at Louis Armstrong International Airport.
The clouds and growing wind gusts would
remain as White House officials nixed
plans to ride from New Orleans to Venice
via helicopter, settling instead for a
two-hour drive to the fishing outpost
most threatened by the expanding oil spill.
Coast Guard Commandant Adm. Thad Allen
said the volume of crude oil spewing from
the damaged well could climb to 100,000
barrels a day, with 60 days to 90 days
needed for BP to drill relief wells to
stem the flow. He spoke to the obvious
urgency of stopping the flow of crude.
"The difference between 1,000 and
5,000 barrels a day (original estimates),
when you look at the potential discharge
of 100,000, leads me to believe that there
are a lot of inaccuracies associated with
trying to estimate flow from a broken
pipe at 5,000 feet," Allen said.
"That's the reason it's so very,
very important we focus on stopping this
leak right away."
********************************************************************
U.S.
curtails fishing in stricken Gulf
By the CNN Wire StaffMay 2, 2010 8:14
p.m. EDT
(CNN) -- Federal officials closed a portion
of the northern Gulf of Mexico to fishing
Sunday, curtailing a billion-dollar business
as high winds and choppy seas hampered
efforts to corral a rapidly growing oil
spill.
The spill cast a pall over the annual
Blessing of the Fleet in Bayou La Batre,
Alabama, one of many towns that make their
living from the Gulf. In Venice, Louisiana,
a rain-spattered President Obama told
reporters his administration has launched
a "relentless response" to the
spill, but said the problem might not
be solved for "many days."
A ruptured undersea well off Louisiana
is spewing about 210,000 gallons (5,000
barrels) of crude a day into the Gulf
of Mexico, and efforts to shut off the
flow have been unsuccessful since the
late April explosion that sank the drill
rig Deepwater Horizon.
To the east, a heavy smell of oil hung
over the Mississippi beaches, and the
leading edge of the slick grew closer
to the coast of Alabama and the Florida
Panhandle.
Adm. Thad Allen, the commandant of the
Coast Guard, told CNN's "State of
the Union" that the slick was still
nine miles off the Louisiana coast, but
seas of 6 to 10 feet have made deploying
booms to fend the spill off the coast
"somewhat problematic." Oil
giant BP, which owns the well at the heart
of the problem, said it had prepared massive
boxes to be lowered over the leak points,
but deploying them would take about a
week.
Video: Obama: 'Relentless response' to
spill
Video: Tent to be used to seal leaking
oil rig
Interactive: Responding to an oil spill
Gallery: Response to oil spill RELATED
TOPICS
Oil Spills
Gulf of Mexico
Barack Obama
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
The minimum 10-day fishing restriction
imposed Sunday by the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration covers
an area between the mouth of the Mississippi
River in Louisiana to the waters off Florida's
Pensacola Bay.
"Balancing economic and health concerns,
this order closes just those areas that
are affected by oil," NOAA Administrator
Jane Lubchenco said in a statement announcing
the decision. "There should be no
health risk in seafood currently in the
marketplace."
The Gulf Coast's commercial fishing industry
brings in about $2.4 billion to the region.
Thomas Rodi, the Roman Catholic archbishop
of Mobile, officiated at Sunday's event
in Bayou La Batre and said the spill could
have "widespread effects" on
the area -- "not only the livelihood
of people, but an entire way of life."
Among those taking part in the blessing
was Maurice Ryan, who told CNN, "You
have to put your trust in someone."
"I really feel like, with the church
and the bishop, I've got my life in good
hands," Ryan said. "BP certainly
isn't helping me."
WDSU:Oil spill causes empty shrimp nets
The oil spill started April 20, after
an explosion on BP contractor Transocean
Ltd.'s Deepwater Horizon drilling platform
that left 11 men presumed dead. About
1.6 million gallons of oil have spilled
since the explosion, the Coast Guard said.
"This event is a self-feeding fire,"
said Richard Charter, of the environmental
group Defenders of Wildlife. "It
is so big and expanding so fast that it's
pretty much beyond human response that
can be effective." The spill will
have "a multidecade impact"
-- a "long-term poisoning" of
the area, he said.
Booms were strung across the mouths of
delta estuaries in Louisiana and inlets
along the Mississippi coast. In Alabama,
National Guard troops helped lay them
out off Dauphin Island, at the southern
end of Mobile Bay.
In Pascagoula, Mississippi, a steady
stream of customers stocked up on bags
of freshly boiled crawfish, oysters and
shrimp. The weekend trade was good, but
owner Keith Delcambre said he was worried
about the future if the oil slick hits
the coast.
"All I know is seafood," he
said while sorting crawfish in small workroom
behind the kitchen. "I don't know
what we'll do if this hits. It feels like
a hurricane is coming, but what can you
do to stop oil?"
WDSU: 20 sea turtles found dead along
Mississippi beaches
The cause of the blast on the Deepwater
Horizon remains unknown. BP says a device
known as a "blowout preventer"
failed and has not responded to repeated
attempts to activate it using remotely
operated submarines.
Frustration with BP was growing across
the Gulf states, and Louisiana Gov. Bobby
Jindal said Saturday that the company's
response has been inadequate. But BP America's
president, Lamar McKay, told ABC's "This
Week" that its focus "is dealing
with the source of the oil, dealing with
it on the surface, and dealing with it
on the beach or the marsh if it occurs."
McKay said the company has built a containment
system to prevent the leaking oil from
spreading. But it may take another six
to eight days to deploy that system, which
is made up primarily of massive boxes
designed to capture the crude.
BP spokeswoman Marti Powers said the
company is still trying to use remote-controlled
submarines to shut off the well at the
ocean floor, about 5,000 feet below the
surface, and spreading dispersants on
and under the water to break up the slick.
The company has put out about 300,000
feet -- roughly 60 miles -- of floating
booms to keep the oil away from ecologically
sensitive shorelines, she said. But she
said efforts to skim oil off the surface
were put off because of bad weather.
"We're hampered because the weather
is so bad. Some of the vessels can't get
out," she said. "So that slows
us down a little bit. But they are still
making the effort. We did get some photos
back this morning that showed quite a
bit of success."
|