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Showing posts with label OIL SPILL DISASTERS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OIL SPILL DISASTERS. Show all posts

OIL SPILL DISASTERS

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 The non ending demand of oil has forced us to turn light minded to the detrimental environmental effects caused during its exploration and production. Right from its extraction, transportation and from the products refined from it, about 210 million gallons of petroleum enters the sea each year worldwide.  Another additional 180 million gallons enter the ocean through natural seeps.

WORST OIL DISASTERS (OIL SPILLS):

Let us first have a flash back of some of the worst environmental disasters related to oil, that have pummelled our planet:
March 1967: The Torrey Canyon oil supertanker was shipwrecked off the western coast of Cornwall, England, causing a major environmental disaster. This was the first major oil spill at sea.

March 16, 1978:  The Amoco Cadiz, an oil tanker owned by the company Amoco (now emerged with BP) sank near the Northwest coasts of France, resulting in the spilling of   68,684,000 US Gallons of crude oil (1,635,000 barrels). This is the largest oil spill of its kind (spill from an oil tanker) in History!

June 3, 1979: The Ixtoc-I exploratory oil well suffered a blowout resulting in the third largest oil spill and the second largest accidental spill in history.

November 20, 1980: A Texaco oil rig drilled into a salt mine transforming the Lake Peigneur, a freshwater lake before the accident, into a salt water lake!

July 6, 1988: Piper Alpha disaster- An explosion and the resulting fire on a North Sea oil production platform killed 167 men & the total insured loss was about US$ 3.4 billion. To date, this is rated as the world's worst offshore oil disaster in terms both of lives lost and impact to industry.

March 24, 1989: The Exxon Valdez, an oil tanker bound for Long Beach, California, hit Prince William Sound's Bligh Reef dumping an estimated 40.9 million lites, or 250,000 barrels of crude oil into the sea. As many as 250,000 seabirds died, as well as at least 2,800 sea otters, approximately 12 river otters, 300 harbour seals, 247 bald eagles, 22 orcas, and billions of salmon and herring eggs were destroyed.  The effects of the spill continue to be felt 20 years later.

March 23, 2005: An explosion occurred at a British Petroleum refinery in Texas City, Texas. It is one of the largest in the world, processing 433,000 barrels of crude oil per day. Over 100 were injured and 15 were confirmed dead.

April 20, 2010: an explosion on BP’s Deepwater Horizon oil rig plummeted 5 million barrels of oil in the Gulf of Mexico, killing 11 workers and precipitating one of the worst oil spills in history. The well was capped on July 15 but not permanently sealed until September 19.

ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES DUE TO OIL SPILLS, LEAKAGES & CATASTROPHIC BLOW-OUTS:

Oil and gas extraction and transportation can cause severe impact on the ecosystem during routine maintenance and production operations. Gas is flared with consequent emissions, large quantity of water is withdrawn due to contamination, drinking water is polluted with additives and solid waste & other toxic volatile fluids are deliberately dumped in the oceans. This affects air and water quality and can form vast plumes below the surface. Birds typically ingest oil that covers their feathers, causing kidney damage, altered liver function, and digestive tract irritation. This results in the decrease of fauna population, thus affecting the food chain in the ecosystem.

CONTROLLING OIL SPILLS - NEED OF THE TIME

There are several conditions that enhance an oil spill. These include temperature, water currents, wind speed and surface-sea conditions. However, it is essential that oil spills be contained and their impact be minimized. Ensuring that the equipment is checked and tested before final use and safe & careful handling of materials & equipments should be made mandatory. Taking safety & precautionary measures for the personnel should be placed at the top most position of the priority list.

DON’T PANIC – THE INDUSTRY IS WORKING ON IT!!

Though the industry is trying its level best to minimize the catastrophic damage done by oil spills all around the world, it cannot nullify them completely. Though accidental errors are always there, measures are being taken to reduce their impact on environment. Consistent public-private partnership is required and flexible federal laws need to be promulgated. Technology and innovation has already made this job easier and the recovery of spilled fluids has been made more efficient.

Here are the oil spill recovery methods being deployed by the industry these days:

MECHANICAL RECOVERY & CONTAINMENT EQUIPMENT:

These are the equipments that contain the spilled oil, capture it and then transmit it to the wells or tanks for storage where the spilled fluids are properly dispersed or degraded. Besides controlling the leakage they reduce the possibility of polluting the shorelines.

BOOMS:
These are flat or round floatation devices, that converge oil channels accumulating them into thick surface layers for easier recovery.


BARRIERS:
These are a temporary measure to hold oil at place until more sophisticated equipment arrives. Barriers are made of plastic, wood, old oil drums, tires or fire-hoses. Barriers are built by bulldozers, by pushing a wall of sand toward the sensitive shore-line.

 SKIMMERS:
These self-propelled, efficient devices that depend on shore conditions. Skimmers trap oil in a disc or an enclosure and squeeze it into a recovery tank. However they are prone to clogging and jamming by floating debris.

SORBENTS:
Oil absorbent materials or fabrics (sorbents) recover liquids by absorption and adsorption. Sorbents need to be both oleophilic (oil attracting) and hydrophobic (water-repellent) to combat oil spills. They should not be heavy, else they might sink.


DISPERSANTS:
Dispersants are biological or chemical dispersing agents sprayed on the affected area to break oil into simpler smaller particles so it can be easily degraded or accumulated at the beach as visible oil. However, they can’t be sprayed on densely populated areas and their long-term use is not recommended. Their effectiveness is affected by temperature, humidity and water salinity.


IN-SITU BURNING OF OIL:
In-situ burning is the combustion of a spilled product at the site of the spill. It offers a simple, rapid, efficient and inexpensive means of reducing the net impact of an oil spill. It exposes safety and health hazards to the response team who may be exposed to higher levels of toxic gases. Major in-situ pollutants are SO2, CO, NO2, PAHs (polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons) and particulates (soot, fog, dust and mists).

NANOSPONGES:
Nanosponges are made of tiny metal nanowire mesh that can be used like a sponge to soak up any oil in water.


These nanowires are 20 nanometers in diameter and made up of potassium manganese oxide which is a paper-like material that can sit on top of water, without getting wet, while absorbing 20 times its weight, in oil.  

MICROBES
Ultra-Microbes(tm), have been approved by the EPA and added to the list of approved products for applications involving oil spills. Having been tested extensively by an Italian university and found to be harmless to plant and animal life and safe for the environment, the Ultra-Microbes(tm) are added to containers of sea water and mixed. This mixture is then be sprayed onto the ocean surface to immediately start remediating the oil. The microbes quickly digest the oil as a food source and break it down into carbon, CO2 and a white protein that is basically fish and plant food. The oil becomes non-hazardous, and when all oil is digested the microbes die.
                                                                                                      WRITTEN BY: SYED ALI MEHDI,
                                                                                                                                 AYESHA ZAKI.

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