WEBwww.AsiaSentinel.com
Image RSS mobile
Tuesday
Feb 09th
  • Email Alerts
Text size
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size

Asia Sentinel



Home arrow Opinion arrow Timor Oil Well Fire Snuffed Out
Timor Oil Well Fire Snuffed Out Print E-mail
Tag it:
Delicious
Furl it!
Mister.Wong
NewsVine
Reddit
YahooMyWeb
Technorati
Digg
Written by Our Correspondent   
Wednesday, 04 November 2009
ImageBut the environmental consequences are likely to continue for years

Salvage crews overnight Tuesday managed to kill a leaking oil well that spewed millions of liters of crude oil into the Timor Sea for 74 days, contaminating thousands of square kilometers of ocean and killing vast amounts of wildlife.

PTTEP Australasia, a unit of Thailand's state-owned PTT Exploration & Production Plc, said crews had poured 3,400 barrels of heavy mud and 1,000 barrels of brine into a relief well drilled down to the rupture, which is 2.5 kilometers below sea level, and that a fire which ignited Sunday on the ruined and listing West Atlas deep sea drilling platform was starting to subside.

The magnitude of the spill, in a pristine ocean teeming with wildlife in a remote corner of Asia, has kicked off a belated furor in Australia, with environmentalists and others calling for an enquiry and demanding that all new exploration permits in the region be frozen. The Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society said Australian should suspend all drilling applications immediately.

In particular, lawmakers and other critics are demanding to know why PTTEP was granted additional concessions in the area even as the spill was going on. On October 24, PTTEP took control of five new exploration licenses that gave it access to another 571 square miles of Australian waters near the leaking Montara block rig, which lies about 240 kilometers off Australia's northwestern coast.

Australian Marine Conservation Society spokesman Darren Kindleysides told The Age that PTTEP's track record should have been considered before access was granted to newfields. "Clearly PTTEP's track record has been pretty shabby in recent months," Kindleysides was quoted as saying. "Major questions still hang unanswered over why this spill happened and why it hasn't been plugged yet."

The government, however, said PTTEP is an internationally respected oil and gas exploration company and should not be penalized until the reasons for the undersea rupture are known. Federal Resources Minister Martin Ferguson said the government would launch an official inquiry into the causes of the spill. He later told reporters in Melbourne that if PTTEP was "found to have been at fault with respect to any of their responsibilities, then any potential action will be appropriately considered at the time."

The big concern now is which way the massive oil slick will move. The Australian Maritime Safety Authority said Wednesday that so far no oil had reached the coastlines of either Australia or Indonesia. As many as 300 personnel, using 17 ships and nine aircraft, have been battling the slick since it erupted on August 21. They have applied dispersants, worked to contain the spread and sought to recover as much of the oil as possible through the use of skimmers. The cost of containing the spill had already reached A$5 million, the government said.

The Indonesian government said oil washing up onto the coast of some small islands has sickened some residents, who say they are suffering from skin problems and diarrhea from eating contaminated fish. The government warned residents not to eat any dead fish found floating near the spill. As many as 10,000 communities rely on the Timor Sea for sustenance, with some 7,000 fishermen plying the waters.
The World Wildlife Fund Australia warned that the oil, combined with the chemicals being used to disperse it, could affect fish stocks and other marine life for generations, describing the spill – said to be the worst in Australia in 40 years – as an overwhelming environmental tragedy. In a report released on October 25, the WWF said up to 15 species of whale and dolphin, over 30 species of seabirds and five of turtles are the potential victims of the spill, in the Montara Oil Field. As many as 30,000 individual sea snakes and 16,000 turtles may be found in the area affected by the slick, the report said. At that time, the WWF estimated the slick at between 6,500 and 15,000 square kilometers.

"This area has a huge amount of marine life, including some of the most iconic ocean wildlife. Species such as Fraser's dolphin, green and flatback turtles and red-footed booby migrate through this area and may come into contact with the slick," Gilly Llewellyn, the WWF director, told reporters. She also warned about the use of dispersants.

"We should not be lulled into thinking that spraying dispersants on the surface solves the problem," said Llewellyn, a wildlife biologist. "These dispersants may end up actually raising the level of toxicity in the water while sinking some of the oil currently on the surface into deeper water."

"We do not under estimate the significantly increased technical complexity, logistical challenges and hazards of the work now required in the wake of the damage caused by the fire to the wellhead platform and the West Atlas rig," PTTEP Australasia said in a prepared news release.

"We will continue to work closely with the Australian Marine Safety Authority to assist in the oil spill clean-up operations and with the Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts in continuing to roll out what is likely to be the largest industry environmental monitoring program ever seen in Australia. PTTEP remains committed to fully funding the spill cleanup and environmental monitoring programs being undertaken by the lead Federal government agencies."
Comments (1)add
Timor Leste
written by Mamakthir , November 21, 2009
Timor Leste is like a young virgin taken to a whorehouse by some kindly white uncle.
report abuse
vote down
vote up
Votes: +1
Write comment
smaller | bigger

security image
Write the displayed characters


busy
 

The Intimate Reef

Friday, 08 January 2010 | Our Correspondent

article thumbnailUnderwater Photographs from Indonesia
Full Story

Previous posts:

    Alice Poon

    Freedom of Expression Too Precious to Throw Away

    Thursday, 04 February 2010 | Alice Poon

    In a free society, there will always be more than one single opinion. In a free society, it is accepted that everyone should have an equal right to express his/her opinion without fearing...
    Full Story

    Previous posts:

    Donate to Asia Sentinel

    Enter Amount: