An offshore petroleum platform exploded and was burning in the Gulf of Mexico, about eighty miles off the Louisiana coast, west of the site where BP's undersea well spilled after a rig explosion.Rico says if they weren't producing oil or gas, why an explosion? Curious. (Also, if "Cheri Ben-Iesau" (with her last name meaning 'son of Jesus' in Hebrew) ain't a name to conjure with, Rico says he doesn't know what is...)
The Coast Guard says no one was killed in the blast, which was reported by a commercial helicopter flying over the area. All thirteen people aboard the rig have been accounted for, with one injury. The extent of the injury was not known.
Coast Guard Commander Cheri Ben-Iesau said some of those from the rig were spotted in emergency flotation devices. Seven Coast Guard helicopters, two airplanes, and three cutters were dispatched to the scene from New Orleans, Houston, and Mobile, Alabama, Ben-Iesau said. She said authorities do not know whether oil was leaking from the site.
The Department of Homeland Security said the platform was in about 2,500 feet of water and owned by Mariner Energy of Houston. DHS said it was not producing oil and gas.
The Deepwater Horizon rig leased by BP was in about 5,000 feet of water when it exploded and sank in April, killing eleven workers and triggering a leak of about 206 million gallons of oil.
02 September 2010
Blowing up another one
The AP reports yet another fuque de clusteur in the Gulf:
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The platform had been shut in since it was damaged in Hurricane Ike in 2008. The crew was probably a construction crew sent out to do repairs. Source of the fire is still unknown but was probably ignited by welding or cutting. Perhaps a storage tank had flammable vapors that were ignited. It does not appear to be well related and there is no oil spill.
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