Huge oil-skimming ship makes Va. stop 500,000 barrels/day

Steez

Banned
Nov 23, 2009
81
0
0
By STEVE SZKOTAK
Associated Press Writer
NORFOLK, Va. -- With no assurances it will be allowed to join the Gulf oil cleanup, a Taiwanese-owned ship billed as the world's largest skimming vessel was preparing to sail Friday evening to the scene of the Deepwater Horizon disaster.

The ship - the length of 3 1/2 football fields and 10 stories high - is designed to collect up to 500,000 barrels of oily water a day through 12 vents on either side of its bow. It docked in Norfolk en route to the Gulf from Portugal, where it was retrofitted to skim the seas. The ship and its crew of 32 were to leave Virginia waters Friday evening.

The owners of the "A Whale" said the ship features a new skimming approach that has never been attempted on such a large scale. They are anxious to put it to its first test in the Gulf.

"We really have to start showing people what we can do," said Bob Grantham, project coordinator for TMT Group, a Taiwan-based shipping company.

The company is still negotiating with the Coast Guard to join the cleanup and does not have a contract with BP to perform cleanup work. The company also needs environmental approval and waiver of a nearly century-old law aimed at protecting U.S. shipping interests.

Environmental Protection Agency approval is required because some of the seawater returned to the Gulf would have traces of oil.

The Coast Guard, which has received more than 2,000 cleanup proposals, said the supertanker skimmer had survived a preliminary review and was being studied further.

Capt. Ron LaBrec said that initial review involves a number of government agencies, including the EPA.

One question, he said, is: "Will a large vessel like this be able to operate this in this kind of area?"

If the ship passes the additional review, its owners could then negotiate terms with BP. He could not provide an estimated timetable for the review would be completed.

The company said it also needs a waiver of the 1920 Jones Act, which limits the activities of foreign-flagged ships in coastal U.S. waters. The A Whale is Liberian-flagged vessel.

Grantham said TMT was hopeful it could secure the necessary approvals during the ship's three-day passage to the Gulf.

The converted oil tanker has the capacity of holding 2 million barrels, but would limit its holding tanks to 1 million barrels for environmental reasons. Oil skimmed up by the tanker would be separated from seawater, then transferred to another vessel.

Its owners claim the ship could gulp oily water at a daily rate that nearly matches the skimming total to date in the Gulf.

Nobu Su, CEO and founder of TMT group, compared the massive ship to a whale scooping up small fish. He said cappuccino-colored oily water would be processed through several tanks to extract oil the color of espresso.

He said the ship was engineered to skim oil shortly after its construction in South Korea this year after he recognized the "catastrophic" oil spill would require extraordinary measures.

"I believe this spill is unprecedented and you need an unprecedented solution," said T.K. Ong, senior vice president for TMT.

The effort received the endorsement of at least one Louisiana resident.

Edward Overton, a professor emeritus from Louisiana State University, was among the visitors at the port where the A Whale was berthed. He called the current cleanup inadequate.

"We need this ship," he told TMT executives. "That oil is already contaminating our shoreline."

http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/06/25/1699987/oil-skimming-ship-makes-va-stop.html
 

Horse99

New member
Aug 17, 2006
555
1
0
Vancouver
they need permission from the US Coast Guard amongst others...not BP

This is not the first time they have refused offers from others....., by "they" I mean Obama and the US gov't.....remember, he has said "i'm in charge".....

It has taken 71 days, but I've heard they are now accepting international help to clean the spill....
 
Apr 13, 2009
102
1
18
Holy shit...so let me get this straight...

They have to be given PERMISSION to help clean up one of the largest natural disasters known to mankind? Screw BP! Just go in there and skim!
they need permission from the US Coast Guard amongst others...not BP....

Yeah, amazing isn't it? The 1920 law was designed to protect the profits of U.S. shipping companies, but some bastard sitting in his ivory tower holds up a major emergency response while he enjoys the feeling of power, and takes his time deciding whether or not he wants to waive this law for an emergency situation that the law was clearly never intended to address!

Other countries will be affected by this disaster, whether through losing food imported from the gulf, or by possibly being in line to get oiled if this stuff gets into the gulf stream current and starts circulating around the Atlantic. I think these countries need to send in whatever is needed to the gulf (charter and pay for this A Whale ship maybe?) and just take care of it no matter what the U.S. coast guard and EPA, or BP have to say about it. Let the U.S. send out war ships to blockade them and see what world opinion will have to say about that!!! After it's over, then they can sue the hell out of BP, the U.S. Government, and anyone else who is blocking the efforts to fix this disaster, and force them to pay the costs for it, But at least they will be safe from the disaster.
 

threepeat

New member
Sep 20, 2004
946
2
0
Edmonton
Holy shit...so let me get this straight...

They have to be given PERMISSION to help clean up one of the largest natural disasters known to mankind? Screw BP! Just go in there and skim!
I wonder if they can just take the oil once they've done skimming it? It's a lot of oil, could be good money there.
 

emilioa4

Member
Mar 2, 2009
309
1
18
funny thing as well, everyone else needs permission to HELP clean up this country's mess, yet i dont see the USA asking for permission to do whatever the fuck they chose to do in foreign territories...... go figure. someone needs to bite them in the ass.
 

katsrin

Member
Oct 5, 2002
37
1
8
For anyone keeping score, it turns out that this "A WHALE" was a bust and not anywhere near as effective as was first tentatively advertised.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38283782/ns/disaster_in_the_gulf/

HOUSTON — A Taiwanese-owned "super skimmer" sent to help clean up the Gulf of Mexico oil spill has been a bust, the U.S. Coast Guard said after tests on the ship.

"While its stature is impressive, 'A Whale' is not ideally suited to the needs of this response," Coast Guard Rear Adm. Paul Zunkunft, a federal on-scene coordinator, said in a statement late on Friday.

The tanker collected virtually no oil in two weeks of tests, Zunkunft said at a news briefing earlier on Friday.

"All we found in the tanks was water, so it was very ineffective," he said at the briefing.
 
Ashley Madison
Vancouver Escorts