10-week ocean oil leak plugged
AN oil rig that had been leaking into the Timor Sea for 10 weeks was plugged yesterday, and a massive fire blazing aboard the structure was largely extinguished, the rig operator said.
Officials with PTTEP Australasia said a mixture of heavy mud and brine poured into the well yesterday finally stopped the leak. A fire that had broken out on Sunday on the West Atlas rig and Montara wellhead platform was almost completely out, the company said.
"We are relieved and thankful that we have killed the well and stopped the main fire," PTTEP Australasia chief financial officer Jose Martins said in a statement.
The blaze started when workers were pouring mud into a hole that had been leaking an estimated 400 barrels of oil a day since August 21. The company, a unit of Thailand's PTT Exploration & Production Plc, says it does not know what sparked the blaze.
The oil slick from the rig, about 250 kilometers off Australia's northwest coast, stretches across thousands of kilometers of remote ocean. Indonesia said last week that thousands of dead fish and clumps of oil have been found near its coastline.
Yesterday, PTTEP dumped 3,400 barrels of heavy mud and 1,000 barrels of brine into the well, stopping the leak and cutting off the fire's fuel source. Material on top of the rig was expected to burn out as the fuel dries up, the company said.
Officials will monitor the rig for the next couple of days to ensure it remains stable, and may spray the wellhead platform with ocean water to cool it down before attempting to re-board the rig to assess the damage, the company said.
Martins said PTTEP would cooperate with the government inquiry announced on Monday and pay for the cleanup.
Officials with PTTEP Australasia said a mixture of heavy mud and brine poured into the well yesterday finally stopped the leak. A fire that had broken out on Sunday on the West Atlas rig and Montara wellhead platform was almost completely out, the company said.
"We are relieved and thankful that we have killed the well and stopped the main fire," PTTEP Australasia chief financial officer Jose Martins said in a statement.
The blaze started when workers were pouring mud into a hole that had been leaking an estimated 400 barrels of oil a day since August 21. The company, a unit of Thailand's PTT Exploration & Production Plc, says it does not know what sparked the blaze.
The oil slick from the rig, about 250 kilometers off Australia's northwest coast, stretches across thousands of kilometers of remote ocean. Indonesia said last week that thousands of dead fish and clumps of oil have been found near its coastline.
Yesterday, PTTEP dumped 3,400 barrels of heavy mud and 1,000 barrels of brine into the well, stopping the leak and cutting off the fire's fuel source. Material on top of the rig was expected to burn out as the fuel dries up, the company said.
Officials will monitor the rig for the next couple of days to ensure it remains stable, and may spray the wellhead platform with ocean water to cool it down before attempting to re-board the rig to assess the damage, the company said.
Martins said PTTEP would cooperate with the government inquiry announced on Monday and pay for the cleanup.
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