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For now, Tropical Storm Alex, which is hitting the western Caribbean with rain and high winds, is not expected to pass close to BP Plc.'s blown-out well off the Louisiana coast.
But even a miss that only generates large waves could greatly complicate clean-up efforts from Louisiana to Florida
Current official estimates suggest between 35,000 to 60,000 barrels a day are leaking from the rogue well. BP collected over 24,000 barrels on
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New equipment being moved to the site of the leak in the coming week could raise the daily collection rate to 53,000 barrels a day, U.S. Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen, who is coordinating the U.S. oil spill response, said on Saturday.
U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu and Interior Secretary Kenneth Salazar are also scheduled to review plans on Wednesday for a new containment system that could boost collection to 80,000 barrels per day, Allen said.
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But progress could be scuttled if Alex, or a subsequent storm, comes too close to the leak site.
Allen said BP would be forced to evacuate the vessels and personnel working to contain the spill if a storm with gale-force winds, 39 miles per hour or stronger, were expected within five days at the leak site. That would once again leave the well gushing uncontrollably.
Alex was expected to make landfall at Belize by nightfall, cross land and
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In Grand Isle, Louisiana, a tiny village jutting out into the Gulf of Mexico
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"If it comes and it's somewhat severe, you might as well say goodbye to Grand Isle," said Pam Brooks, 50. "The oil will get thrown up and coat everything."
The Gulf disaster and its impact on London-based energy giant BP was on the agenda on Saturday when U.S. President Barack Obama and new
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Shares of BP, a staple holding of many U.K. pension funds, have been savaged since the oil crisis started and fell another 6 percent to a 14-year low on Friday.
Investors are fretting about the potential costs to BP, which include but are not limited to a $20 billion compensation fund it set up under intense U.S. political pressure. BP said it has paid out $2.35 billion so far in clean-up and compensation costs related to the spill.
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Obama has been highly critical of the company, even as his own poll ratings have fallen amid perceptions that his handling of the Gulf crisis has been too slow. (Left: oil washes ashore at Gulf Shores, Alabama).
Cameron and Obama "agreed that there was nothing to be gained from
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The pair also agreed that BP must meet its obligations to cap the leak, clean up the damage and meet legitimate compensation costs.
LEGAL WRANGLING, PROTESTS
The Obama administration on Friday asked a U.S. appeals court to stay a ruling from a federal judge that overturned a six-month ban on new deepwater drilling in the Gulf.
On Saturday, the state of Louisiana filed a brief opposing the administration's request. Each day the ban is in place, "millions of dollars
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The disaster is also taking a heavy toll on fishing, tourism and the environment. About one-third of U.S. federal waters in the Gulf of Mexico remain closed to fishing.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports a growing toll of birds, sea turtles and marine mammals, mostly dolphins, found dead or debilitated along the Gulf Coast.
In Florida on Saturday, hundreds of local residents and supporters
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"It a sick feeling," said Cindy Nevens, resident of Navarre Beach, Florida. "There is no end in sight and we don't know if it can be stopped or if they are telling us the truth about how much oil they are collecting."
Source:
Reuters, "Oil spill efforts ramp up as storm eyed anxiously", accessed June 27, 2010
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