Japan to declare nuclear plant stable

 Japan to declare nuclear plant stable

Japan is poised to declare its crippled nuclear plant virtually stable nine months after a devastating tsunami, but the facility still leaks some radiation, remains vulnerable to earthquakes and shows no prospect for cleanup for decades.

Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda said last week that temperatures inside the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant’s three melted reactor cores are almost consistently below the boiling point and radiation leaks have significantly subsided – two key conditions in a hoped-for “cold shutdown.”

Officials say the government is expected to hold a news conference Friday to declare something close to cold shutdown, though experts caution it will be, at best, a tenuous stability.

The declaration would mark a step forward for the much-maligned operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., which has struggled to control the plant after it was damaged in a huge earthquake and tsunami March 11, unleashing the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl.

“Up until now, this has been the biggest goal,” TEPCO spokesman Masao Yamaguchi said. “It would be a milestone.”

The announcement is expected to refer to cold shutdown “conditions”- less definitive phrasing than a cold shutdown.

That’s partly because the operator cannot measure temperatures of melted fuel in the damaged reactors in the same way as with normally functioning ones, although the company believes they have reached a stable state.

in any case, experts caution that the progress so far at Fukushima should not be overstated, and that problems could still crop up.

“TEPCO and the government are anxious to bring a certain closure to the crisis,” said Kazuhiko Kudo, a nuclear physicist at Kyushu University. “It would be a problem if the announcement gives an impression that the plant has received an official safety certificate.”

The announcement would mark the end of the second phase of the government’s lengthy roadmap to completely decommission the plant – a process that could take about 30 years, authorities have said.

in the next phase, officials may start discussing whether to allow some evacuated residents who lived in areas with lesser damage from the plant to return home – but that could still be months or years away.

many of more than 100,000 residents evacuated from around the plant remain in limbo, living with relatives or in temporary housing. And a 20-kilometer (12-mile) zone around the plant is expected to remain off limits for some time.

Food safety concerns also persist.

The Fukushima plant disaster, which spewed an estimated one-fifth the amount of radiation as the 1986 accident at Chernobyl, has caused contamination of rice, vegetables and beef from around the region. recently, even trace amounts of cesium were found in baby formula.

The complex still faces numerous concerns, including the vulnerability of the spent fuel pools, which sit on the top floor of the damaged reactor buildings, and the vast amount of contaminated water that has collected in the reactor basements and nearby storage areas. another severe earthquake could damage the spent fuel pools, which might cause the water to leak and allow the fuel to overheat.

Unit 4′s spent fuel pool, which contains the largest number of fuel rods, is the biggest concern because of structural damage to the building beneath it, although TEPCO says it has reinforced the structure.

 Removal and storage of those fuel rods from pools at four of the reactor units is also part of the next step toward eventual decommissioning.

another continuing concern is containing radiation leaks.

To cool the reactors, TEPCO has been injecting water into the reactors, which is then leaking out through cracks.

The radioactive water has been collected and stored in huge rooms converted into storage tanks before being decontaminated and put back into the reactors as coolant.

Officials say the overall volume of contaminated water keeps growing, forcing the operator to keep searching for additional storage space.

Other recent leaks have raised questions about whether the plant really is fully under control. last week, the utility said that about 45 tons of highly radioactive water had leaked from the plant’s water processing system, some possibly leaking into the ocean.

Officials have said those are isolated incidents that are being taken care of and do not affect the overall plant status.

normally, a nuclear reactor is considered to be in cold shutdown when its coolant system is at atmospheric pressure and the reactor cores are at a temperature below 100 Celsius (212 Fahrenheit) so that it would be impossible for a chain reaction to take place.

but meeting that strict definition is impossible at Fukushima Dai-ichi because the damaged reactors’ fuel has melted and its exact whereabouts is unknown.

Authorities suspect most of the fuel has fallen to the bottom of the innermost steel pressure vessels, and some most likely dribbled through to the beaker-shaped containment vessel.

that makes it virtually impossible to know the exact temperature of the fuel.

Temperature gauges inside the Fukushima reactors show that the temperature at the bottom of the pressure vessel is around 70 C. TEPCO officials and nuclear experts say that indicates the reactor is in a cold, stable state.

but because of the educated guesswork involved, Japanese authorities are using the phrase “cold shutdown conditions,” rather than “cold shutdown.”

The government has also stressed that the amount of radiation now being released around the plant precincts is at or below 1 millisievert per year – equivalent to an annual legal exposure limit for ordinary citizens before the crisis began. it also says the reactor cooling and water recycling apparatus is working and sustainable.

How to remove and dispose of the melted fuel is also an issue.

recent TEPCO simulations showed that fuel in the worst-hit reactor no. 1 has mostly melted, breached the bottom of the core, dropping to an outer compartment and eating away into its concrete foundation and reaching within a foot of the crucial steel bottom of the primary containment chamber.

“It would make sense to let the people in and outside the country know that the work is steadily continuing,” said Satoru Tanaka, a nuclear physicist at the University of Tokyo. “But achieving the (cold shutdown) status does not mean the problem is over. there are so many things that still need to be taken care of and clarified.”

The Nuclear Safety Commission, which is comprised of government-appointed nuclear experts, on Monday approved TEPCO’s operation and safety plans covering the next phase.

but safety commission chairman Haruki Madarame urged TEPCO and the Nuclear Industrial and Safety Agency to regularly review and evaluate the plans because “the reactors are broken and we hardly know what it really is like inside the reactors and it’s difficult to predict what may occur.”

– AP

Japan to declare nuclear plant stable

Former MLB manager Bobby Valentine and Japanese baseball share mutual admiration

1308467720 24 Former MLB manager Bobby Valentine and Japanese baseball share mutual admirationValentine, Japan share mutual admiration ‘Sensei’ of baseball plans fundraiser to aid tsunami relief

It wasn’t the start to his managerial career in Japan that Bobby Valentine had hoped for.

It was Jan. 17, 1995, and Valentine was in the midst of his first news conference in Japan, held in the airport just moments after he touched down. Valentine had come to Japan to take over the Chiba Lotte Marines, a team that hadn’t won the pennant since 1974. Fresh off managing the Texas Rangers for 1,186 games — including a stretch of four straight seasons with a winning record — the arrival of the high-profile and successful manager was big news in Japan.

But as the manager soon learned, he wasn’t the biggest news of the day.

Valentine smiled and patiently answered questions from the media as the scrum and the constant flashes of the cameras pressed against him. Just minutes into what was to be his introduction to Japanese baseball, Valentine instead got an introduction to Japanese life.

After his plane touched down, a 6.8-magnitude earthquake struck near the city of Kobe, as thousands lost their lives and tens of thousands lost their homes.

“I was having the press conference when the earthquake struck,” Valentine told MLB.com. “The reporters all left — I guess they figured they had something more important going on.”

Valentine learned to live with the daily fear of the devastation that killed tens of thousands on March 11 as a tsunami swept across large swaths of northeast Japan. the 8.9-magnitude earthquake that triggered the wave that swept away so many lives was something Valentine said was part of Japanese life.

“I don’t know if I’d say there was a social awareness about it, but it was just something you learned was part of life,” Valentine said. “I experienced hundreds of earthquakes when I was there — hundreds. most of them were of the four- or five-magnitude variety. There were a couple tsunami warnings, too. It’s just something that was, something you deal with.”

And now, Valentine is dealing with the impact of the tsunami the best way he knows how — by giving and using his celebrity as a baseball manager to full effect. Valentine is spearheading a Stamford on the Sound charity event on Saturday, in which he will bring together former players, sports personalities and Hollywood celebrities, including former players David Cone, Darryl Strawberry and Lee Mazzilli.

Valentine’s first stint in Japan lasted just one year, as he returned to the United States, joining the Mets organization, becoming manager in 1996. It was against the backdrop of orange seats and the blue outfield walls of Shea Stadium that Valentine would find success, leading the Mets into the National League Championship Series in 1999 and to the World Series the following year. after being dismissed in 2002 following a disappointing 75-86 record, Valentine returned to Japan. Once again, he put on the black and white of Chiba Lotte.

There is no one singular moment, Valentine says, that sums up his love for the island nation, but it was a passion that was apparent from the onset.

“I think he really tried to dive into Japanese culture headfirst,” said Steve Novosel, a Texan now living in Japan who runs the English-language fansite WeLoveMarines.com. “He made a big effort to learn the language, for example. the first time I met Bobby, in fact, he asked me how my language studies were going and offered some advice on a text to use to study. Bobby was a true ambassador for Japanese baseball.”

Valentine counts hundreds of friends in Japan, the product of his gregarious penchant for making friends and his deep respect for the traditions and culture of his second home. Japan’s reverential appreciation for masters of any tradition has led to a fanatical following for Valentine throughout the nation, as he is revered as a sensei of baseball.

Wherever the team traveled, he was greeted as a hero. Opposing fans politely applauded as he strolled by on the field, asking him to pose for a photograph — even as they wore the caps of the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles or the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks. He taught clinics and promoted the game every which way he could.

“Such passionate people for the game,” Valentine said. “They followed and lived the team. I remember seeing grandmothers taking their granddaughters to games. the traditions ran deep.”

But as with all things, his time in Japan ended and Valentine returned back to the United States in 2009 after a controversial dismissal. He left deeply moved by the outpouring of love from the Japanese people and with countless friendships he made on the island.

After the devastation, he reached out to AmeriCare, a humanitarian relief organization based in his hometown of Stamford, Conn. after some calls from Valentine to Japan, he was able to help coordinate destinations for $600,000 in medical supplies going from AmeriCare to the stricken areas.

The tragedy struck him hard; Valentine’s first thoughts as he sat and watched the television reports on the tsunami were of his friends on the island.

“I was calling immediately, constantly,” Valentine said. “It took a while. the cell service was obviously down for a while. Some lost everything they had except for their loved ones. they were left with nothing but the clothes on their backs. Some didn’t even have that, to be honest.”

Valentine remains mum on how much he wants to raise from his charity event, but he has already secured several prominent sponsors and hopes to sell 1,000 tickets to the event, bringing together groups such as the Stamford Chamber of Commerce, the Japanese-American Association of New York, BLT Harbor Point and the Manassy Media Group.

“We want to do as well as we can, raise as much as we can,” Valentine said. “But in something like this, you don’t have to hit a home run. you can hit the warning track here and we’d be quite happy.”

Kristian Dyer is a contributor to MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.

<a href="http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20110616&content_id=20580144&vkey=news_mlb&c_id=mlbtag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20110616″>Former MLB manager Bobby Valentine and Japanese baseball share mutual admiration

Apple Looking To Sell Digital Tracks With Better Sound Quality – Techland – TIME.com

1298412914 19 Apple Looking To Sell Digital Tracks With Better Sound Quality   Techland   TIME.com

It’s hard to discern the difference between the lower quality, compressed 16-bit tracks that are available for download through Apple and other digital retailers and the 24-bit original audio recording so it probably doesn’t make a huge difference for the majority of listeners.  For the music snobs who can tell the inferior track from the better one, however, it is a constant annoying factor that has to be dealt with any time one opts to listen to music on an MP3 players. that might change soon: According to CNN, Apple and other online music stores are in talks with the record labels to sell “premium” quality tracks closer to the original recordings,

“What we’re trying to do here is fix the degradation of music that the digital revolution has caused,” chairman of Universal Music Group’s Interscope-Geffen-A&M Jimmy Iovine said at an HP news conference. “It’s one thing to have music stolen through the ease of digital processing. But it’s another thing to destroy the quality of it. And that’s what’s happening on a massive scale.”

Compared to the quality of streaming music, 16-bit compressed files available from digital music retailers are much better, but the come nowhere near the quality of the recordings you hear on a CD or vinyl. Some bands, like Radiohead, have already made the move to sell better uncompressed digital versions of their tracks.

The problem is while Apple computers and iTunes can handle tracks with the 24-bit sound, most portable electronic devices, including current iPods and iPhones, can’t handle the higher quality audio files. Apple would have to revamp their next generations of MP3 players – and customers would have to buy the new products if they want improved sound.

“Paul McCartney can master the Beatles albums all he wants, (but) when you play them through a Dell computer, it sounds like you’re playing them through a portable television,” Iovine said to CNN.

More on TIME.com:

Spotify Signs With EMI. Is It Closer to a U.S. Launch?

Sony Exec: “No Intention” of ending Partnership With iTunes

Google’s Rumored Music Service Confirmed by Motorola?

Apple Looking To Sell Digital Tracks With Better Sound Quality – Techland – TIME.com

Paterno quashes rumors that he’s finished

 Paterno quashes rumors that he’s finished

TAMPA, Fla. — A jovial Joe Paterno insists he has no plans to stop coaching after this week’s Outback Bowl.

The 84-year-old Penn State coach said during a news conference Tuesday that he “honest to goodness” has not entertained thoughts of stepping down after 45 seasons leading the Nittany Lions.

Sitting beside Florida’s Urban Meyer, Paterno called rumors he may quit after Saturday’s game against the Gators “ridiculous.” he said he feels great and is still having fun coaching.

Paterno also said he’s not happy to see Meyer leaving coaching after the Outback Bowl. Meyer announced his resignation earlier this month because of health concerns and he wants to spend more time with his family.

“I don’t know Urban’s situation,” Paterno said when asked about Meyer walking away from a program he’s led to two Southeastern Conference championships and a pair of national titles in six seasons.

“I’m being selfish when I say I hate to see guys like that leave the game,” Paterno added. “To me, I’m different than Urban. I’ve got people calling up saying: ‘When the hell are you getting out?”’

When laughter in the room subsided, Paterno continued.

“I don’t know. People think I’m going to quit this year or next year. I haven’t even thought of it,” he said. “I honest to goodness have not thought of it.

“the situation around me is very stable. the athletic director was a kid that I recruited as a walk-on, the coaches have been with me … the (school) president has been with us now maybe 14, 15 years. we have a lot of fun together. I don’t see any reason to get out. … I feel great.”

Paterno’s comments came a day after PennState.Scout.com quoted the coach’s wife, Sue, as saying rumors about Paterno’s health and future with the Nittany Lions were “lies.”

“who started the crazy rumors?” Sue Paterno said. “He’s fine. No one has to identify who starts it. we don’t even know where it starts.”

The coach alluded to various internet speculation as well, saying there was talk back in State College about him possibly being hospitalized in Hershey.

“Geez, Hershey Hospital? I was home chewing out somebody for being late for a meeting,” Paterno, the all-time bowl wins leader with 24, said. “It’s ridiculous. I don’t know when I’ll get out. I honestly don’t know.”

   

Paterno quashes rumors that he’s finished

Government sues BP, 8 other companies in Gulf oil spill

1293167716 21 Government sues BP, 8 other companies in Gulf oil spill

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department on Wednesday sued BP and eight other companies in the Gulf oil spill disaster in an effort to recover billions of dollars from the largest offshore spill in U.S. history.

The Obama administration’s lawsuit asks that the companies be held liable without limitation under the Oil Pollution Act for all removal costs and damages caused by the oil spill, including damages to natural resources. The lawsuit also seeks civil penalties under the clean Water Act.

“We intend to prove these violations caused or contributed to the massive oil spill,” Attorney General Eric Holder said at a news conference.

The federal lawsuit says inadequate cementing of the well contributed to the disaster. Similar charges were made by BP in its internal investigation, and by the independent presidential oil spill commission. but Halliburton co., the contractor in charge of mixing and pumping the cement, is not named in the suit.

Holder said it is conceivable that additional defendants could be added to the lawsuit. “This is an ongoing process,” the attorney general said.

The amount of damages and the extent of injuries sustained by the United States as a result of the Deepwater Horizon Spill are not yet fully known, the lawsuit states.

An explosion that killed 11 workers at BP’s Macondo well last April led to oil spewing from the company’s undersea well — more than 200 million gallons in all by the government’s estimate. BP disputes the figure.

The department filed the suit in federal court in new Orleans.

The other defendants in the case are Anadarko Exploration & Production LP and Anadarko Petroleum Corp.; MOEX Offshore 2007 LLC; Triton Asset Leasing GMBH; Transocean Holdings LLC and Transocean Offshore Deepwater Drilling Inc. and Transocean Deepwater Inc.; and Transocean’s insurer, QBE Underwriting Ltd./Lloyd’s Syndicate 1036.

Anadarko and MOEX are minority owners of the well that blew out. Transocean owned the rig that BP was leasing.

Transocean disputed the allegations, insisting it should not be held liable for the actions of others. “No drilling contractor has ever been held liable for discharges from a well under the Oil Pollution Act of 1990,” the company said in a statement e-mailed to The associated Press.

“The responsibility for hydrocarbons discharged from a well lies solely with its owner and operator.” QBE/Lloyd’s can be held liable only up to the amount of insurance policy coverage under the Oil Pollution Act and is not being sued under the clean Water Act.

The lawsuit alleges that safety and operating regulations were violated in the period leading up to April 20.

It says that the defendants failed to keep the Macondo well under control during that period and failed to use the best available and safest drilling technology to monitor the well’s conditions. They also failed to maintain continuous surveillance and failed to maintain equipment and material that were available and necessary to ensure the safety and protection of personnel, equipment, natural resources and the environment, the suit charges.

Democratic Rep. Edward J. Markey, D-Mass., a member of the House energy panel that is investigating the spill, acknowledged the government will have a tough fight on its hands since BP has already taken an aggressive stance regarding its liability.

“It may have taken these companies months to cap their well, but they will spend years trying to cap their financial obligations to the people of the Gulf,” Markey said. “That is why it is vital for the Obama administration to swiftly advance this legal action.” before Wednesday, potential class-action lawsuits had been filed in the Gulf oil spill by fishing and seafood interests, the tourism industry, restaurants and clubs, property owners losing vacation renters — even vacationers who claim the spill forced them to cancel and lose a deposit. So far, more than 300 suits have been spawned by the spill and consolidated in federal court in new Orleans.

Wednesday’s move by the Justice Department follows the Obama administration’s decision not to open new areas of the eastern Gulf and Atlantic seaboard to drilling. that marked a reversal from an earlier decision to hunt for oil and gas, an announcement the president himself made last spring three weeks before the spill.

The staff of a presidentially appointed commission looking into the spill has said that the disaster resulted from questionable decisions and management failures by three companies: BP, the well owner and operator; Transocean, the owner of the Deepwater Horizon rig; and Halliburton.

The panel found 11 decisions made by these companies increased risk. Most saved time, and all but one had a safer alternative.

Separately, an administrator is doling out money to Gulf oil spill victims from a $20 billion fund of BP money.

The Justice Department isn’t the first government entity to sue BP. Alabama Attorney General Troy King filed federal lawsuits in August on behalf of the state against BP, rig owner Transocean, cement contractor Halliburton Energy Services Inc. and other companies that worked on the ill-fated drilling project.

U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier is presiding over most of the consolidated federal suits. in September, Louisiana Attorney General James “Buddy” Caldwell’s office asked Barbier to create a “government case track” to handle government-related suits separately from other claims. The judge hasn’t ruled on that request yet.

Government sues BP, 8 other companies in Gulf oil spill

Soccer-Cazorla replaces injured Navas in Spain squad – Yahoo! Canada News

1289589330 11 Soccer Cazorla replaces injured Navas in Spain squad   Yahoo! Canada News

* Cazorla in for the injured Navas

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* Friendly to boost Iberian bid to host 2018 finals

MADRID, Nov 12 (Reuters) – Villarreal’s Santi Cazorla replaces the injured Jesus Navas in the Spanish squad to face Portugal next week, in the only change to the 23-man group that won the World Cup in South Africa in July.

Sevilla winger Navas misses out having recently had surgery on an ankle injury.

The world and European champions face their neighbours at the Stadium of Light in Lisbon on Wednesday in a friendly they hope will boost the countries’ joint bid to host the 2018 World Cup finals, coach Vicente del Bosque said on Friday.

“This is an important game being held just under a month away from the decision to choose the hosts for the 2018 World Cup finals,” coach Vincente Del Bosque told a news conference on Friday.

“We can give the final push for the two countries to be successful in their bid.”

Xavi, Cesc Fabregas, Fernando Torres, Pedro and Raul Albiol all return after missing last month’s Euro 2012 qualifiers with injuries.

Midfielder Xavi, a candidate for the FIFA Ballon d’Or, has been struggling with an Achilles problem that has seen Barcelona using him sparingly this season, and led to him dropping out of October’s internationals.

With Barca set to play league leaders Real Madrid on Monday Nov. 29, Del Bosque was asked whether the champions had put up any resistance to releasing Xavi.

“Xavi has always shown his desire to come and play with the national team and if I remember correctly he is set to win his 97th cap,” Del Bosque added.

“To doubt his commitment isn’t correct.”

Spain’s last match of 2010 provides Portugal with the chance to avenge the 1-0 defeat they suffered in the World Cup finals, when David Villa scored the only goal to knock them out.

FIFA will make their decision on the hosting of the 2018 and 2022 World Cup finals on Dec. 2. Russia, England and a joint bid from Belgium/Netherlands are also in the running to stage the 2018 tournament.

Goalkeepers: Iker Casillas (Real Madrid), Victor Valdes (Barcelona), Pepe Reina (Liverpool).

Defenders: Alvaro Arbeloa (Real Madrid), Sergio Ramos (Real Madrid), Raul Albiol (Real Madrid), Carles Puyol (Barcelona), Gerard Pique (Barcelona), Carlos Marchena (Villarreal), Joan Capdevila (Villarreal).

Midfielders: Xavi (Barcelona), Xabi Alonso (Real Madrid), Andres Iniesta (Barcelona), Cesc Fabregas (Arsenal), Sergio Busquets (Barcelona), David Silva (Manchester City), Javi Martinez (Athletic Bilbao).

Forwards: David Villa (Barcelona), Fernando Torres (Liverpool), Juan Mata (Valencia), Fernando Llorente (Athletic Bilbao), Santi Cazorla (Villarreal), Pedro (Barcelona).

(Writing by mark Elkington; Editing by Alison Wildey; to query or comment on this story email )

Soccer-Cazorla replaces injured Navas in Spain squad – Yahoo! Canada News

Vikings cut Randy Moss  – Breaking News – The Charleston Gazette – West Virginia News and Sports -

 Vikings cut Randy Moss 
   Breaking News   
The Charleston Gazette   West Virginia News and Sports

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. — the Minnesota Vikings have waived receiver Randy Moss.

Linebacker Ben Leber says coach Brad Childress informed the team that Moss had been let go during a team meeting Monday afternoon.

The NFL Network first reported the Vikings waived Moss, but team officials have not confirmed the news.

Moss had one catch for 8 yards in a loss to the Patriots. in Sunday night's postgame news conference, he expressed admiration for the Patriots and criticized Vikings coaching.

Childress said earlier Monday that Moss was staying back in the Boston area after the game to spend time with family. Childress said he did not regret acquiring him "at the moment.''

Childress did not mention the roster move during his news conference.

The Vikings acquired Moss from the Patriots a month ago for a third-round draft pick. He played in four games for the Vikings and had 13 catches for 174 yards and two touchdowns.

Vikings cut Randy Moss 
– Breaking News –
The Charleston Gazette – West Virginia News and Sports -

No sign of oil after Gulf platform fire – Coast Guard 

1285352115 27 No sign of oil after Gulf platform fire   Coast Guard 

An oil and gas platform operated by Mariner Energy burst into flames in the Gulf of Mexico on Thursday, but the crew of 13 escaped and there were no signs of an oil spill, the U.S. Coast Guard said. Skip related content

The accident brought unwelcome attention to the offshore drilling industry as it is trying to roll back a six-month deepwater drilling moratorium imposed in the wake of the BP Plc Macondo well disaster, which killed 11 workers and poured 4.1 million barrels of oil into the Gulf.

As of late Thursday, there were no signs of a spill from the Mariner platform.

"the boats and the aircraft on scene cannot see a sheen," U.S. Coast Guard Captain Peter Troedsson told a news conference Thursday afternoon in new Orleans.

Shortly after the fire, Mariner reported there was a mile-long oily sheen on the water around the platform, according to the government.

On Friday morning, Coast Guard helicopters will fly over and inspect the platform and surrounding ocean, a Coast Guard spokeswoman said.

The fire burnt for several hours before it was extinguished. a company spokesman said it started on an upper deck of the platform where living quarters were located, and had not been caused by a "blowout," or sudden release of oil and gas from a well.

The crew, plucked from the Gulf by an oil supply vessel, were transported to a hospital onshore and no injuries have been reported, the Houston-based company said.

Automated shutoff equipment turned off the flow of oil and gas from the platform's seven producing wells as the crew evacuated, Mariner said. the cause of the fire is still unknown and under investigation, the company said.

"It's unlikely to have long-term implications for production in the Gulf of Mexico," said Raoul LeBlanc, a senior director at PFC Energy in Houston.

Environmental groups said the Mariner explosion reinforced the need to keep the moratorium in place. White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said he did not know whether the fire would affect the moratorium, scheduled to expire November 30.

Several analysts said the accident could hurt the industry in its court battle to lift the drilling halt early.

"the incident has happened at the wrong time," said Eugen Weinberg, head of commodity research at Commerzbank. "the political establishment will probably move quickly as everybody still remembers the slow dealing with the Macondo accident and the dramatic pictures from this summer."

The platform is located more than 90 miles (145 km) south of Louisiana's Vermilion Bay, 200 miles west of BP's ruptured Macondo well. it is in relatively shallow water 340 feet (104 meters) deep.

The platform's output is a small fraction of the 1.6 million barrels of oil and 6.4 billion cubic feet of gas the region produces on a daily basis.

The facility averaged 9.2 million cubic feet of natural gas per day and 1,400 barrels of oil and condensate per day during the last week of August, Mariner said.

MARKET REACTS

News of the fire helped push crude oil prices up $1.11 to $75.02 a barrel on the new York Mercantile Exchange. Oil prices were also boosted by Hurricane Earl, which is threatening refineries along the U.S. East Coast.

Shares of Mariner Energy fell 2.6 percent to close at $22.75 and shares of Apache Corp, which is expected to buy Mariner Energy in a $2.7 billion deal, fell 1.3 percent to close at $91.30.

Apache plans to proceed with the Mariner purchase, Apache spokesman bill Mintz, said.

Mariner has participated in at least 35 deepwater projects in the Gulf and operated over half of them.

The fire was the fifth reported at offshore sites operated by Mariner since October 2006, according to the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement.

None of the earlier fires caused any fatalities, although workers were injured in two of the accidents. the company also suffered a blowout while drilling a well about 90 miles off the Louisiana coast in may 2008, but the well was brought under control within a few hours.

The Vermillion platform was last inspected in January and found to have three minor compliance violations, according to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management records.

(Additional reporting by Kristen Hays, Bruce Nichols, Erwin Seba and Eileen O'Grady in Houston; David Sheppard, Matt Daily and Joshua Schneyer in new York; Tom Doggett, Ayesha Rascoe and Timothy Gardner in Washington; writing by Anna Driver and Andy Sullivan in Washington; Editing by Paul Simao)

 

No sign of oil after Gulf platform fire – Coast Guard 

No sign of oil after Gulf platform fire – Coast Guard

1283930115 30 No sign of oil after Gulf platform fire   Coast Guard

NEW ORLEANS – an oil and gas platform operated by Mariner Energy burst into flames in the Gulf of Mexico on Thursday, but the crew of 13 escaped and there were no signs of an oil spill, the U.S. Coast Guard said.

The accident brought unwelcome attention to the offshore drilling industry as it is trying to roll back a six-month deepwater drilling moratorium imposed in the wake of the BP Plc Macondo well disaster, which killed 11 workers and poured 4.1 million barrels of oil into the Gulf.

As of late Thursday, there were no signs of a spill from the Mariner platform.

“The boats and the aircraft on scene cannot see a sheen,” U.S. Coast Guard Captain Peter Troedsson told a news conference Thursday afternoon in new Orleans.

Shortly after the fire, Mariner reported there was a mile-long oily sheen on the water around the platform, according to the government.

On Friday morning, Coast Guard helicopters will fly over and inspect the platform and surrounding ocean, a Coast Guard spokeswoman said.

The fire burnt for several hours before it was extinguished. a company spokesman said it started on an upper deck of the platform where living quarters were located, and had not been caused by a “blowout,” or sudden release of oil and gas from a well.

The crew, plucked from the Gulf by an oil supply vessel, were transported to a hospital onshore and no injuries have been reported, the Houston-based company said.

Automated shutoff equipment turned off the flow of oil and gas from the platform’s seven producing wells as the crew evacuated, Mariner said. The cause of the fire is still unknown and under investigation, the company said.

“It’s unlikely to have long-term implications for production in the Gulf of Mexico,” said Raoul LeBlanc, a senior director at PFC Energy in Houston.

Environmental groups said the Mariner explosion reinforced the need to keep the moratorium in place. White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said he did not know whether the fire would affect the moratorium, scheduled to expire November 30.

Several analysts said the accident could hurt the industry in its court battle to lift the drilling halt early.

“The incident has happened at the wrong time,” said Eugen Weinberg, head of commodity research at Commerzbank. “The political establishment will probably move quickly as everybody still remembers the slow dealing with the Macondo accident and the dramatic pictures from this summer.”

The platform is located more than 90 miles deep.

The platform’s output is a small fraction of the 1.6 million barrels of oil and 6.4 billion cubic feet of gas the region produces on a daily basis.

The facility averaged 9.2 million cubic feet of natural gas per day and 1,400 barrels of oil and condensate per day during the last week of August, Mariner said.

News of the fire helped push crude oil prices up $1.11 to $75.02 a barrel on the new York Mercantile Exchange. Oil prices were also boosted by Hurricane Earl, which is threatening refineries along the U.S. East Coast.

Shares of Mariner Energy fell 2.6 percent to close at $22.75 and shares of Apache Corp, which is expected to buy Mariner Energy in a $2.7 billion deal, fell 1.3 percent to close at $91.30.

Apache plans to proceed with the Mariner purchase, Apache spokesman bill Mintz, said.

Mariner has participated in at least 35 deepwater projects in the Gulf and operated over half of them.

The fire was the fifth reported at offshore sites operated by Mariner since October 2006, according to the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement.

None of the earlier fires caused any fatalities, although workers were injured in two of the accidents. The company also suffered a blowout while drilling a well about 90 miles off the Louisiana coast in May 2008, but the well was brought under control within a few hours.

The Vermillion platform was last inspected in January and found to have three minor compliance violations, according to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management records.

No sign of oil after Gulf platform fire – Coast Guard