Final Report on the Investigation of the Macondo Well Blowout
Year: 2011 Language: english Author: Deepwater Horizon Study Group Publisher: Deepwater Horizon Study Group Edition: March 1 Format: PDF Quality: eBook Pages count: 126 Description: At approximately 9:47 p.m. (Central Standard Time) on the evening of April 20, 2010, an uncontrolled flow of water, oil mud, oil, gas, and other materials came out of the drilling riser and possibly the drill pipe on the dynamically positioned drilling vessel Deepwater Horizon owned by Transocean and contracted by BP to drill the Mississippi Canyon 252 #1 Macondo well in approximately 5,000 ft of water in the northern Gulf of Mexico offshore the coast of Louisiana. A series of two or more explosions and a huge fire followed shortly after the uncontrolled flow commenced. The fire continued unabated for about two days fueled by hydrocarbons coming from the Macondo well. The Deepwater Horizon was abandoned shortly after the fire started, but 11 of 126 persons aboard perished. The vessel sank about 36 hours later and the fire was extinguished. The riser and drill pipe inside bent at the top of the subsea Blowout Preventer (BOP) and dropped crumpled and broken on the seafloor, spewing gas and oil.
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Final Report on the Investigation of the Macondo Well Blowout
Year: 2011
Language: english
Author: Deepwater Horizon Study Group
Publisher: Deepwater Horizon Study Group
Edition: March 1
Format: PDF
Quality: eBook
Pages count: 126
Description: At approximately 9:47 p.m. (Central Standard Time) on the evening of April 20, 2010, an uncontrolled flow of water, oil mud, oil, gas, and other materials came out of the drilling riser and possibly the drill pipe on the dynamically positioned drilling vessel Deepwater Horizon owned by Transocean and contracted by BP to drill the Mississippi Canyon 252 #1 Macondo well in approximately 5,000 ft of water in the northern Gulf of Mexico offshore the coast of Louisiana.
A series of two or more explosions and a huge fire followed shortly after the uncontrolled flow commenced. The fire continued unabated for about two days fueled by hydrocarbons coming from the Macondo well. The Deepwater Horizon was abandoned shortly after the fire started, but 11 of 126 persons aboard perished. The vessel sank about 36 hours later and the fire was extinguished. The riser and drill pipe inside bent at the top of the subsea Blowout Preventer (BOP) and dropped crumpled and broken on the seafloor, spewing gas and oil.
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