Simple Brilliance
Not every complex problem needs to have a complex (and expensive) solution. Check out this quite green idea for capturing much of the oil still being emitted by the Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico.
Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 10:08 AM
Comments
Posted by: Skip at May 12, 2010 10:32 AM (RZhcI)
Posted by: TimothyJ at May 12, 2010 10:52 AM (IKKIf)
Note all the finger pointing on who is to blame for this. I have worked rigs and can tell you that the project engineer at BP is the one with the prize. He and only he is the man that prevents a blow out. He calculates the mud, makes sure the preventers are working, ok's the cement and so forth. If he was on the floor when the well blew, which is where he belngs, then he should have been the last man off and should have died closing the rig. I have known this to occur.
Posted by: David at May 12, 2010 01:13 PM (dccG2)
I love this country but sometimes the people running it are schmucks.
Posted by: NevadaDailySteve at May 12, 2010 01:18 PM (+xi30)
The volume of hay required to collect the amount of oil present makes the idea logistically impractical in this case. Several folks have already done the math, Google it if you're interested.
On the other hand, for something like keeping a repair garage leak from fouling a local river, it's a quick and easy solution.
Posted by: Junk Science Skeptic at May 12, 2010 02:05 PM (Fnr44)
Posted by: Web at May 12, 2010 02:20 PM (Fp/GI)
Posted by: bman at May 12, 2010 02:54 PM (ne/1s)
But simple, workable, logical answers like these two gentleman have produced will get ignored... because some petro-chemical corporation wants and gets the contract for dumping even more crap into the ocean. That, my friends, is the height and definition of fascism - greased palms and all.
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Posted by: blakeart at May 13, 2010 11:15 AM (S8lzv)
I say he will throw everything and the kitchen sink at the problem including the hay.
Posted by: Ron at May 15, 2010 09:02 AM (B9qRp)
Since the incident about 4.3 million gallons have spewed from the well.
Four million gallons of oily water have been skimmed from the water. That means about 2 million gallons of crude have been skimmed.
1.9 million gallons have been either absorbed by sorbet buoys, or the chemicals dumped to disperse it.
That leaves less than half a million gallons still in the water, and it will be cleaned up shortly. They are gaining ground on the problem.
Now here is another little known fact. 16 million gallons of crude comes up through seeps in the cap rocks in the gulf every year, and is cleaned up naturally without any human intervention.
Posted by: Matt at May 16, 2010 05:17 PM (M9y1k)
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