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Friday, October 23, 2009

Attempt to plug oil leak delayed

The latest attempt to plug an oil well, that has been leaking for more than two months in the Timor Sea, has been delayed.
Oil began flowing from a well at the Montara oilfield, more than 200km off Western Australia's north-west coast, on August 21.
Three attempts PTTEP Australasia to plug the leaking well with mud have failed.
A fourth attempt was to be made today, but PTTEP Australasia said that would now take place over the weekend.
A spokesman for the company said an overnight analysis of electro magnetic surveys after drilling activities yesterday meant a specialised guidance tool would have to be used to align the drilling assembly in the well bore to intercept the leaking well.
"The drilling team on board the West Triton rig will deploy the alignment tool down the intercept well to accurately guide the drilling assembly towards the target," the spokesman said.
"Following a successful intercept, heavy mud will be pumped from the West Triton down into the relief well, displacing the oil, gas and water and stopping the flow."
The well casing being targeted is 25cm in diameter.
Late yesterday, PTTEP said a small piece of cement recovered near the site of the leaking well showed repair crews could be close to finally stemming the spill.
PTTEP said the well was initially leaking at a flow rate of 400 barrels of oil a day.
But the Greens said data from Geoscience Australia, revealed in Senate estimates hearings on Wednesday, revealed the flow could be about 2,000 barrels a day, plus condensate.
Conservationists have been critical of the response to the spill.
Today, WWF said PTTEP had confirmed the deaths of 16 seabirds out of 25 affected by the oil spill.
WWF conservation director Dr Gilly Llewellyn said dolphins, migratory seabirds, sea snakes and marine turtles have been found in the slick-affected area during a recent expedition by the group.
A survey report, released today, painted a picture of a rich marine environment under toxic threat from the Montara leak.
"We recorded hundreds of dolphins and sea birds in the oil slick area, as well as sea snakes and threatened hawksbill and flatback turtles," Dr Llewellyn said.
PTTEP said there were no reports of any whales or dolphins in trouble and tests undertaken on fish specimens to date showed no contamination by oil.
"Clearly, wildlife is dying and hundreds if not thousands of dolphins, seabirds and sea snakes are being exposed to toxic oil," Dr Llewellyn said.
"The critical issue is the long-term impact of this slick on a rich marine ecosystem, taking into consideration the magnitude, extent and duration of the event."
Oil could be a slow and silent killer, Dr Llewellyn said.
"Impacts from the Exxon Valdez disaster are still being seen 20 years later, so we can expect this environmental disaster will continue to unfold for years to come," she said.

Fatal crash in Gascoyne

UPDATE 8.15PM A man has been killed and three others injured in a fatal crash this afternoon in Woodleigh, about 700km north of Perth.
At about 4pm a car rolled over on Woodleigh Road, about 2km off Great Northern Highway and 25km north-east from the Overlander Roadhouse.
Semi-private Woodleigh Road runs to Woodleigh Station and is about halfway between Geraldton and Carnarvon.
At this stage, it is believed to be a single-vehicle accident.
St John Ambulance, FESA and the police are at the scene.
The crash came within minutes of a head-on crash on Donnybrook-Boyup Brook Rd about 10km north of Boyup Brook involving two people. One person is still believed to be trapped in a vehicle.
Both crashes came after a side impact crash in Dawesville today that saw an 18-year-old woman rushed to RPH with serious head and internal injures.
At about 3pm the young woman, who is from Erskine, was driving a Mazda on the incorrect side of an incomplete section of Old Coast Road.
Police said she failed to give way to a Mitsubishi Triton travelling northbound, but the male driver escaped with minor injuries.