Iraq Sun
IraqSun.com Thursday 9th September 2010 Issue 252/8
  • More Oil and Gas News

  • Eight failures that led to Gulf oil spill
  • Oil platform in South Atlantic on fire
  • Many people die in North Ossetia blast
  • Serious eye problems emerge from laser pointers
  • Many world leaders disturbed by Quran burning plan
  • Taliban are winning war says Mullah Omar
  • Looted artifacts go back to Iraq
  • Alzheimer’s could be helped by vitamin B
  • Rabid coyote attacks humans in New York
  • Marijuana may soon in the hands of respectable Mexicans
  • Siberian plane goes down into bog
  • Residents of Christchurch rocked by another quake
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    Gulf beaches will see fewer oil spill workers
    Iraq Sun
    Sunday 1st August, 2010  


    Incoming BP chief executive Bob Dudley has made a commitment to tackling the environmental oil damage in the Gulf of Mexico, but has also said it is time for the company to scale back some aspects of the oil spill clean-up.
    Incoming BP chief executive Bob Dudley has made a commitment to tackling the environmental oil damage in the Gulf of Mexico, but has also said it is time for the company to scale back some aspects of the oil spill clean-up.

    Mr Dudley told the BBC that even though BP would be in the area "for years" to ensure the damage is put right, no oil has been released into the Gulf since a new cap was closed on 15th July, allowing the company to prepare for a pullback, in which workers will be pulled back from clear beaches.

    He said: "You will see the evidence of a pullback because we have booms across the shores all the way from Florida to Louisiana. And where there is no oil on the beaches you probably don't need people walking up and down in Hazmat suits. So you'll probably see that kind of a pullback."

    Mr Dudley said more mud would be pumped into the top of the oil cap during next week, as BP engineers continue to work to make a permanent seal.

    On 20th April, the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico, killing 11 workers and causing an oil spill that soon became the worst environmental disaster in US history.

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