Yahoo – AFP,
11 May 2014
Waves crash
along the beach, days after a BP announcement that it is ending its
"active cleanup" on the Louisiana coast from the Deepwater Horizon
oil spill, on April 19, 2014 in Grand Isle, Louisiana (AFP Photo/Sean Gardner)
Paris (AFP)
- Scientists on Sunday said that methane which leaked from the 2010 oil-rig
blowout in the Gulf of Mexico persisted in the sea for months beyond a presumed
cleanup of the gas by marine microbes.
As much as
half a million tonnes of natural gas, 80 percent of it methane, leaked into the
deep sea as a result of the blowout on April 20, 2010, on BP's Deepwater
Horizon rig.
The leak
triggered a surprising "bloom" of marine bacteria that feasted on the
gassy hydrocarbon plume.
The bugs
performed a valuable environmental service, helping to prevent gas from
lingering in the sea -- where it would contribute to ocean acidification -- or
from escaping to the air, where it would add to the greenhouse-gas problem.
The bloom
was so dramatic that, by the end of August, tests suggested all the gas had
been mopped out by these natural little helpers.
But in a
study published in the journal Nature Geoscience on Sunday, US marine
scientists said the bloom abruptly declined at the end of June, even as methane
concentrations remained about 5,000 times above background levels.
The bugs
did indeed remove a significant amount of the gas, but their population crashed
while the leak was still in progress, it said.
Engineers
eventually capped the blowout on July 15, after 83 days. In addition to the
gas, around four million barrels of oil escaped into the Gulf of Mexico.
Data from
research expeditions that ran from May to December 2010 suggest that the
residual plumes dispersed, according to the study.
Above-normal
methane concentrations from the well, carrying a telltale carbon isotope
signature, were found over a large area north and northeast of the wellhead,
and this persisted until the end of the year at least, the study said.
The
investigation, headed by Samantha Joye at the University of Georgia, did not
estimate how much gas was not gobbled up by the microbes.
In
addition, it was not designed to assess any environmental damage.
Why the
microbial bloom crashed is unclear, but the fact that it happened underscores
the many uncertainties in the complex marine environment when a gas leak
occurs, it said.
Potential
factors in these blooms include the availability of other nutrients for the
bacteria, currents, other microscopic marine life and chemicals used to
disperse oil slicks.
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