..bisa ngak lapindo dijadikan 7 keajaiban dunia....hehehheehe...:d 

--- On Wed, 6/4/08, Asana Viebeke Lengkong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
From: Asana Viebeke Lengkong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [bali] LAPINDO
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, June 4, 2008, 10:32 AM



 
 



Lapindo blamed 
for mud volcano in East Java


Published: June 3 2008 20:42 | Last updated: June 3 2008 
20:42


A two-year-old mud volcano in East Java that has submerged six villages, 
displaced 12,000 families and inundated hundreds of hectares of land, was 
caused 
by drilling negligence rather than natural causes, according to new research by 
British and US academics.


The research, seen by the Financial Times, provides the most conclusive 
findings to date that Lapindo Brantas, the oil and gas company drilling an 
exploratory well 150m from the eruption site, triggered the mudflow on May 29 
2006. The mud is still flowing at more than 100,000 cubic metres a day – enough 
to fill 53 Olympic swimming pools.


Lapindo, which has seen the report, acknowledges it made significant 
mistakes less than a day before the eruption, but says these had no bearing on 
the subsequent mudflow. It says the incident was a natural disaster caused by 
tectonic activity unsealing a geological fault close to the drill 
site.


The political fallout for President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono at 
legislative and presidential elections could be significant if prosecutors 
proceed to court and Lapindo is found liable.


The government agreed to share the multi-billion dollar clean-up costs 
with Lapindo, which is owned by the family of Aburizal Bakrie, the chief 
welfare 
minister.


Geologists Richard Davies of Britain’s Durham University and Michael 
Manga of the University of California at Berkeley in the US said they were “98 
per cent certain” that Lapindo was responsible. “In geology you can rarely be 
100 per cent certain about anything,” Dr Davies said. “There are so many 
unlikely coincidences – Lapindo was either the unluckiest drilling company 
anywhere in the world ever, or they caused the disaster.”


The academics concluded that the disaster began with the drilling crew’s 
failure to detect for 90 minutes a “massive” influx of water and gas, known as 
a 
kick, into the 2,834m-deep drilling hole the day before the eruption. They say 
that by the time the hole had been closed to contain the kick, the pressure in 
the hole had risen so much that it exceeded the maximum allowable pressure and 
the sides fractured.


Lapindo acknowledges that its personnel failed to detect the kick 
promptly, but says that the pressure in the bore never exceeded the maximum 
allowable.


The company points to a 5.9-magnitude earthquake 250km to the south-west 
on May 27 as evidence of tectonic activity occurring at the time, suggesting 
that it opened the Watukosek fault, on which the drill site was 
located.


“We’re trying to look for answers for what happened,” said Bambang 
Istadi, Lapindo’s former exploration manager and now the Bakrie Group’s senior 
vice-president for technical services.


Dr Manga said there was no evidence of an escalation of tectonic activity 
over the previous year, that bigger earthquakes nearer the eruption site had 
not 
caused mud eruptions and that the fault would have been more likely to close 
than open, based on the way the Earth’s plates moved to cause the Yogyakarta 
earthquake.


Separately, an unpublished analysis carried out for the Indonesian police 
and seen by the FT points to potentially crucial errors in Lapindo’s pressure 
calculations.


Harry Eddyarso, who has 25 years of worldwide drilling experience, was 
commissioned by the Indonesian police to analyse the data submitted by the 
companies involved in the drilling.


“I’m 100 per cent certain Lapindo is to blame,” he said. “They made one 
mistake after another.” The police have publicly accused Lapindo of 
responsibility for the mud slide but prosecutors have declined to proceed to 
court, citing reports from scientists who have attributed the mud flow to 
natural causes.


Last year the Bakrie Group bought the 32 per cent stake in Lapindo owned 
by Medco Energi, Indonesia’s largest private energy company, in exchange for 
Medco withdrawing arbitration proceedings against Lapindo.


The government said last week it was focusing on cleaning up the mess and 
helping the victims. 



http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/af464b2c-31a0-11dd-b77c-0000779fd2ac.html


      
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