"The leak finally stopped on March 23, 1980, 
some 10 months after it began. An estimated 
3 million to 3.5 million total barrels of oil 
were spilled into the Gulf."

"If the BP well leaks for 10 months at that 
rate, the total oil leaked will reach 
3.6 million to 5.6 million barrels."


--The BP oil spill has been called an "unprecedented disaster" by both the 
president and BP's top executive. But the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe has 
echoes of a 1979 spill, when a rig in the southern Gulf exploded after the 
blowout preventer failed.

Thirty-one years later, we haven't come that far technologically with how we 
deal with underwater oil drilling spills. 

The Mexican company running the Ixtoc I rig attempted a slew of now-familiar 
remedies --- they pumped mud into the well, capped it with a metal "sombrero," 
shot lead balls into the well and drilled relief wells -- but it took 10 months 
to stop the leak even though the drilling was taking place just 160 feet below 
the surface.

The Deepwater Horizon, which blew on April 20, was drilling 5,000 feet 
underwater.

The story of the Ixtoc disaster, one of the worst in drilling history, began on 
June 3, 1979. The Ixtoc was an exploratory well drilled in the oil-rich 
southern Gulf by Pemex, the Mexican state oil company. 

It exploded after the drilling mud, used as a counterbalance to pressure from 
natural gas, started escaping through cracks in the rock. Workers tried to plug 
the cracks, but the mud began surging back onto the rig, followed by oil and 
natural gas, which ignited. 

The crew tried to activate the blowout preventer, which, like the one on the 
Horizon, would have sheared off the drill pipes and sealed them shut. But, like 
the Horizon's, it didn't work.

Fortunately, unlike the Horizon, no lives were lost aboard the Ixtoc.

Pemex estimated that 475,000 metric tons of oil -- some 3.5 million barrels -- 
poured into the Gulf before the leak was finally plugged on March 23, 1980. 

The broken well initially spewed some 30,000 barrels a day and, according to 
Pemex, the rate dwindled to less than 2,000 barrels as the months went on. But 
U.S. scientists estimated that the rate was closer to a steady 50,000 barrels a 
day.

For comparison, the BP well is leaking at an estimated 12,000 to 19,000 barrels 
a day. If the BP well leaks for 10 months at that rate, the total oil leaked 
will reach 3.6 million to 5.6 million barrels.

Pemex's attempts to stop the leak will sound familiar to those following the BP 
response.

The company sent divers down to try to shut off the well, and BP sent 
submersible robots, both to no avail. Pemex, like BP, also sprayed the slick 
with dispersants, burned off some of the oil and gas and collected contaminated 
water with tankers.

Pemex pumped mud into the well in July 1979, a measure they claimed cut the 
leak to 20,000 barrels a day. BP tried the same last week in an operation 
called "top kill." It failed.

Like BP's junk shot, in which the company tried to block the leaking pipe with 
debris, Pemex shot lead balls into their open pipe. They had more success than 
BP, claiming the measure cut the leak down to 10,000 barrels a day.

Pemex also used containment domes, but instead of BP's "top hat," Pemex dubbed 
their dome "Operation Sombrero." After a month of false starts and bad weather, 
Pemex successfully lowered the sombrero. They said the dome caught 6,500 
barrels a day.

Throughout the months of attempts, Pemex was also drilling two relief wells. 
The first was completed in the late fall, and workers began pumping salt water 
and other liquids into it in order to relieve pressure.

It took until March of 1980 for the pressure had subsided enough to allow Pemex 
to pump cement into the well, creating a 1,650-foot-long plug. The leak finally 
stopped on March 23, 1980, some 10 months after it began. An estimated 3 
million to 3.5 million total barrels of oil were spilled into the Gulf.

-The next step for BP is lowering another containment dome. But government 
officials say the leak will likely continue until at least August, when BP 
expects to finish two relief wells. Drilling could be complicated, however, by 
what's expected to be an active hurricane season.

The Ixtoc disaster affected 162 miles of Texas coastline and 1,421 birds were 
found with oiled feathers and feet, according to the NOAA. The U.S. commercial 
fishing industry was negligibly affected by the earlier spill, according to a 
report by the Bureau of Land Management. 

Conversely, some 25 percent of the Gulf has been closed to fishermen due to the 
BP spill.

The Ixtoc spill did cause Texas tourism to take a hit, however. The BLM 
estimated a seven to 10 percent decrease, while local officials claimed a 60 
percent hit. U.S. businesses sued Mexico for more than $300 million in damages, 
but Mexico claimed sovereign immunity and refused to pay.

The effects to Texas were mitigated, however, because officials had two months 
to prepare boom and barrier islands before the oil hit.

http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com/2010/05/ixtoc_oil_spill.php?ref=fpblg



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