And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his name that sat on him was 
Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was given unto them over 
the fourth part of the earth, to kill with sword, and with hunger, and 
with death, and with the beasts of the earth.

--the Apocalypse of St. John



NY Times June 2, 2010
U.S. Says No, but Nuclear Option for Spill Gains Support
By WILLIAM J. BROAD

The chatter began weeks ago as armchair engineers brainstormed for ways 
to stop the torrent of oil spilling into the Gulf of Mexico: What about 
nuking the well?

Decades ago, the Soviet Union reportedly used nuclear blasts to 
successfully seal off runaway gas wells, inserting a bomb deep 
underground and letting its fiery heat melt the surrounding rock to shut 
off the flow. Why not try it here?

The idea has gained fans with each failed attempt to stem the leak and 
each new setback — on Wednesday, the latest rescue effort stalled when a 
wire saw being used to slice through the riser pipe got stuck.

“Probably the only thing we can do is create a weapon system and send it 
down 18,000 feet and detonate it, hopefully encasing the oil,” Matt 
Simmons, a Houston energy expert and investment banker, told Bloomberg 
News on Friday, attributing the nuclear idea to “all the best scientists.”

Or as the CNN reporter John Roberts suggested last week, “Drill a hole, 
drop a nuke in and seal up the well.”

This week, with the failure of the “top kill” attempt, the buzz had 
grown loud enough that federal officials felt compelled to respond.

Stephanie Mueller, a spokeswoman for the Energy Department, said that 
neither Energy Secretary Steven Chu nor anyone else was thinking about a 
nuclear blast under the gulf. The nuclear option was not — and never had 
been — on the table, federal officials said.

“It’s crazy,” one senior official said.

Government and private nuclear experts agreed that using a nuclear bomb 
would be not only risky technically, with unknown and possibly 
disastrous consequences from radiation, but also unwise geopolitically — 
it would violate arms treaties that the United States has signed and 
championed over the decades and do so at a time when President Obama is 
pushing for global nuclear disarmament.

The atomic option is perhaps the wildest among a flood of ideas proposed 
by bloggers, scientists and other creative types who have deluged 
government agencies and BP, the company that drilled the well, with 
phone calls and e-mail messages. The Unified Command overseeing the 
Deepwater Horizon disaster features a “suggestions” button on its 
official Web site and more than 7,800 people have already responded, 
according to the site.

Among the suggestions: lowering giant plastic pillows to the seafloor 
and filling them with oil, dropping a huge block of concrete to squeeze 
off the flow and using magnetic clamps to attach pipes that would siphon 
off the leaking oil.

Some have also suggested conventional explosives, claiming that oil 
prospectors on land have used such blasts to put out fires and seal 
boreholes. But oil engineers say that dynamite or other conventional 
explosives risk destroying the wellhead so that the flow could never be 
plugged from the top.

Along with the kibbitzers, the government has also brought in experts 
from around the world — including scores of scientists from the Los 
Alamos National Laboratory and other government labs — to assist in the 
effort to cap the well.

In theory, the nuclear option seems attractive because the extreme heat 
might create a tough seal. An exploding atom bomb generates temperatures 
hotter than the surface of the sun and, detonated underground, can turn 
acres of porous rock into a glassy plug, much like a huge stopper in a 
leaky bottle.

Michael E. Webber, a mechanical engineer at the University of Texas, 
Austin, wrote to Dot Earth, a New York Times blog, in early May that he 
had surprised himself by considering what once seemed unthinkable. 
“Seafloor nuclear detonation,” he wrote, “is starting to sound 
surprisingly feasible and appropriate.”

Much of the enthusiasm for an atomic approach is based on reports that 
the Soviet Union succeeded in using nuclear blasts to seal off gas 
wells. Milo D. Nordyke, in a 2000 technical paper for the Lawrence 
Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, Calif., described five 
Soviet blasts from 1966 to 1981.

All but the last blast were successful. The 1966 explosion put out a gas 
well fire that had raged uncontrolled for three years. But the last 
blast of the series, Mr. Nordyke wrote, “did not seal the well,” perhaps 
because the nuclear engineers had poor geological data on the exact 
location of the borehole.

Robert S. Norris, author of “Racing for the Bomb” and an atomic 
historian, noted that all the Soviet blasts were on land and never 
involved oil.

Whatever the technical merits of using nuclear explosions for 
constructive purposes, the end of the cold war brought wide agreement 
among nations to give up the conduct of all nuclear blasts, even for 
peaceful purposes. The United States, after conducting more than 1,000 
nuclear test explosions, detonated the last one in 1992, shaking the 
ground at the Nevada test site.

In 1996, the United States championed the Comprehensive Test-Ban Treaty, 
a global accord meant to end the development of new kinds of nuclear 
arms. President Obama is pushing for new global rules, treaties and 
alliances that he insists can go much further to produce a nuclear-free 
world. For his administration to seize on a nuclear solution for the 
gulf crisis, officials say, would abandon its international agenda and 
responsibilities and give rogue states an excuse to seek nuclear strides.

Kevin Roark, a spokesman for Los Alamos in New Mexico, the birthplace of 
the atomic bomb, said that despite rumors to the contrary, none of the 
laboratory’s thousands of experts was devising nuclear options for the Gulf.

“Nothing of the sort is going on here,” he said in an interview. “In 
fact, we’re not working on any intervention ideas at all. We’re 
providing diagnostics and other support but nothing on the intervention 
side.”

A senior Los Alamos scientist, speaking on the condition of anonymity 
because his comments were unauthorized, ridiculed the idea of using a 
nuclear blast to solve the crisis in the Gulf.

“It’s not going to happen,” he said. “Technically, it would be exploring 
new ground in the midst of a disaster — and you might make it worse.”

Not everyone on the Internet is calling for nuking the well. Some are 
making jokes. “What’s worse than an oil spill?” asked a blogger on Full 
Comment, a blog of The National Post in Toronto. “A radioactive oil spill.”

Henry Fountain contributed reporting.
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