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</TD><TD vAlign=center align=left height=60>Home | Emergency Response | Recent and Historical Incidents</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR><TR><TD><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 align=center border=0><TBODY><TR><TD class=entrygroup_table>Latest News</TD><TD class=entrygroup_table>NOAA Roles</TD><TD class=entrygroup_table>Learn More</TD><TD class=entrygroup_table>Factsheets</TD><TD class=entrygroup_table>Visuals</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR><TR><!-- this td tag contains the center panel of the page --><TD vAlign=top align=left>Deepwater Horizon Incident, Gulf of Mexico
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</TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=center align=middle><AGL:CONTAINER>Jump down to our Trajectory Maps section on this page for a full-sized trajectory map. </AGL:CONTAINER></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></AGL:CONTAINER>
As the nation?s leading scientific resource for oil spills, NOAA has been on the scene of the Deepwater Horizon spill from the start, providing coordinated scientific weather and biological response services to federal, state and local organizations. More
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<AGL:CONTAINER>Updated daily
Situation: Friday 30 April </AGL:CONTAINER>
<AGL:CONTAINER>NOAA Administrator Jane Lubchenco spoke with fishermen in Venice, Louisiana today as the Deepwater Horizon incident grows. Also visiting the spill were Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano, Secretary of Interior Ken Salazar, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, Admiral Mike Mullen, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, Rear Admiral Mary Landry, Deputy Secretary of Interior David Hayes and Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Carol Browner. The Department of Defense authorized mobilization of the Louisiana National Guard to help protect critical habitats from contamination and assist local communities in the cleanup and removal of oil. </AGL:CONTAINER>
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<AGL:CONTAINER>Oil continues to flow into the Gulf of Mexico at an estimated to 5000 barrels (210,000 gallons) per day from three leaks in damaged piping on the sea floor from the Deepwater Horizon incident recently declared a Spill of National Significance (SONS). NOAA is assisting the Unified Command in evaluating a new technique to apply dispersants to oil at the source - 5000? below the surface, if successful this could keep plumes and sheens from forming. Work also continues on a piping system designed to take oil from a collection dome at the sea floor to tankers on the surface; this technique has never been tried at 5000?. Drilling of a relief or cut-off well is still planned - one drilling rig is on site and one should arrive this weekend, but the process will not be complete for several months. Aircraft have applied over 139,000 gallons of dispersant and will continue as conditions allow.
With shore impacts looming, more than 217,000 feet of boom have been assigned to contain the spill, with an additional 305,760 feet available. The Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries announced the closure of both recreational and commercial fishing in areas of likely impact and the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals closed molluscan shellfish (oyster) harvesting areas in the coastal parishes of Plaquemines and St. Bernard. NOAA efforts have included: modeling the trajectory and extent of the oil, getting pre-impact samples surveys and baseline measurements, planning for open water and shoreline remediation, supporting the Unified Command as it analyzes new techniques for handling the spill and starting Natural Resource Damage Assessments (NRDA). </AGL:CONTAINER>
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<AGL:CONTAINER>Important Contacts </AGL:CONTAINER>
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<AGL:CONTAINER><!-- inline linkbox 1 --><TABLE cellSpacing=2 cellPadding=0 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>More Information about this Incident ? top
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<AGL:CONTAINER><!-- inline resource box 1 --><TABLE cellSpacing=2 cellPadding=0 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>Trajectory Maps ? top
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As the nation?s leading scientific resource for oil spills, NOAA has been on the scene of the Deepwater Horizon spill from the start, providing coordinated scientific weather and biological response services to federal, state and local organizations. More
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<AGL:CONTAINER>Updated daily
Situation: Friday 30 April </AGL:CONTAINER>
<AGL:CONTAINER>NOAA Administrator Jane Lubchenco spoke with fishermen in Venice, Louisiana today as the Deepwater Horizon incident grows. Also visiting the spill were Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano, Secretary of Interior Ken Salazar, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, Admiral Mike Mullen, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, Rear Admiral Mary Landry, Deputy Secretary of Interior David Hayes and Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Carol Browner. The Department of Defense authorized mobilization of the Louisiana National Guard to help protect critical habitats from contamination and assist local communities in the cleanup and removal of oil. </AGL:CONTAINER>
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<AGL:CONTAINER>Oil continues to flow into the Gulf of Mexico at an estimated to 5000 barrels (210,000 gallons) per day from three leaks in damaged piping on the sea floor from the Deepwater Horizon incident recently declared a Spill of National Significance (SONS). NOAA is assisting the Unified Command in evaluating a new technique to apply dispersants to oil at the source - 5000? below the surface, if successful this could keep plumes and sheens from forming. Work also continues on a piping system designed to take oil from a collection dome at the sea floor to tankers on the surface; this technique has never been tried at 5000?. Drilling of a relief or cut-off well is still planned - one drilling rig is on site and one should arrive this weekend, but the process will not be complete for several months. Aircraft have applied over 139,000 gallons of dispersant and will continue as conditions allow.
With shore impacts looming, more than 217,000 feet of boom have been assigned to contain the spill, with an additional 305,760 feet available. The Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries announced the closure of both recreational and commercial fishing in areas of likely impact and the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals closed molluscan shellfish (oyster) harvesting areas in the coastal parishes of Plaquemines and St. Bernard. NOAA efforts have included: modeling the trajectory and extent of the oil, getting pre-impact samples surveys and baseline measurements, planning for open water and shoreline remediation, supporting the Unified Command as it analyzes new techniques for handling the spill and starting Natural Resource Damage Assessments (NRDA). </AGL:CONTAINER>
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- National Weather Service forecasts persistent southeast winds through the weekend which will push surface oil towards shore and hamper surface recovery efforts until a forecast shift on Monday
- The Coast Guard is using forecasts and graphics of oil movement prepared by NOAA?s Emergency Response Division (ERD) and Marine Charting Division to keep mariners out of oil areas by depicting them on electronic charts
- Baseline aerial surveys to assess marine life continued today with personnel from NOAA?s National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), more flights are planned this weekend
- NOAA?s Assessment and Restoration Division (ARD) coordinated with natural resource trustees from five states and with Responsible Party representatives on seven resource assessment workgroups (birds, mammals and turtles, fish, shoreline habitats, water column injury, data management, and human use)
- NOAA and the Louisiana Department of Health and Human Hospitals gathered oysters and water and sediment samples in four commercial harvest areas
- An ARD natural resource economist arrives on scene tomorrow to lead a team that will evaluate spill related losses of human-use activities
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<AGL:CONTAINER>Important Contacts </AGL:CONTAINER>
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- For NOAA media inquiries, please contact Keeley Belva at keeley.belva@noaa.gov or 301.713.3066
- For response inquiries, please phone the Joint Information Center (JIC) at 985.902.5231 or 985.902.5240
- To report oil on land, or for general Community and Volunteer Information, please phone 866.448.5816
- To report oiled or injured wildlife, please phone 800.557.1401
- To discuss spill related damage claims, please phone 800.440.0858
- BP is asking fishermen for their assistance in cleaning up the oil spill. BP is calling this the Vessel of Opportunities Program and through it, BP is looking to contract shrimp boats, oyster boats and other vessels for hire to deploy boom in the Gulf of Mexico. Fishermen should phone 425.745.8017 about this program.
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<AGL:CONTAINER><!-- inline linkbox 1 --><TABLE cellSpacing=2 cellPadding=0 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>More Information about this Incident ? top
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- IncidentNews: Deepwater Horizon View the most up-to-date information on OR&R's IncidentNews site. [leaves OR&R site]
- The Louisiana Regional Restoration Planning Program Federal and Louisiana natural resource trustees have developed a statewide Louisiana Regional Restoration Planning Program to assist the natural resource trustees in carrying out their Natural Resource Damage Assessment (NRDA) responsibilities. [leaves OR&R site]
- EPA: Federal Response to BP Spill in the Gulf of Mexico This site tracks EPA's ongoing work in the area and help answer questions about the incident. [leaves OR&R site]
- Deepwater Horizon Joint Information Center This site is providing information regarding the April 20 incident in the US Gulf of Mexico involving a Transocean drilling Rig Deep Water Horizon. The Horizon was engaged in drilling activity on behalf of BP at Mississippi Canyon Block 252, about 52 miles southeast of Venice, La. [leaves OR&R site]
- Deepwater Horizon Response on Twitter This site is providing information regarding the April 20 incident in the US Gulf of Mexico involving a Transocean drilling Rig Deep Water Horizon. [leaves OR&R site]
- Deepwater Horizon Response on Facebook This site is providing information regarding the April 20 incident in the US Gulf of Mexico involving a Transocean drilling Rig Deepwater Horizon. [leaves OR&R site]
<AGL:CONTAINER><!-- inline resource box 1 --><TABLE cellSpacing=2 cellPadding=0 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>Trajectory Maps ? top
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- Deepwater Horizon Trajectory Map April 30 2145 Approximate oil locations from April 27, 2010 to May 1, 2010 including forecast for May 2 based on trajectories and overflight information.
(Document format: PDF, size: 285.8 K)
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