Oil industry insider claims well cap simply 'the biggest con job we've ever seen'
By - July 20, 2010 8:21 AM
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From Red Dirt Report staff reports ...
Posted: July 20, 2010
Oil industry insider Matt Simmons blew
the whistle on the made-for-TV capping
of the so-called oil leak in the Gulf
of Mexico Thursday, July 15,
during an
interview on KPFK radio, the NPR station in Los Angeles.
Simmons, former energy adviser to the second President Bush, explained that according to his reading
of the data from
NOAA, the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric
Administration, capping of the so-called riser and
the subsequent announcement by U.S. President Obama was "the biggest con job we've ever
seen."
Simmons, creator of an investment bank catering to oil companies, told radio host Ian Masters that
the real problem
continuing to gush oil into
the Gulf was
not the 6-inch "riser" that apparently has been capped amid much TV hoopla, but that an open
hole or cauldron perhaps
up to 10 miles distant from where British Petroleum's cameras are focused which continues to
spew 120,000 BARRELS
per day, and that BP's much
publicized effort
to drill relief wells in what the company says is
an effort to stop the flow of oil is nothing but a cynical publicity stunt.
"The dimensions of this lie are beyond belief," said Simmons, explaining that the idea of a
relief well is
"tricky at best," since trying
to hit a pipe of less than a foot in diameter 35,000 feet below the surface of the Gulf may be
entirely futile
because the casing of the
original pipe is
not even there, having blown away at some point.
But Simmons noted that both BP and Obama continue to deny that this open hole, or cauldron, even
exists, even
though Simmons and others insist
the NOAA
data from satellites prove by speed of flow and depth
of light that the amount of oil that has been flowing through
the on-camera riser could
not possibly account for
the amount of oil that
has spilled into the Gulf.
"The riser is totally irrelevant," Simmons stressed, adding
"and there's no way to
cap the open
hole." He explained that BP continues to
deny the open hole exists and theorizes the continuing flow of oil into the Gulf is really just
the residue from
what has already been spilled
during the
first 90 days of the disaster.
"There is denial that there's even a problem," Simmons said.
"In about a month or two
people will
realize that this actually was the biggest con
job we've ever seen."
Simmons also noted an additional danger. "What the researchers now believe is that basically is
that between 4000
and 4500 below the ocean
floor lies an oil
lake that's somewhere between 100 and 120 miles
wide and it's about 4500 feet deep. It's this toxic waste and crude and it's releasing
methane gases that are
absolutely lethal
which is why all the fish and dolphins and sharks and whales are dying. And workers too, which
is why so many
have gotten sick, or maybe
really sick.
"The health problems are so serious," Simmons said. "When you
inhale methane you just
die."
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