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Deepwater Horizon Blowout Animation

10m 49s1,524 words124 segmentsEnglish

FULL TRANSCRIPT

0:07

Narrator: April 20, 2010.

0:10

Eleven workers died and 17 were seriously injured by an explosion on the Deepwater Horizon,

0:17

an offshore drilling rig located approximately 50 miles off the coast of Louisiana.

0:23

The rig burned for two days, eventually sinking and triggering the largest oil spill in U.S. history,

0:30

as oil and gas spewed up from the sea floor.

0:34

The Deepwater Horizon had been drilling an oil well in 5,000 feet of water,

0:39

in an area of the Gulf of Mexico, known as the Macondo Prospect.

0:44

In 2010, the CSB launched an investigation to examine the technical,

0:49

organizational and regulatory factors that contributed to the accident.

0:54

During the investigation, the CSB made new findings about why a key piece of safety equipment,

1:00

the Deepwater Horizon's blowout preventer, failed to seal the well during the emergency.

1:06

These new findings help explain why the accident was devastating. [Sound of explosion]

1:11

Narrator: And the CSB cautioned that other blowout preventers currently in use could fail in similar ways.

1:20

Narrator: Drilling an offshore well involves creating a pathway between the

1:25

drilling rig and oil and gas reservoirs trapped beneath the sea floor.

1:30

A deep hole or a wellbore, is drilled through layers of subsea rock and sediment.

1:36

These rocky layers can contain trapped water, crude oil and natural gas under pressure.

1:42

An unplanned flow of these well fluids into the wellbore, known in the industry as a "kick", can be dangerous.

1:50

Without careful management, a kick can lead to a blowout,

1:54

the uncontrolled release of flammable oil and gas from the well.

1:58

A blowout can be catastrophic, since oil and gas reaching the drilling rig

2:03

can quickly find an ignition source ... [Sound of explosion]

2:05

leading to a fire or explosion, endangering the lives of the drilling crew.

2:11

To prevent kicks, drillers pump a dense slurry called "drilling mud" into the well,

2:17

creating a barrier between the undersea oil and gas and the piping that leads to the rig.

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If this mud barrier fails or is somehow removed,

2:27

the safety of the drilling crew depends on a critical piece of equipment, located on the sea floor,

2:32

called the blowout preventer, or BOP.

2:36

The BOP is a complex electrically and hydraulically powered device

2:40

that is essential for controlling the well

2:43

and in an emergency situation,

2:45

preventing a disaster on the platform high above on the sea surface.

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The BOP is connected to the rig by a large diameter pipe called a "riser."

2:56

If a kick occurs, the blowout preventer is designed to prevent

3:00

flammable oil and gas from traveling up the riser to the drilling rig.

3:04

This is done by sealing the area around the drill pipe, known as the "annular space."

3:11

To do this, the crew can manually close pipe rams and donut-shaped rubber devices known as 'annular preventers."

3:20

If those devices should fail to work, the last resort is a pair of sharp metal blades,

3:26

which form a blind shear ram, designed to cut the drill pipe and seal the well.

3:32

The blind shear ram can be activated manually or by automated emergency systems.

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At approximately 8:45 p.m. on April 20, 2010,

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a kick occurred in the Macondo well.

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Oil and gas entered the wellbore undetected,

3:50

eventually passing above the blowout preventer and traveling quickly up the riser

3:54

toward the Deepwater Horizon and the 126 people onboard.

3:59

Just after 9:40 p.m., drilling mud forced upwards by the rising oil and gas, suddenly blew out onto the rig.

4:08

Crew members responded by closing the upper annular preventer in the BOP.

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However, this did not seal the well as intended

4:16

and flammable oil and gas continued to flow into the riser toward the rig.

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Next, the crew closed a pipe ram.

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This successfully closed the annular space and sealed the well,

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but tragically this proved to be only a temporary fix.

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Oil and gas that were already above the pipe ram continued to flow inexorably toward the Deepwater Horizon.

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As the oil and gas escaped the riser onto the rig, the pressure dropped in the annular space above the pipe ram.

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But at the same time, the pressure in the drill pipe climbed substantially.

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The drill pipe was closed at the top, but oil and gas continued to flow in from the reservoir below.

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After extensive analysis, the CSB concluded that this large difference in pressure

5:04

likely caused the drill pipe to buckle,

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essentially bending the pipe off-center, inside the blowout preventer.

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The buckling pushed sections of the drill pipe outside of the reach of the blind shear ram blades.

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This would eventually prove to be catastrophic.

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At approximately 9:49 p.m., the flammable hydrocarbons found an ignition source.

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[Sound of explosion]

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Narrator: And the first explosion shook the Deepwater Horizon.

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With the drill pipe buckled, the explosion and subsequent loss of electrical and hydraulic power from the rig

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likely activated an automated system on the blowout preventer, known as the "AMF/deadman",

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which closes the blind shear ram and cuts the drill pipe.

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This emergency system is designed to activate when electric power, hydrolic pressure

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and communications from the rig have been lost.

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The AMF/deadman system was operated by two redundant control systems on the BOP,

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known as the "yellow pod" and the "blue pod."

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The redundancy is supposed to increase the reliability of the system in an emergency situation.

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The yellow and blue pods worked independently of each other

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and were comprised of identical enclosed computer systems and sets of solenoid valves.

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When activated, the solenoid valves controlled important BOP functions, such as closing the blind shear ram.

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If electrical power from the rig was lost, as happened on April 20, 2010,

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both the yellow and blue control pods contained backup 27-volt and 9-volt batteries to power emergency functions.

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The 9-volt batteries powered computers that would activate the solenoid valves,

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which were powered by the 27-volt batteries.

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However, evidence indicates the blue pod had been miswired at some time

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before the BOP was lowered onto the sea floor.

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This caused the pod's 27-volt battery to drain

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and made it impossible to operate the solenoid valve for the blind shear ram on the night of the accident.

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And within the redundant yellow pod, the solenoid for the blind shear ram had been miswired.

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The solenoid valves were controlled by two coils of electrical wire.

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These two coils were designed to work in concert, generating a magnetic field strong enough to operate the valve.

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But within the miswired solenoid valve, the two coils actually opposed each other, leaving the valve paralyzed.

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Only a third unplanned failure allowed the yellow pod to operate.

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On the night of the accident, one of the 9-volt batteries that powered the solenoid valve's computer had failed.

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As a result, the affected computer system could not initiate the command to energize the miswired coil.

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Had both coils of the miswired solenoid valve been energized,

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the two coils would have generated opposing forces on the valve.

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The solenoid valve would have remained closed and the blind shear ram would never have been closed.

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However, the failed battery rendered one coil inoperable

8:17

and most likely allowed the other coil to open the solenoid valve by itself.

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This in turn initiated closure of the blind shear ram.

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This should have cut the drill pipe and sealed the well, greatly reducing the impact of the accident.

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But because the drill pipe was buckled and off-center inside the blowout preventer,

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it was trapped and only partially cut.

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With the failure of this last ditch measure,

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there was nothing left to stop the massive oil spill and destruction of the rig.

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Narrator: During its investigation, the CSB identified a mechanism

8:56

that likely caused the drill pipe to be buckled around the time of the explosion.

9:01

This mechanism is called "effective compression".

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Although effective compression had previously been noted as a hazard in other drilling operations,

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it had never been identified as a problem affecting drill pipe during well operations.

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Effective compression occurs because although pipe may appear to be perfectly straight,

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in fact it has minute bends and irregularity, invisible to the naked eye.

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Along these bends, the side of the pipe that is curved outward is slightly longer

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and has more surface area than the other side.

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When there is a large difference in pressure between the inside and outside of the pipe,

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as happened on April 20, 2010,

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the longer side of the pipe experiences a larger bending force.

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Eventually this force can become great enough to buckle even heavy pipe.

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This is an important finding, CSB investigators said,

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because the same conditions of differential pressure could occur at other drilling rigs,

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even if a crew successfully shuts in a well.

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The CSB warned this could make existing blowout preventer designs less effective in emergency situations.

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Narrator: In the case of the Deepwater Horizon accident,

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the buckled drill pipe prevented the blind shear ram from sealing the well.

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Oil and gas from the well flowed out of the buckled drill pipe and into the Gulf of Mexico for 87 days.

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A reported five million barrels of oil eventually spilled,

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causing one of the worst environmental disasters in United States history.

10:44

[Music]

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