Friday, June 4, 2010

Oil spill top kill failure ushers in 2010 hurricane season

Day one of the 2010 Hurricane season was officially Tuesday, day 42 of the oil spill within the Gulf of Mexico 2010. Crude gushes unabated into the sea on the BP oil spill live feed as forecasters predict an unusually severe 2010 hurricane season. BP bet its hopes on the oil spill top kill to stop the leak, but the effort was pronounced a failure over the holiday weekend. To stem the flow, yet not stop the leak, BP will next make an effort to sever the broken pipe from the wellhead, put a cap on it with a hose to the surface and make an effort to collect the oil. Relief wells being drilled to stop the leak at its source are at least two months from completion. A spill of up to 100 million gallons of oil and counting is fouling the gulf, where meteorologists say hurricane season 2010 begins in June.

Article Source: Hurricane season 2010 starts in gulf as oil spill top kill fails By Personal Money Store

2010 hurricane season forecast

Meteorologists have designated June 1 as the official start of hurricane season 2010, which lasts until Nov. 30. Historically, as opposed to pay day same day, big-name hurricanes form thousands of miles away within the Atlantic Ocean, are tracked for days by meteorologists and relentlessly hyped by the media before making landfall in the U.S.. AOL reports that the 2010 hurricane season could start with storms along the Southeast coast or northeastern Caribbean, however the Gulf of Mexico is more likely. Early season sea temperatures within the Atlantic aren’t likely to brew up a storm there. Early season storms can have short warning because forming closer to land won't allow for days of anticipation.

Leak foils oil spill top kill

Efforts to battle the BP oil leak are likely to be disrupted, whether or not the first storm of the 2010 hurricane season strikes quickly. In addition to the oil spill being spread across a wider area of shoreline, efforts to stop the leak might be delayed for weeks. The New York Times reports that plan B following the failed oil spill top kill involves chopping off the broken wellhead pipe, putting a containment dome over it and pumping collected oil to the surface. After cutting the pipe, the BP oil spill live feed will show a greater flow for several days until the cap is in place. What’s more, when a hurricane heads for the gulf, crews will disconnect the hose and run for cover, leaving the BP oil leak to gush unabated.

Forecast for toxic storm surge

Storm surges carrying oil sludge and oil dispersant, which is toxic, could make parts of the gulf coast uninhabitable throughout hurricane season 2010. To predict where the oil slick could be driven by gulf hurricanes, the Gerson Lehman Group analyzed tracking data from recent storms. In 2008 Gustav headed to the west-central gulf with its counter-clockwise spin, pushing a storm surge to the Texas coast. A hurricane with a track like Ida in 2009, which tracked to the east-central gulf, would move the toxic storm surge into Florida’s west coast. Areas miles from the coast might be coated in an aerosol of oil and toxic dispersants carried by hurricane-force winds.

Hurricane season 2010 details

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association hurricane season 2010 forecast predicts as much as 23 named storms, with three to seven major hurricanes. Storms with winds reaching 39 mph or a lot more are named. Possibly 14 of those storms could produce winds passing 74 mph to be classified as hurricanes. Three to seven might be Category 3, 4 or 5 hurricanes with winds of at least 111 mph. The strongest tropical system recorded in June was Hurricane Audrey, which made landfall in southern Louisiana on June 27, 1957, as a Category 4 storm, with a sustained wind of 145 mph.

Discover a lot more data on this topic

AOL News

New York Times

Gerson Lehman Group



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