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Florida Gov. Charlie Crist answers a question Saturday about the approach of Tropical Storm Alex by drawing a map in the sand in Pensacola. Forecasts show Alex missing the spill area, but its path could suddenly change.
Florida Gov. Charlie Crist answers a question Saturday about the approach of Tropical Storm Alex by drawing a map in the sand in Pensacola. Forecasts show Alex missing the spill area, but its path could suddenly change.
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NEW ORLEANS — The logistics of containing the oil spewing into the Gulf of Mexico are mind-boggling even in ideal conditions. Add a tropical storm like the one swirling in the Caribbean and things get even more complicated.

Any system with winds over 46 mph could force BP to abandon efforts to contain the flow for up to two weeks and delay the drilling of two relief wells that are the best hope of stopping it, Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen said Saturday, shortly after Alex became the first tropical storm of the Atlantic hurricane season.

Forecasts show Alex churning toward Mexico and missing the northern Gulf Coast and the spill, but officials are watching closely anyway.

“We all know the weather is unpredictable, and we could have a sudden, last-minute change,” Allen said.

Emergency plans call for moving workers and equipment five days before gale- force winds are forecast to arrive at the half-square mile containment operation surrounding the blown-out well. Oil has been gushing since the offshore drilling rig Deepwater Horizon exploded 50 miles off the coast of Louisiana on April 20, killing 11 workers.

Nearly 39,000 people and more than 6,000 boats are working there, in other parts of the gulf and on land, to skim and corral oil, protect hundreds of miles of coastline and clean fouled beaches. All those efforts would have to be suspended if a storm threatened.

At the well, the two systems that have been capturing anywhere from 840,000 to 1.2 million gallons of oil a day would be unhooked, leaving oil to gush into the gulf again. No one knows how much is flowing, but worst-case estimates indicate it could be as much as 2.5 million gallons a day.

Work also would stop on the two relief wells being drilled to take the pressure off the blown-out well, considered the only permanent solution. The first is on target for completion by mid-August, but there could be a significant delay from a storm.

Despite the setback that a suspension would represent, “the safety of life is the No. 1 priority,” Allen said.

Out in the gulf, there is also concern about the thousands of feet of protective boom ringing numerous islands and beachfronts. Winds and waves could hurl the material, much of it soaked with oil, deep into marshes and woodlands.

Once a storm’s expected direction is determined, barges and crews plan to remove as much boom in its path as possible, said Sam Phillips, solid- waste permits administrator with the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality. The boom would be stored on barges so it could be put back in place quickly.

“You can move a lot of boom in 48 hours, if that were your sole endeavor,” he said. “Can they get all of it? Probably not.”

BP, the Coast Guard and the state of Louisiana have already been talking about how to coordinate evacuations so workers and equipment don’t clog highway escape routes.

Officials in coastal St. Bernard Parish gave local agencies a deadline for outlining evacuation plans, said parish spokeswoman Jennifer Belsom.

Avoiding AlexTourists and residents flee Belize as Tropical Storm Alex approaches.


Developments

Beach gathering protests offshore drilling: Hundreds of people, including Florida Gov. Charlie Crist, joined hands on an oil-stained strip of beach in the Florida Panhandle on Saturday as part of a demonstration against offshore drilling. In all, 820 “Hands Across the Sand” events were scheduled in all 50 states and in 34 countries. The demonstrations also intended to show support for clean energy.

Recovery official to tour region: President Barack Obama’s point man for the recovery and restoration of the area affected by the gulf oil spill will tour the region next week. Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus will begin a five-day visit Monday as he assesses damage from the millions of gallons of crude oil spewing from a well owned by BP, his office said in a statement. Mabus, a former governor of Mississippi, will meet with state and local officials in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida.

Denver Post wire services

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