Obama sends US nuclear physicists to tackle Gulf oil leak
The US has sent a team of nuclear physicists to help BP plug the catastrophic flow of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico from its leaking Deepwater Horizon well, as the Obama administration becomes frustrated with the oil giant’s inability to control the situation.
The five-man team – which includes a man who helped develop the first hydrogen bomb in the 1950s – is the brainchild of Steven Chu, President Obama’s Energy Secretary.
He has charged the men with finding solutions to stop the flow of oil. President Obama yesterday promised a “relentless” effort to resolve the problem as he criticised the “cozy relationship” BP and other oil companies have with US regulators in Washington.
The five men visited BP’s main crisis centre in Houston earlier this week, along with Mr Chu, and are to continue to work with the company’s scientists and external advisers to reach an answer.
President Obama accused BP and its contractors of “falling over each other to point the finger of blame at someone else,” while adding “the potential devastation to the Gulf Coast, its economy and its people require us to continue our relentless efforts to stop the leak.”
Thad Allen, a Coast Guard commandant, said that the slick “has the potential to be catastrophic.”
- Oil slick chaos as 210,000 gallons leaking daily into Gulf
- Gulf oil rig disaster spilling 300,000 gallons of oil per day
- Light oil prices trading up over $86 on messy Gulf oil spill
- BP in deeper trouble, has hands full with Gulf oil slick chaos
- Light oil price trading near $80 on US inventories data, dollar
- Light oil price holds at $86, awaits latest US oil stock data
- Brent oil price holding around $88 mark amid strong dollar
- Gulf spill of 210,000 gallons daily may push oil over $100
- Gulf of Mexico oil rig spill serious, leaking 42,000 gallons daily
- Oil prices start the week trading higher on US data
- Transocean, Gulf of Mexico rocked by large oil rig explosion
- US Light oil trading higher, near $82 on Goldman, markets
- Oil prices trading firm on US data, homing in on $90 barrel
- Crude oil prices hit 2010 trading high on falling US dollar
- Oil prices trading higher on Monday amid weaker US dollar
- Weekly petroleum recap, crude oil inventories up
- Oil prices trading lower as US dollar makes gains
- Oil prices trading down two percent on stronger US dollar
- Oil prices above $82 as traders look to US supplies, OPEC
- Crude oil prices trading lower on stronger US dollar
Go here to read the rest:
Obama sends US nuclear physicists to tackle Gulf oil leak














