Russian sub 'could stop oil leak'

The skipper was speaking as two of the subs - which can dive to 6,000m - started a campaign of exploration at the bottom of Lake Baikal in Siberia.
He added that there was still time for the subs to help BP with the disaster.
The subs are searching for gas hydrates - a potential alternative fuel source - on the bed of Baikal.
Yevgenii Chernyaev told BBC News that the problem had to be addressed at the highest level.
Two oval-shaped submersibles have recently started their third season of exploration in Baikal - the world's deepest lake.
Anatoly Sagalevich of Russia's Shirshov Institute of Oceanology, which owns the vessels, said that he had an informal conversation with a BP representative asking if Mirs would be able to help stop the leak.
But he said there was no official request and no real discussions about the matter.
A BP spokesman told BBC News that the company had not had any formal contact with the Russians.
"We've had over 120,000 people come up with ideas," he said in an e-mail.
"We are looking through all of these to see which are viable. If [the Russians] want to contact us (or may have done so through some other channel), we can evaulate their idea."
Oil has been leaking from a damaged well in the Gulf of Mexico since a BP-operated drilling platform, Deepwater Horizon, exploded and sank in April.
And though BP says it is now able to gather some 10,000 barrels of oil a day, using a device that siphons oil up to surface ships, thousands of barrels of oil continue to gush daily from the ocean floor.
The US administration has already called the leak the biggest environmental catastrophe in the country's history.
Mr Chernyaev said that his team had held numerous discussions about the oil spill in the Gulf and the Russians would be ready to come to the rescue - but only if everything was done properly.
Standing on a barge that transports the two subs after their submersion, the Mir-2 captain underlined that the subs were probably the only deep-sea vessels in the world capable of stopping the leak.
"Our subs are unique. There are two of them and they can submerge and work simultaneously. Also, they are powerful enough to work with any other additional equipment.
"There are only four vessels in the world that can go down to 6,000m - the Mirs, French Nautile and Japanese Shinkai. The Mirs are known to be the best, and we have a very experienced team of specialists," he said.
But Mr Chernyaev added that such an operation would have a chance of succeeding only if BP or the US government asked the Russian government to join efforts to stop the leak.
"It should all be decided on the government level. Asking [Anatoly] Sagalevich [of Russia's Shirshov Institute of Oceanology, which owns the subs] to simply bring the Mirs over is nonsense. Even though we're able to go to much greater depths than where the damaged well is located, we wouldn't be able to do much on our own.
"We need a team of international specialists and we have to know all the details and probably even build a special device to attach to the subs, and all this needs time," said Mr Chernyaev.
He explained that the subs had already worked in much harsher conditions, such as the Arctic.
The submersible's pilot also said that the Russians were very surprised that BP and the US government had not asked them for help from the beginning.
"And we would not refuse to help, even though for us it would be very complicated, especially right now, when we're already working on Baikal. But it doesn't look like anyone seriously wants our help," he added.
Mr Chernyaev was one of the pilots on the first manned descent to the seabed under the geographic North Pole, carried out using the Mir mini-submarines. The expedition was widely reported as a bid to further Moscow's territorial claims in the Arctic.

The two submersibles started their third season of exploration in Lake Baikal on 1 July. Over the last two expeditions, they found reserves of gas hydrates on the lake bed - which some consider a possible alternative fuel source of the future.
Gas hydrates are usually formed in permafrost or deep in the oceans. These are crystalline water-based solids; gases such as methane are trapped inside them within cages of hydrogen-bonded water molecules.
Baikal is the only freshwater basin where gas hydrates are found in its sediments. Scientists say the depth of the lake - reaching 1,637m - and extremely low temperatures of water near the lake bed both help gas hydrates form at depths exceeding 350m.
The current expedition aims to obtain important data about these findings, and is also searching for new life forms, which might be unique to Baikal.
Located in eastern Siberia, not far from the Mongolian border, the lake holds one-fifth of the planet's fresh water and many unique species of plants and animals, among them the nerpa - a species of freshwater seal.

Blog Archive
-
▼
2010
(163)
-
▼
July
(127)
- Barack Obama finally makes his peace with Bill Cli...
- Prince William starts RAF rescue training on Anglesey
- Prince William policing bill row
- Dozens dead in train crash in eastern India
- Troops to stay in Afghanistan until 2014 says mini...
- Clinton raises pressure on Pakistan to fight milit...
- Destitute in Dubai: One man's story
- China coal mine accidents 'kill at least 38', trap...
- Serbia and Croatia forge ties with talks in Belgrade
- Caribbean 'drug lord' Jose Figueroa Agosto arrested
- Germans take cultural party onto motorway
- Baghdad suicide bomber kills at least 43 people
- Kabul suicide blast kills three
- Goldtrail collapse leaves Britons in Greece and Tu...
- Deadly Mexican drug gang attack 'was car bomb'
- Militants kill 16 in Pakistan convoy ambush
- US puts Muslim cleric on terror blacklist
- Israeli police arrest Jewish man for Arab murders
- Australian PM Julia Gillard sets general election ...
- Insurer AIG agrees to massive $725m fraud payout
- The UK-built Zephyr solar-powered plane has smash...
- Obama cautious as tests continue on BP oil stoppage
- Phantom Eye hydrogen-powered spy plane unveiled
- Iranian scientist Shahram Amiri alleges US torture
- Pakistan bans India Osama Bin Laden comedy
- Workers at the World Trade Center site are excavat...
- Tea Party activists fund sign linking Obama to Hitler
- Tea Party activists fund sign linking Obama to Hitler
- US military to hand over last detention centre in ...
- Obama steps up rhetoric against al-Qaeda and al-Sh...
- UK soldiers killed by rogue Afghan named by MoD
- Ex-president Khatami 'banned from leaving Iran'
- Sister of Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi 'arrested in...
- Iran scientist makes new kidnap claims
- Zephyr solar plane set for record endurance flight
- Missing Iranian scientist appears at embassy in US
- North Korean officials postpone warship talks with US
- No title
- US weighs Iran military option
- UN sanctions against Iran
- Iran atomic bomb possible 'within six years'
- Iran signs nuclear fuel-swap deal with Turkey
- US puts economic squeeze on Iran
- 'Iran nearing nuclear bombs' Russia warns
- More than 20 million viewers switch on World Cup f...
- Switzerland rejects US extradition of Roman Polanski
- Colombian Farc leader's 'bodyguards die' in army raid
- Five Scots a week die while on holiday in Spain
- Pakistan government defaults on its electricity bill
- US to access Europeans' bank data in new deal
- Kylie Minogue claims UK number one album
- Californians bare bottoms for passing trains
- Barack Obama demands justice 15 years after Srebre...
- Eight men jailed in Tunisia for 'inciting terror'
- Music fan dies at T in the Park festival
- Girl, 16, assaulted inside Denbighshire church
- Five US soldiers killed in Afghanistan attacks
- A particular Palestinian 'obsession'
- Gaza aid ship to dock in Egypt after Israel pressure
- Catalan protesters rally for greater autonomy in S...
- Russian sub 'could stop oil leak'
- Iraq inquiry: Tony Blair under the spotlight again
- Israel steps up bid to block aid ship bound for Gaza
- Golden Girl Betty White poses for calendar
- US Afghan commander Stanley McChrystal fired by Obama
- Pakistan suicide blasts 'kill more than 100'
- BP to make new attempt to plug Gulf of Mexico oil ...
- EU imposes flight ban on Iran Air over safety
- Iran bolsters friendships abroad
- US and Russian 'spy-swap planes' land in Vienna
- Six arrested over street stabbing in Easton
- UK marine killed in Sangin district of Afghanistan
- Bus driver shoots Cairo workers
- Investigators claim US money is funding Afghan war...
- Suicide attack in Pakistan tribal village kills 17
- Iran executes two men by stoning
- Iran woman escapes stoning death for adultery
- US to cut $4bn in Afghan aid over corruption fears
- Afghan corruption has doubled since 2007, survey says
- Nato airstrike kills five Afghan soldiers
- Suicide bomber kills Iraqi Shia pilgrims
- Bin Laden chef pleads guilty at Guantanamo Bay trial
- Russian press says Obama, Kremlin don't want spy row
- Russia and US said to be planning spy exchange
- Pakistani army clashes with militants in the north...
- Actress Lindsay Lohan jailed for probation violation
- Israel's rocky friendship with Barack Obama
- Obama and Netanyahu urge direct Mid-East peace talks
- France's Sarkozy rejects campaign donation 'smears'
- China executes top Chongqing official for corruption
- British troops in Afghanistan are to hand over re...
- Pregnant drinking 'affects sperm'
- UK soldier dies in Afghanistan explosion
- Iran says its passenger jets were refused fuel abroad
- Israel confirms easing of Gaza blockade
- Chinese court sentences US geologist to 8 years
- Ex-hot dog eating champion Takeru Kobayashi held i...
- Solar lamp wins award for helping developing count...
- Israelis reflect on flotilla raid
- Thousands join Jane Tomlinson 10km run in Leeds
-
▼
July
(127)
No comments:
Post a Comment