Louisiana Oil Pipeline Ruptures
AP

April 6, 2002

Area rich in marine and coastal wildlife

LAFITTE, La. - A pipeline rupture Saturday caused about 90,000 gallons of oil to spill into a coastal area known as Little Lake, Coast Guard officials said.

Owner BP Amoco shut down the pipeline as soon as it became aware of the spill. The company then notified Garner Environmental, which dispatched five boats to begin containment and cleanup.

The area is rich in marine and coastal wildlife.

Calls to BP Amoco at its Texas City, Texas, headquarters were not immediately returned Saturday.

Coast Guard officials said BP Amoco sent a plane to assess the damage.

It was not immediately clear what caused the rupture or to what extent the spill may have damaged marine or coastal wildlife.

Little Lake is mostly surrounded by land but connects to the Gulf of Mexico about 35 miles south of New Orleans.



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La. Pipeline Rupture Spills Oil
By BRETT MARTEL
Associated Press Writer

April 6, 2002

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - A pipeline rupture sent about 90,000 gallons of oil pouring into a southeast Louisiana coastal area known as Little Lake Saturday.

Owner BP Amoco shut down the pipeline as soon as it became aware of the spill and notified Garner Environmental, which dispatched five boats to begin containment and cleanup, said company spokesman Neil Chapman.

It was not immediately clear what caused the rupture or to what extent the spill may have damaged marine or coastal wildlife.

"We're trying to keep the oil away from the critters and if some do get in trouble we have specialists who are trained to rehabilitate them," said BP spokesman Daren Beaudo, who was on the scene.

Coast Guard officials said BP Amoco sent a plane to assess the damage.

Little Lake is mostly surrounded by marshland but connects to the Barataria Bay and the Gulf of Mexico at Louisiana's far southeastern coast, about 35 miles south of New Orleans.

Cleanup crews had 40,000 feet of containment boom in the water, but some oil had made land and started up a canal.

"There will be some shoreline impact and we're trying to prevent any more," Beaudo said. "The wind out here has been kind of tricky."

He said the cleanup could take several days.

Chapman said company engineers had yet to determine what caused the rupture in the line that runs from the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port to the Alliance Refinery near New Orleans.

Coast Guard spokesman Jeff Murphy described the slick as a large ribbon being pushed by the wind toward the shoreline, where cleanup crews were able to corral most of it.

"It's staying in one area of the lake," he said. BP "had a fast response with a lot of resources."

The worst Louisiana spill in recent years dumped a half million gallons from the tanker Westchester into the Mississippi River in November of 2000.

The Westchester spill was the largest in U.S. waters since the Exxon Valdez dumped more than 10 million gallons of oil in Prince William Sound, Alaska, in March 1989.

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