No sign of oil after Gulf platform fire: US Coast Guard

The company that owns the platform did not know what caused the fire.

New Orleans: An oil and gas platform operated by Mariner Energy burst into flames in the Gulf of Mexico on Thursday, but the crew of 13 escaped and there were no signs of an oil spill, the Coast Guard said.

The accident brought unwelcome attention to the offshore drilling industry as it is trying to roll back a six-month deepwater drilling moratorium imposed in the wake of the BP Plc Macondo well disaster, which killed 11 workers and poured 4.1 million barrels of oil into the Gulf.

As of late Thursday, there were no signs of a spill from the Mariner platform.

"The boats and the aircraft on scene cannot see a sheen," US Coast Guard Captain Peter Troedsson told a news conference on Thursday afternoon in New Orleans.

Shortly after the fire, Mariner reported there was a mile-long oily sheen on the water around the platform, according to the government.

On Friday morning, Coast Guard helicopters will fly over and inspect the platform and surrounding ocean, a Coast Guard spokeswoman said.

The fire burned for several hours before it was extinguished. A company spokesman said it started on an upper deck of the platform where living quarters were located, and had not been caused by a "blowout”, or sudden release of oil and gas from a well.

The crew, plucked from the Gulf by an oil supply vessel, were transported to a hospital onshore and no injuries have been reported, the Houston-based company said.

Automated shutoff equipment turned off the flow of oil and gas from the platform`s seven producing wells as the crew evacuated, Mariner said. The cause of the fire is still unknown and under investigation, the company said.

"It`s unlikely to have long-term implications for production in the Gulf of Mexico," said Raoul LeBlanc, a senior director at PFC Energy in Houston.

Environmental groups said the Mariner explosion reinforced the need to keep the moratorium in place. White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said he did not know whether the fire would affect the moratorium, scheduled to expire on November 30.

Several analysts said the accident could hurt the industry in its court battle to lift the drilling halt early.

"The incident has happened at the wrong time," said Eugen Weinberg, head of commodity research at Commerzbank. "The political establishment will probably move quickly as everybody still remembers the slow dealing with the Macondo accident and the dramatic pictures from this summer."

The platform is located more than 90 miles south of Louisiana`s Vermilion Bay, 200 miles west of BP`s ruptured Macondo well. It is in relatively shallow water 340 feet deep.

The platform`s output is a small fraction of the 1.6 million barrels of oil and 6.4 billion cubic feet of gas the region produces on a daily basis.

The facility averaged 9.2 million cubic feet of natural gas per day and 1,400 barrels of oil and condensate per day during the last week of August, Mariner said.

Bureau Report

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