See, just because we are european doesn't mean we're incapable of understanding...
jh Send a noteboard - 03/06/2010 09:53:25 AM
That is 5,000 barrels of oil a day or 220,000 barrels of oil in the 44 days that the well has been leaking. At a weighted price per barrel of around $70 (it's gone down to the mid-$60s and up to the mid-$70s in that time), that's $15.4 million worth of oil that has just leaked into the Gulf.
BP had initially said it was only 1,000 barrels a day leaking into the ocean, and environmental activists are talking about amounts that are just not possible, even if the well were bigger than it is and the pressure were greater than it is.
However, the lost revenue is just a drop in the bucket (pun intended) compared to the massive, massive cost of the cleanup, which will almost certainly top $1 billion.
Of course, the government's estimate is oddly convenient. There are 42 gallons to the barrel, and so 210,000 gallons becomes 5000 barrels exactly. For you European types, the number of barrels in a metric ton will vary based on the density of the oil, but a rule of thumb in the industry is 7.3 barrels to the metric ton, so that's still about 685 metric tons of oil leaking into the Gulf every day.
BP had initially said it was only 1,000 barrels a day leaking into the ocean, and environmental activists are talking about amounts that are just not possible, even if the well were bigger than it is and the pressure were greater than it is.
However, the lost revenue is just a drop in the bucket (pun intended) compared to the massive, massive cost of the cleanup, which will almost certainly top $1 billion.
Of course, the government's estimate is oddly convenient. There are 42 gallons to the barrel, and so 210,000 gallons becomes 5000 barrels exactly. For you European types, the number of barrels in a metric ton will vary based on the density of the oil, but a rule of thumb in the industry is 7.3 barrels to the metric ton, so that's still about 685 metric tons of oil leaking into the Gulf every day.
Volume measurements. As you said, density plays a factor in weight measurements, so it is easier to just go with cubic metres, a perfectly sound unit of measurement.
Also, let's just hope they fix it soon.
"People think it must be fun to be a super genius, but they don't realize how hard it is to put up with all the idiots in the world" - Calvin.
Assuming the government is right, and 210,000 gallons of oil go into the Gulf each day...
03/06/2010 01:47:55 AM
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The estimates are always going to be rounded figures.
03/06/2010 02:23:35 AM
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True enough about activists, but the alternative energy folks have pretty good evidence now.
03/06/2010 02:30:55 AM
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Alternative energy is a pipe dream for now, though.
03/06/2010 02:40:41 AM
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So you support greater regulation and oversight of offshore oil?
03/06/2010 09:30:25 AM
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No. I support the basic safety regulations that are already in place.
03/06/2010 09:55:42 AM
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BP says it's already spent $990 million. The question is how many billions it will end up being. *NM*
03/06/2010 02:25:41 AM
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The fact is, no one knows how much oil has been leaking.
03/06/2010 09:48:25 AM
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Straw man alert!
03/06/2010 09:57:59 AM
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Of course, unfettered private sector can do no wrong. right?
03/06/2010 10:27:19 AM
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I prefer the more conservative number to media hyperbole.
03/06/2010 05:52:07 PM
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Well, considering the original conservative number has been proven drastically wrong.
03/06/2010 07:28:27 PM
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70,000 barrels a day is obviously hyperbole.
03/06/2010 08:45:03 PM
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But you'd agree that half-million to a million gallons is a pretty reasonable estimate?
03/06/2010 10:34:58 PM
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I think it's probably under 20,000 but could be as much as 30,000. 70,000 is way too high.
04/06/2010 12:48:03 AM
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See, just because we are european doesn't mean we're incapable of understanding...
03/06/2010 09:53:25 AM
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