Federal officials are allowing BP to keep the cap on its crippled Gulf Coast oil well despite the discovery that it is leaking, the Associated Press reports. The national commander for the oil spill, retired Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen, said this afternoon that the leaks are not a major concern so far.
Officials also said that nearby seepage that had fueled concerns the well might be leaking may be naturally occurring, The New York Times reports.
Earlier today, the government told BP the cap could remain in place for another 24 hours, but ordered company engineers to closely monitor the well for potential problems.
“I restated our firm position that this test will only continue if they continue to meet their obligations to rigorously monitor for any signs that this test could worsen the overall situation. At any moment, we have the ability to return to the safe containment of the oil on the surface until the time the relief well is completed and the well is permanently killed,” Allen said in a statement Monday morning. Officials considered the cap to be only a test and Allen said that he would grant BP extensions to keep the cap in place only one day at a time.
The well was sealed last Thursday, when the company used submarines to close valves on a device that had been fitted over the top of the well. Officials believed the move had stopped the spill until they found the cap was leaking this afternoon.
If officials do decide to reopen the well, BP would go back to the old system of using production vessels to capture oil at the surface.
BP Chief Operating Officer Doug Suttles told The Washington Post that the company was hoping the cap would stay on until a permanent fix could be put in place. In a statement, BP said that one of the two relief wells it is drilling is on track to permanently kill the leaking well by mid-August.
According to government estimates, at least 2.3 million barrels, or 105 million gallons of oil has spilled into the gulf and 587 miles of coastline — including 337 miles in Louisiana — have been tainted by oil, the Post reports.


