All 13 Crew Members Rescued in Gulf Oil Rig Fire

All 13 crew members from a Gulf of Mexico offshore drilling platform that burst into flames Thursday have been rescued and, authorities said, no oil spill occurred as a result of the fire, The Associated Press reports.

The crew members survived after leaping from the platform and floating together in protective “gumby suits” in the waters about 100 miles south of Louisiana’s Vermilion Bay. The Coast Guard reported a single injury,  but a spokesman for Houston-based Mariner Energy, which owns the platform, said that no crew members were hurt.

The platform lies about 200 miles west of the Deep Horizon rig, the site of the April explosion that killed 11 workers and produced BP’s catastrophic oil spill. The Coast Guard early on Thursday reported that a a mile-long oil sheen was spotted in the water near the fire, raising concerns about more oil flowing into the Gulf. However, that report was later dismissed.

Federal authorities have cited Mariner Energy and associated entities for 10 Gulf of Mexico accidents over the last four years, according to safety records from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement.

Authorities said that the shallow-water rig was closed for maintenance at the time of the accident. Mariner said it did not know what caused the fire.

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