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Subject **BROKEN NEWS!**BP containment "Top Hat" Delayed, set back, failed, shit the bed...wtf eva
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Original Message BP top hat is "set back" a few days...

Plan to cap Gulf of Mexico oil leak with dome delayed

A new attempt by BP to control the main leak at the Gulf of Mexico oil well disaster site with a steel dome has been put back by a "few days".

Earlier, the British oil giant said it hoped the "top hat", which is now on the seabed, would be deployed by Thursday at the broken pipeline.

An attempt to use a larger containment dome failed on Sunday when it became clogged with ice and gas.

The well is spewing out some 5,000 barrels (210,000 gallons) of oil a day.

The "top hat" is meant to siphon oil into container ships but there is no guarantee that the plan will work, the BBC's Andy Gallacher reports.

The first of two relief wells being drilled is not expected to be ready for some three months.

Human hair

Emergency teams are using several methods in their attempts to deal with the oil at the surface.

Thousands of clean-up crews, soldiers and volunteers have all been deployed to keep the expanding oil slick from damaging the coastlines of four states.

Around 1.5m ft of floating booms are being used as part of the efforts to stop oil reaching the coast, Reuters reports.

A US charity is even making booms out of nylon tights, animal fur and human hair.

Hair donations have been sent from around the world to help make the special booms, which will be laid on beaches to soak up any oil that washes ashore.

Eleven people died when an explosion - thought to have occurred after a surge of methane gas from deep within the well - destroyed the Deepwater Horizon rig on 20 April.

Huge bill

The huge oil spill has so far cost BP - which is in charge of the clean-up operation - $450m (£300m).

The total bill could be as high as $20bn (£13.6bn), analysts say.

"Estimates run from between $3bn to $20bn. Certainly, there's the clean-up costs.

"And the associated lawsuits, which at this stage looks like it could be one of the largest class actions in US history", oil analyst Greg Smith of stock market research house Fat Prophets told the BBC.

"From our point of view, we would think somewhere mid-range - around the $10bn mark," he adds.

[link to news.bbc.co.uk]
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