BP Cap Stops Oil Flow For First Time Since April
NEW ORLEANS — BP says oil from its broken well has stopped gushing into the Gulf of Mexico for the first time since April.
The announcement Thursday came after company officials said all valves had been shut on a new cap over the busted well in an experiment to stop the spill.
Check out our oil spill gallery:
- ‘Sinners’: Black Horror Scholars Discuss The Blockbuster Film
- Trump’s Brazen Takeover Of The Library Of Congress Is Another Direct Threat To Democracy
- Trump Calls Kamala Harris ‘Dumb As A Rock’ While Other MAGAts Call Her A ‘DEI Hire’…Again
- Sean Combs’ Legal Team Claims ‘Mutual Abuse’ In Relationship With Cassie Ventura
- The Segregationist Administration: How Trump’s Team Is Systematically Dismantling Civil Rights
Kent Wells, a BP PLC vice president, said at a news briefing that oil stopped flowing into the water at 2:25 p.m. CDT.
It was a long-awaited milestone in one of the nation’s worst environmental disasters. While not a permanent solution to plug the busted well, the success in capturing the oil spewing out was welcome news.
The crisis began when BP’s deepwater rig exploded, killing 11 workers.
The cap is not a permanent fix. BP is drilling two relief wells so it can pump mud and cement into the leaking well in hopes of plugging it for good.
RELATED STORIES