Florida Releases August 25, 2010 Gulf Oil Spill Situation Update

Source: Governor of Florida
Posted on: 25th August 2010

On August 25 NOAA analysis shows Southern Florida, the Florida Keys, and the East Coast are unlikely to experience any effects from the remaining oil on the surface of the Gulf.

Offshore, there is no path for oil to enter the Florida Straits. View the Florida Gator Interactive Oil Spill Map

Approximately 135 miles of Gulf Coast shoreline is currently experiencing moderate to heavy oil impacts: 4 miles in Florida, 115 miles in Louisiana, 11 miles in Mississippi and 5 miles in Alabama. 522 miles of shoreline are experiencing light to trace oil impacts: 122 miles in Florida, 233 miles in Louisiana, 99 miles in Mississippi and 68 miles in Alabama.

The MC252 well has been shut in since July 15 and there is currently no oil flowing into the Gulf. Open water fishing operations will continue today. The fishing operations will aim at removing drill pipe within the MC252 BOP. The DDII has completed preparations for its BOP to be used on the Macondo well and is standing by. The DDIII is on standby but maintaining full readiness to proceed when directed.

Scattered shower and thunderstorm activity is expected to be low today. There is a 20-30% chance of showers along the Panhandle and Big Bend coast. There is very low, 10-20% chance of rain throughout the Panhandle tonight. Rain chances are expected to increase to about 40-50% on Thursday. Seas will be between 1-3 feet today. Heat index values will reach up to 100-104 degrees today and tomorrow. In the tropics, Hurricane Danielle is currently at category 1 strength with maximum sustained winds of 85 mph. The official forecast track still curves the storm away from the U.S. coastline. The area of low pressure in the eastern Atlantic now has a 100% chance of developing and is expected to become a tropical depression by later this morning. Computer models also show this system curving away from the U.S. A weak low pressure system in the western Gulf of Mexico has a 10% chance of developing as it moves westward over the next few days.

Beaches in Escambia County, including Pensacola Beach, Perdido Key and the Gulf Islands National Seashore, are open for swimming. There have been minimal reports of oil, usually scattered tar balls, in the past six weeks. Learn more

Governor Charlie Crist, the State Emergency Response Team and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) are actively coordinating and responding to the Deepwater Horizon incident.

The following is a summary of state and BP response actions as of August 25, 2010.

Map of BP Oil Spill as of August 25, 2010. Click on images for larger picture.

BP oil spill nearshore trajectory august 24, 2010

No recoverable oil has been reported by daily overflights since July 30. Daily satellite analyses have indicated a decreasing number of possible oil anomalies since the well has been capped. Recent overflights sent to investigate satellite anomalies have only reported seeing seaweed with an occasional colorless sheen.

We do not expect any recoverable DWH oil to appear in the offshore environment. However, observations will continue into the foreseeable future. If the need arises, surface oil trajectories will be produced again. Periods of onshore winds may result in some scattered tarball impacts for the next few weeks to months.

NOAA Interactive Oil Spill Map For august 24, 2010

Visit geoplatform.gov/gulfresponse/ to see the latest information about the oil spill’s trajectory, the position of NOAA’s research ships, spilled oil’s coastal location and the areas closed to shipping.

Current Situation:

Florida beaches are open.

Currently Deepwater Horizon is not discharging any oil into the Gulf of Mexico. Unified Area Command continues with a comprehensive oil well intervention and spill response planning following the April 22 sinking of the Transocean Deepwater Horizon drilling rig 130 miles southeast of New Orleans. On August 5, pressure testing was performed which indicated there is an effective cement plug in the casing. BP believes the static kill and cementing procedures have been successful.

  • This event has been designated a Spill of National Significance.
  • More than 30,294 personnel are working the on and offshore response.
  • Oil-water mix recovered: over 34.7 million gallons. Dispersant: more than 1.84 million gallons deployed.
  • Response vessels available: more than 4,375. Response aircraft available: 72

Florida Specific:

All Tier 1, 2 & 3 boom has been removed and stored in the Northwest Florida counties.

Tar balls continue to be reported in Northwest Florida.

58 vessels are deployed in Florida for the Vessels of Opportunity program.

Federal Fishery closure, west of Cape San Blas to state line. 26,388 sq mi of southeast portion has been reopened. (see NOAA FB10-060) Coastal state waters offshore of Escambia County are now reopened for harvesting of finfish, crabs and shrimp.

NOAA forecast oil trajectories do not indicate any recoverable oil to appear across the northern-central gulf, but minor tarball impacts are still possible.

In addition to $100,000 for Volunteer Florida to maintain a volunteer registration database, BP has issued over $82 million in grants to Florida for booming, tourism advertising, and state preparedness and response efforts. An additional $500,000 has been issued by BP to fund innovative technology solutions for Okaloosa County.

BP awarded $3 million to the Florida Department of Children and Families to maintain behavioral health and substance abuse services for individuals affected by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.

BP claims in Florida total 38,979 with approximately $81,899,686.61 paid.

BP has assumed direct financial responsibility for approx $9 million of Boom contracts for Florida counties.

Florida Information Lines:

The Florida Oil Spill Information Line (FOSIL) is available from 8am-6pm EDT daily.

  • English – (888) 337-3569 / TDD – (800) 955-8771 / Voice – (800) 955-8770
  • Spanish – (877) 955-8773
  • Haitian Creole – (877) 955-8707

For general health/exposures information questions related to the oil spill, contact the Florida Poison Control Center at (800) 222-1222.

Two public hotline numbers for oil spill investigation and cleanup:

  • Impacted Wildlife: (866) 557-1401
  • Oiled Shoreline: (877) 2-SAVE-FL or #DEP for cellular devices

The Florida Department of State has established a hotline for archeological, historical preservation, and tribal lands that may be impacted by the Deepwater Horizon incident: (850) 245-6530.

To confirm legitimate charities and determine if an organization is registered with the state, call Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) (800) 435-7352 or www.800helpfla.com.

Information Websites:

Volunteer registration: www.VolunteerFlorida.org and click “Register to Help”

Health advisories: http://www.dep.state.fl.us/deepwaterhorizon/health.htm

State sampling data: www.nrdata.org

GATOR web mapping application: http://map.floridadisaster.org/gator/

Recovery related jobs, response management application: http://FloridaGulfRecoveryJobs.com/

NOAA GeoPlatform:  http://www.geoplatform.gov/gulfresponse/

State Actions:

State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC) is at a Level 2 (Partial), operating from 0800 to 1700 EDT, with Florida Department of Environmental Protection (FDEP) as the lead agency.

Governor’s Executive Orders 10-99, 10-100, 10-106 and 10-132 declared a state of emergency for identified Florida coastal counties.

Governor’s Executive Order 10-101 established the Gulf Oil Spill Economic Recovery Task Force, which will facilitate efforts by Florida businesses and industries to recover the loss of commerce and revenues due to the oil spill.

Governor’s Executive Order 10-169, authorizing property appraisers to provide interim assessments of properties affected by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill disaster.

There are two Florida branch offices in Northwest Florida. These branch offices bring together federal, state and local agencies to streamline response efforts.

Conducting daily conference calls with county and emergency management partners, the Federal On-Scene Coordinator, and various Unified Commands.

A SERT Toxicological Data Analysis Cell is providing consistent scientific assessments of collected sampling to inform local/state decision making.

9 Florida National Guard personnel on duty at various duty posts in the Deepwater Horizon area of operations.

19,899 volunteers have registered to respond to Deepwater Horizon. 31,031 volunteer hours have been worked.

AmeriCorps, National Civilian Community Corps members are assisting with models for a community-run Citizen Information Station (CIS).

Currently, Florida has 8 task forces capable of both gross and secondary decontamination of vessels, and 1 task force capable of gross decontamination of vessels.

Emergency Bridge Loan Program, cumulative totals (As of 8/20/10) – Applications: 106; Declined: 15; Approved: 91; Amount: $2,189,500

The Small Business Administration issued an Economic Injury Disaster Loan Declaration for the State of Florida. Outreach Centers are open in 9 counties. Total Loan Applications: Issued: 816 Accepted: 297Declined: 11 Approved: 50 Loan amount approved: $5,982,400.00

Recovered Oiled Wildlife: On 08/24/10

See the consolidated wildlife report updated by noon each day: http://www.deepwaterhorizonresponse.com/go/doctype/2931/55963

Local States of Emergency

Escambia: Expired
Santa Rosa: Expired
Okaloosa: 8/28/10
Bay: Expires on 8/26/10
Gulf: Expires on 8/31/10
Franklin: Expires on 8/28/10
Wakulla: Expired
Dixie: Expired
Sarasota: Concurrent with State
Jefferson: Expired

County EOC Activations

Escambia, Level 3
Santa Rosa, Level 3
Okaloosa, Level 3
Walton, Level 3
Bay, Level 2 (Partial)
Gulf, Level 2 (Partial)
Franklin, Level 3
Wakulla, Level 3
Jefferson, Level 3

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