On July 5 According to the NOAA oil plume model, the oil plume is 38 miles from Pensacola, 124 miles from Panama City and 333 miles from St. Petersburg.
The wind and wave conditions will push the near shore oil plume westward and NOAA is forecasting impacts no further east than Perdido Pass through Wednesday.
Southeasterly winds of 10-15 knots will persist across the Northern Gulf Coast today and will continue increase up to 20 knots on Tuesday. Near shore waves will be low, around 1-2 feet, but will increase to 4-5 feet by tomorrow night. High offshore chances of rain will hamper surface recovery operations through tomorrow.
Offshore, no significant amounts of oil are within or moving towards Eddy Franklin and there is no clear path for oil to enter the Florida Straits.
On July 4, about 24,955 barrels of oil were recovered: 16,920 barrels of oil were collected, 8,035 barrels of oil were flared and 56.9 million cubic feet of natural gas were flared.
All Florida Beaches Remain OPEN! Pensacola Beach is open but has been closed to swimming and wading until further notice. 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 July 5, 2010.
Map of BP Oil Spill as of July 5, 2010. Click on images for larger picture.

This forecast is based on the NWS spot forecast from Sunday, July 4 PM. Currents were obtained from several models (NOAA Gulf of Mexico, West Florida Shelf/USF, TGLO/TAMU, NAVO/NRL) and HFR measurements. The model was initialized from Saturday-Sunday satellite imagery analysis (NOAA/NESDIS) and Sunday overflights. The leading edge may contain tarballs that are not readily observable from the imagery (hence not included in the model initialization). Oil near bay inlets could be brought into that bay by local tidal currents.
Winds are forecast to shift tonight to become more southerly, then remain from the south and east through next week with speeds of 10-18 kts. Due to the northwestward movement of the slick over the past several days, the coastlines of MS, AL, and the FL panhandle west of Pensacola continue to be threatened by shoreline contacts. For Louisiana, models show winds and currents moving oil from the source region west around the Delta and then to the north, with new shoreline oiling in the area between Barataria Bay and Caillou Bay. Further west, only scattered sheens have been observed on recent overflights; however strong westward currents will continue to transport these sheens to the west.

NOAA Interactive Oil Spill Map:
www.GeoPlatform.gov/gulfresponse integrates the latest data on the oil spill’s trajectory, fishery closed areas, wildlife and place-based Gulf Coast resources — such as pinpointed locations of oiled shoreline and daily position of research ships — into one customizable interactive map.
Weather Summary:
In the tropics, the National Hurricane Center has given the non-tropical low pressure system in the northern Gulf of Mexico a 10% chance of becoming a tropical cyclone before making landfall within the next two days. A tropical wave in the northwestern Caribbean is in an area of weather conditions favorable for development and has a 40% chance of becoming a tropical cyclone within the next 48 hours.
Current Situation:
Florida beaches are open.
Estimated release rate of oil from Deepwater Horizon at 35,000 to 60,000 barrels per day. Optimization of the dual recovery system (LMRP Cap and Q4000) continues; total oil recovered approximately 25,025 barrels on 7/04/10.
This event has been designated a Spill of National Significance.
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.
There is no planned use of dispersants in Florida waters.
Florida Specific:
Health Effects: Oil Impact notice postings: Escambia County, all Gulf side beaches; Walton County, all Gulf beaches.
Tar balls, tar patties and sheen have been reported in Northwest Florida, with the heaviest impacts reported in Escambia County.
Pensacola Pass as well as Perdido Pass will continue to be closed with the tide to reduce the amount of oil from entering inland waters. These waterways are manned to allow access to necessary vessel traffic during low tide.
Oil Containment Boom (in feet) total: 701,161 deployed in Florida. (Tier 1 & Tier 2: 419,600/ Tier 3: 281,561)
In accordance with established plans, protective booming, staging, and boom maintenance is being conducted along the coast from Escambia to Franklin.
Federal Fishery closure, west of Cape San Blas to state line. (see NOAA FB10-059).
In addition to $100,000 for Volunteer Florida to maintain a volunteer registration database, BP has issued over $75 million in grants to Florida for booming, a national tourism advertising campaign, and the state’s preparedness and response efforts. An additional $500,000 has been issued by BP to fund two innovative technology solutions for Okaloosa County.
BP claims in Florida total 25,461 with approximately $23,192,466.58 paid.
Florida Information Lines:
The Florida Oil Spill Information Line (FOSIL) is available from 8am-6pm EDT daily.
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:
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.
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: http://gulfrecoveryjobs.employflorida.com/
NOAA GeoPlatform, response management application: http://www.geoplatform.gov/gulfresponse/
State Actions:
State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC) is at a Level 1 (Full), operating from 0700 to 1800 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 counties along the Florida coast.
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.
The Governor activated Florida’s Small Business Emergency Bridge Loan Program to provide emergency, short-term loans to established small businesses in 26 designated counties.
Conducting daily conference calls with county and emergency management partners, the Federal On-Scene Coordinator, and various Unified Commands.

FEMA is assisting SERT with streamlining financial reimbursement processing.
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) executive order (EO 10-29) temporarily closes a portion of coastal state waters offshore of Escambia County to the harvest of saltwater fish, crabs and shrimp. Recreational catch and release is allowed.
A SERT Toxicological Data Analysis Cell is providing consistent scientific assessments of collected data sampling to inform local/state decision making.
The Agency for Workforce Innovation and Regional Workforce Boards are identifying and filling jobs related to the oil spill: 11,405 positions advertised; 32,665 applicants referred.
20,661 volunteer hours have been worked.
Conducting daily reconnaissance flights and shoreline patrol from Escambia to Franklin Counties for impact. Real time reconnaissance reports are being entered into GATOR.
Currently, there are 44 vessel decontamination sites in the panhandle approved by DEP, Counties and Cities. BP has approved 8 of those sites with 3 currently under construction.
Recovered Oiled Birds:

See the consolidated wildlife report updated by noon each day: http://www.deepwaterhorizonresponse.com/go/doctype/2931/55963
The Boom Coordination Cell continues to coordinate additional boom requests. The Innovative Technology Cell continues to assess alternative clean-up technologies suggested by the public and stakeholders.
The Small Business Administration has issued an Economic Injury Disaster Loan Declaration for the State of Florida. Disaster Loan Outreach Centers are open in 8 counties.
Loan Applications:
Local States of Emergency
County EOC Activations
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