Amid uncertainty, BP siphons off more oil from well

HOUSTON/WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – Energy giant BP Plc  said yesterday it was capturing more oil from its ruptured  Gulf of Mexico well while U.S. scientists tried to figure out  just how much crude was still pouring out.

The London-based company’s share price closed down 5  percent in London after U.S. President Barack Obama said he  wanted to know “whose ass to kick” over the massive spill.

The on-going disaster remains at the top of Obama’s crowded  domestic agenda, a point underscored by his strong comments and  yesterday’s announcement that he will head back to the Gulf coast  next week to inspect efforts to contain the spill.

Obama will visit Mississippi, Alabama and Florida during a  a two-day trip beginning on Monday, the White House said.

BP already faces a criminal investigation and lawsuits over  the April 20 explosion aboard the Deepwater Horizon oil rig  that killed 11 workers and triggered the 50-day-old oil spill,  the worst in U.S. history.

Efforts to contain the mess forged ahead.

BP said yesterday it had collected 14,800 barrels of oil  from the leaking well on Monday, 33 percent higher than the  amount collected on Sunday and the highest capture rate since  it installed a new system last week to contain the spill.

BP later said it collected  7,850 barrels of oil in the  12-hour stretch ended at noon CDT (1700 GMT) yesterday. That  brought the total collected since the cap was installed to  51,364 barrels.

Hoping to calm rising passions, BP said it would donate  revenues from the oil it is recovering to restore Gulf wildlife  habitats. The company had already committed itself to cleaning  up after the disaster.

The political heat remains intense as the disaster spills  over into energy policy in Washington.

The Interior Department issued new safety and environmental  requirements for companies that want to drill in shallow  waters. They have until June 28 to show they have met the new  requirements or face being shut down.

BP chief executive Tony Hayward was called to testify, for  the first time, at a congressional hearing on June 17 that will  focus on the company’s role in the rig explosion and subsequent  spill. BP said he would attend.

Another congressional committee investigating the spill  sent a letter to rig operator Transocean that questioned  whether the company had enough people working on Deepwater  Horizon at the time of the explosion.

After the spill, the Obama administration imposed a  six-month moratorium on new drilling permits for exploration  and development wells in waters deeper than 500 feet (152  metres). U.S. officials also refused to approve new drilling in  shallow waters until new rules were issued.

Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen, the top U.S. official  overseeing the cleanup effort, said on Monday neither BP nor  the government knew just how much oil

was gushing out of the  well. “That’s the big unknown right now,” he said.

BP has given conservative estimates of the oil flow that  have been ridiculed by scientists and U.S. lawmakers. Even the  government’s much higher estimates of 12,000-19,000 barrels a  day seemed on the low side after Allen said the company planned  to double its collection of oil from the well to 20,000 barrels  every day (840,000 gallons/3.18 million liters).

Allen said yesterday U.S. scientists would present revised  estimates later this week or early next week.

The panel of  experts has said BP’s latest effort to contain the oil spill  could actually increase the flow rate by up to 20 percent.

BP and government officials have said a definitive solution  will not come until August when a relief well is drilled.

Obama, who faces growing criticism that he has appeared  detached from the the economic and ecological catastrophe  hitting four U.S. Gulf states, sharpened his criticism of BP in  an interview with NBC’s “Today” show that aired yesterday.

Obama said he was talking to experts to find out what had  gone wrong “so I know whose ass to kick” over the spill, which  has soiled 120 miles (190 km) of U.S. coastline and threatens  the Gulf Coast’s lucrative fishing industry.