No oil leak spotted as giant drilling ship runs aground off Alaska

Crews aboard two aircraft which flew over an oil drilling ship that went aground in a severe Alaska storm say there is no sign the vessel is leaking fuel or that its hull has been breached.

The Royal Dutch Shell drilling rig used this summer in the Arctic is aground off a small island near Kodiak Island, where the ship, the Kulluk, appeared stable, said federal on-scene response co-ordinator Captain Paul Mehler.

“There is no sign of a release of any product,” he said during a news conference at unified command centre at an Anchorage hotel.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

When the storm eases and weather permits, the plan is to get marine experts on board the Kulluk to take photos and videos, and then come up with a more complete salvage plan.

The rig ran aground on Monday on a sand and gravel shore off an uninhabited island in the Gulf of Alaska. Capt Mehler said the Kulluk was carrying about 143,000 gallons of diesel and about 12,000 gallons of lubricating oil and hydraulic fluid.

Capt Mehler said there was a team of about 500 people working on a response to the situation “with many more coming”.

A Shell official said the drilling rig was built with a double-sided hull of reinforced steel 3ins thick. It had recently undergone £180m of improvements before being put into service for a short time this past summer in the Beaufort Sea off Alaska’s north coast.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The drilling rig’s difficulties go back to Thursday when it separated from a towing vessel south of Kodiak Island as it was being towed to Seattle for maintenance by a 360ft anchor handler, the Aiviq, and a tugboat, the Alert. The vessels were moving north along Kodiak Island, trying to escape the worst of the storm.

But at about 4.15pm, the drill ship separated from the Aiviq about 10 to 15 miles offshore. The tug boat crew guided the drill ship to a place where it would cause the least environmental damage and cut it loose. It grounded at about 9pm.

Sean Churchfield, operations manager for Shell Alaska, said once the situation was under control an investigation would be carried out into the cause. The coastguard said it would also be investigating and its findings would be made public.