Published: September 20, 2010
BP Well Declared Dead; Florida Keys Unaffected
KEY WEST, Florida Keys - (BUSINESS WIRE) - An announcement
Sunday that the blown-out Deepwater Horizon, BP/Transocean oil well in
the northern Gulf of Mexico was declared officially dead is welcome news
for Florida Keys' interests.
Following the April 20 explosion and subsequent spill 480 miles
northwest of Key West, some experts expressed concerns that oil might
become entrained in the Gulf Loop Current and migrate south to the
Florida Keys. However, according to officials from the U.S. Coast Guard
and Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, there has been no evidence
of BP oil remnants affecting the region.
"Despite a heightened awareness and continued search efforts we found no
direct (Deepwater Horizon oil) impacts in the Florida Keys," said
Captain Pat DeQuattro, commanding officer of U.S.
Coast Guard Sector Key West, who led the unified command response in
the Keys.
A pressure test early Sunday morning confirmed that cement
pumped into the bottom of the 18,000-foot-deep well is holding.
The "bottom kill" was the final step in a long process to permanently
seal the well that gushed millions of gallons of oil into the Gulf of
Mexico between April 20 and July 15, 2010. Oil flow stopped July 15
after a cap was installed on a failed blowout preventer.
"We can now state, definitively, the well poses no continuing threat to
the Gulf of Mexico," said retired Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen, the
federal government's point person for the disaster.
Florida Keys travel information is available at http://www.fla-keys.com.

For Florida Keys Tourist Development Council
Andy Newman,
1-800-ASK-KEYS or 305-461-3300
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