For the record, I'm no where near Vermilion bay right now. I did not have anything to do with this.An explosion on an oil rig south of Vermilion Bay sent the 13 people on board into the water Thursday morning around 9:30 a.m.
The incident happened 90 miles south of Vermillion Bay. (See map)
Coast Guard spokesman Bill Colclough said all 13 people have been accounted for and that one of them was injured. The injured person is going to be taken to Terrebonne General Medical Center.
Colclough said the rig owned by Mariner Energy was still on fire as of 11 a.m. and that reports are that it wasn’t an active well.
Four Coast Guard choppers from New Orleans and four from Houston were in route to the scene. A vessel was also in transit.
Coast Guard Cmdr. Cheri Ben-Iesau says some of those from the rig were spotted in emergency flotation devices.
Mariner Energy focuses on oil and gas exploration and production company focused on the Gulf of Mexico. In April, Apache Corp., another independent petroleum company, announced plans to buy Mariner in a cash-and-stock deal valued at $3.9 billion, including the assumption of about $1.2 billion of Mariner's debt. That deal
is pending.
Apache spokesman Bob Dye said the rig is in shallow water.
Responding to an oil spill in shallow water is much easier than in deepwater, where crews depend on remote-operated vehicles access equipment on the sea floor.
The platform is about 200 miles west of BP's blown out Macondo well. On Friday, BP was expected to begin the process of removing the cap and failed blow-out preventer, another step toward completion of a relief well that would complete the choke of the well. The BP-leased rig Deepwater Horizon exploded April 20, killing 11 people and setting off a massive oil spill.
Also, It is not a operational well, it was probably a workover rig capping a dry hole. We'll know more as it comes out.