Authorities downgrade size of oil spill off California coast

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Workers collect oil from the sea water at Huntington Beach, Orange County, California, the United States, Oct. 4, 2021.

San Francisco, (Asian independent) Nearly a week after a mass oil spill off the coast of Southern California, authorities are yet to reach a conclusion on the amount of oil leaked from a ruptured underwater pipeline, but some officials have hinted that it may be smaller than originally projected.

Initial estimates in the days after the spill were that at least 126,000 gallons of oil had leaked into the ocean, and the number was raised on Monday to potentially 144,000 gallons, Xinhua news agency quoted the ABC 7 news channel as saying in a report on Friday.

The report added that officials are now saying a lower number is within the range of possibilities even though the analysis would continue.

The authorities said their current estimates range from a minimum of about 25,000 gallons to a worst-case scenario of more than 131,000 gallons, the report said.

Capt. Rebecca Ore, commander of the US Coast Guard’s Los Angeles-Long Beach sector, said that after further assessments officials determined that a minimum of about 24,696 gallons, or 588 barrels, and a maximum of 131,000 gallons, or 3,134 barrels, of oil was released from the pipeline, ABC 7 reported.

The 131,000-gallon estimate was a “maximum worst-case discharge that is a planning scenario based on a volume in a pipeline”, Ore said.

She disclosed that five federal and state agencies assessed pipeline data, but those numbers had not been confirmed.

This move appeared to confuse some experts who said the amount should be easy to calculate.

David Pettit, a senior attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council who worked on the response to the massive Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, told ABC 7 that the amount of oil spilled into the ocean should be easily and quickly known to Amplify, the company who runs the pipeline.

“If they know what the flow rate was in the pipeline, and how much the pressure dropped, and for how long, you could calculate that in a matter of minutes,” Pettit said. “This is money to them.”

“They know how much they lost, I am certain of that,” he noted.

“We’re nearly a week into this, and while our cleanup and our emergency response is well underway, we still don’t know answers to how this happened, why it happened and who is ultimately responsible,” Orange County Supervisor Katrina Foley said.