Oil spill largest ever on Alaska's North Slope
ANCHORAGE — An oil spill discovered this month in Alaska's Prudhoe Bay was the largest ever on the North Slope, according to an official estimate released Friday.
The estimated spill size of 201,000 to 267,000 gallons far surpasses the 38,000 gallons spilled in 2001, but it is much less than the 11 million gallons spilled in Prince William Sound when the Exxon Valdez ran aground in 1989.
The North Slope is the region between the Brooks Range and the Arctic Ocean and contains most of Alaska's petroleum reserves.
"I can confirm it's the largest spill of crude oil on the North Slope that we have record of," said Linda Giguere of the state Department of Environmental Conservation. The state has kept comprehensive records of oil spills for a decade, with more cursory record-keeping dating to the 1970s, when the trans-Alaska oil pipeline was built.
The estimate was based on a survey conducted this week at the site operated by BP Exploration (Alaska) Inc. where the leak was discovered March 2.
The source of the spill was a quarter-inch hole apparently caused by corrosion inside the three-mile line that leads to the trans-Alaska oil pipeline.
Workers have recovered 52,920 gallons. The effort has been slowed in recent days by extreme cold; the wind-chill factor dipped to more than 70 degrees below zero. But Giguere said the spill was relatively well-contained, covering less than two acres.
"It's a significant spill. The volume is large, but the footprint is small," Giguere said. "It's contained and controlled, which is the really good news. Morale is high, despite the cold temperatures and harsh conditions."
BP's plant is about 650 miles north of Anchorage. Full production is not expected to resume for at least two weeks, BP spokesman Daren Beaudo said earlier this week.