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Impact of Gulf of Mexico oil blowout widens as it flows into second month
Undersea crude oil has gushed into the Gulf of Mexico near Louisiana since a fiery, deadly drilling accident April 20, and experts still were struggling to control the massive gusher as this week began. British Petroleum (BP), the main drilling company involved, is trying many ways to contain the gooey mess and skim it off coastal waters. With the environmental disaster entering a second month Tuesday, the toll on marine life, birds, beach resorts and commercial fishing for shellfish and other catches is escalating daily. Louisiana license plates say "Sportsman's Paradise," but there's a huge economic cloud in paradise. Tourists are canceling hotel and charter boat reservations. Restaurants and supermarkets around the country are switching to farm-raised shrimp from South America or Asia as shortages already boost the cost of Gulf supplies.
In the scramble to stop the pollution, BP on Monday reported "good progress" threading a mile-long, six-inch tube with a rubber stopper into the 21-inch pipe spewing oil from the ocean floor. "We're really pleased that we're capturing some of the flow," a top executive said. The company hopes to halt the flow in about a week. In another new move, federal officials let BP spread chemicals underwater to break the oil into small drops and prevent it from reaching the surface or shore.
Multisource political news, world news, and entertainment news analysis by Newsy.com Front Page Talking Points is written by Felix Grabowski and Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2010
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