The chasm between Apollo and the Gulf

There is no valid analogy between the Gulf spill and Apollo 13

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/42773000/jpg/_42773641_harrison_schmitt203.jpg

I am honored to present this guest post by Apollo 17 astronaut and geologist Dr. H. Harrison Schmitt – Anthony

President Obama’s Administration and its supportive media repeatedly say our 1970 Apollo 13 experience is analogous to the effort to contain and cap the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Not hardly!

The rescue of Astronauts Jim Lovell, Fred Haise and Jack Swigert, after an oxygen tank explosion on their spacecraft, illustrates how complex technical accidents should be handled, in contrast to the Gulf fiasco. Nothing in the government’s response to the blowout and explosion on the Deepwater Horizon and its aftermath bears any resemblance to the response to the Apollo 13 situation by the National Aeronautic and Space Administration and its Mission Control team at the Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston.

“Failure was not an option” for Gene Kranz and his Apollo 13 flight controllers and engineers. In contrast, failure clearly has been an option for President Obama and those claiming to have been on top of this situation “from day one” in his White House and in the Departments of Interior, Energy and Homeland Security. With no single, competent, courageous and knowledgeable leader in charge of a comparably competent, courageous and knowledgeable team as we had with Apollo 13, the Administration has been doomed to failure from the start. The President, without any experience in real-world management of anything, much less a crisis, has no idea how to deal with a situation as technically complex as the Gulf oil spill.

Apollo 13's damaged Service Module, as photographed from the Command Module after being jettisoned.

Whatever may be the culpability of British Petroleum and its federal regulators in causing and dealing with the accident, it has been left to BP engineers and managers and to Gulf State officials to respond as best they can in a regulatory environment that is politically charged, incompetent, fearful and hesitant.

Absolutely no reason exists to assume that any part of the Federal Government has engineering expertise comparable to the petroleum industry that can be applied to this or any future energy-related crisis. Certainly, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, and Energy Secretary Steven Chu have no more experience in these matters than does the President.

Salazar’s empty threat to “push BP out of the way” has no basis as a realistic option and best illustrates the floundering of the Obama Administration. Indeed, from “day one,” the expertise of the entire U.S. and British drilling and production industry should have been mobilized to combat this spill, with a single experienced engineering manager in charge. It still is not too late to start doing it right.

A more appropriate analogy from the Apollo era would be the recovery from the tragic fire during a pre-launch test on January 27, 1967, that took the lives of astronauts Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee. The Apollo 204 fire occurred in the clearly recognized crisis atmosphere of the Cold War, in which America raced to demonstrate to the world the superiority of freedom over the Communist oppression of the Soviet Union. The Deepwater Horizon explosion took place in the equally apparent crisis of America’s dependence on sources of oil from foreign nations governed or intimidated by our enemies or economic competitors. There, however, the validity of the 204 fire analogy ceases.

Charred remains of the Apollo 204 command module.

The NASA’s response to the 204 fire was to rapidly implement its previously well-formulated, objective investigation of its causes, both technical and managerial. Managerial responsibilities were identified, and George Low and his engineering team made appropriate changes without a prolonged exercise in finger pointing or the delays of another Presidential, buck-passing “commission.” NASA of that day moved forward and even accelerated the Apollo effort to its successful conclusion. Apollo 8’s Frank Borman, Jim Lovell and Bill Anders orbited the Moon less than two years after the 204 fire. Seven months after that, on July 20, 1969, Apollo 11’s Neil Armstrong and Edwin Aldrin, with Mike Collins in orbit overhead, landed on the Moon.

The lessons from the 204 fire were applied and we moved on. In contrast, President Obama’s and his Administration’s otherwise rambling response to the Deepwater Horizon explosion has been to stop offshore oil exploration by the United States. How misguided and, indeed, how either ignorant or devious can our President be!?

President Obama has shown repeatedly that the best interests of the American people are a lower priority than his ideological goal of changing America from what it has been, to some mystical, socialist utopia with a renewable-energy-based standard of living equivalent to that of the late 1800s. As if the Administration could not make its ineffective, disjointed response to the Deepwater Horizon accident any worse, it did not even use previously established sea surface burn-off and dispersant procedures to minimize the effects of the spill.

In addition, it has inexcusably delayed approving and assisting in Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal’s request to protect the state’s shores and wildlife habitats, by building offshore sand barriers – as unnecessary as having to make that request should have been. And this is the government that Congress and the President want to run healthcare, immigration, banking, carbon emissions, auto manufacturing, and everything else in American life?

The geologists, engineers, and on-site managers responsible for the Deepwater Horizon drilling effort understood that drilling to an oil reservoir through 13,000 of rock in 5000 feet of seawater would be very difficult. They knew that their geophysically defined target, typical of Gulf petroleum reservoirs, would be a complex mix of crude oil, natural gas and brine, contained in porous and permeable rock. Because of the rock and water depth, the reservoir also would be under very high pressure. In this situation, a reliable blowout preventer, a crimping device installed on the pipe near the floor of the sea, would be essential to reduce the risk of both a spill and potential explosion on the Deepwater Horizon.

Current information indicates that BP installed a defective blowout preventer and did not have a deep-water, robotically emplaced crimping technique as a backup to the blowout preventer. Essential to the prevention of future accidents will be an objective, complete technical and managerial investigation of why a geological and engineering situation of known risks spun out of control. The primary question is, will such an investigation be possible in the politically charged, adversarial “boot on the neck” atmosphere created by President Obama and his team? Imagine if such an atmosphere had surrounded the 204 fire investigation and recovery.

Responsibility for the Deepwater Horizon accident ultimately lies with the chaotic regulatory environment for petroleum exploration created over recent decades by the Congress, courts, Department of the Interior and environmental pressure groups. Will we learn anything about regulatory overkill from this tragic loss of eleven lives, extensive environmental damage, and disruption of business and employment in the Gulf?

Elimination of access to most on-shore and near-shore oil production prospects has driven American exploration away from more easily discoverable and producible resources – and into the much more dangerous and technically challenging deep waters of the seas and oceans. Even then, drilling and production accidents are exceedingly rare, in spite of the geological, engineering and weather-related difficulties that explorers and producers face as a consequence of these misguided restrictions.

Long-term, history reminds us that naturally and accidentally released oil in the oceans disappears due to bacterial action. Remember that the fuel oil which blackened the world’s beaches as a result of World War II ship destruction disappeared after only a few years, and ocean life survived. The Gulf oil spill will not be this Nation’s most serious environmental crisis: World War II tops it by orders of magnitude in more than just this respect.

If America and freedom are to survive indefinitely, the next Congress must begin to restore sanity and intelligence to national energy policy. Until economically competitive alternatives become fully feasible, fossil fuels will remain the mainstay of our economy. Our dependence on unstable foreign sources of oil has become one of our greatest national security vulnerabilities, and only domestic production can solve it in the next 50 years.

The 2010 elections thus become a critical starting point to bring rational, constitutional, America-first thinking back into the Federal Government.

______________

Harrison H. Schmitt is a former United States Senator from New Mexico, as well as a geologist and former Apollo Astronaut. He currently is an aerospace and private enterprise consultant and a member of the new Committee of Correspondence.


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peterdek
June 2, 2010 6:07 am

see
http://www.rnw.nl/english/article/dutch-oil-spill-response-team-standby-us-oil-disaster
This technology has proven itself, over the last 30 years. The technology managed oil spills for the last two major incidents in Europe.
It’s hard to understand that proven technology had to wait this long, just because an out of date EPA regulation. The skimmers are now on their way to Houston.

beng
June 2, 2010 6:14 am

******
President Obama has shown repeatedly that the best interests of the American people are a lower priority than his ideological goal of changing America from what it has been, to some mystical, socialist utopia with a renewable-energy-based standard of living equivalent to that of the late 1800s.
******
Exactly. And one could presume that actually solving the problem isn’t the real goal — exploiting it and using it as a political club is the real game. Can’t let these incidences go to waste, as one of the Obamanator’s closest advisers said.

Jackie
June 2, 2010 6:17 am

What kind of force is required to crimp the main pipe leak which is only 20″ in diameter? And why is it not being done?
This reflects badly on Omana more than BP, as has been pointed out the engineering might of the US should be able to overcome this scenario quickly even thought the pipe is one mile below sea level. The world we know today would be still be living in caves today if it were not for the discovery of oil and other massive engineering developments. Now more than ever we need leaders who will buckle down and take serious steps to fix the immediate problem and insist that the show must go on, even better and safer than before. This is not a time for back tracking and cowardice. Obama has shown he has no steel.

thethinkingman
June 2, 2010 6:19 am

My understanding is that underwater welding is a mature technology but I am a civil engineer and concrete and soil are my medium so . .
Put a tube with an open valve at the top snugly onto the BOP. By that I mean a tube that has an ID such that it can be pushed down onto the BOP neck with the valve open but with a gap that can be closed by welding.
Weld the tube onto the BOP.
Close the valve.
There must be some big problems with doing this or it would have been done and those Petrochemical boys are knowledgeable and clear thinking. But what are those problems?

June 2, 2010 6:25 am

I beg to differ
*****
1. Ron Cram says:
June 1, 2010 at 10:36 pm
…………. I would rather see people criticize Obama for his failures rather than for things which are not really his fault.
*****
A good leader or even an adequate leader understands the limits of his or her abilities and GETS OUT OF THE WAY when others can do better.
“He Whose Middle Name Cannot be Spoken” has done nothing but be an impediment. His regeime, i.e. the people appointed by Him and answerable to Him and Him alone, have refused to make decisions that might ameliorate the spill. They have done nothing but pontificate, threaten and stand in the way of people who do know what they are doing.
It is neither wise nor inspirational to threaten the people you are depending on to solve a crisis. Yet the current regime is bringing both criminal and civil actions against those very people needed to stop the leak.
“…not really his fault…” I agree that nobody expects the President to know how to fix the leak. But they have every right to expect and it indeed is a requirement of his job that he be a leader. At that he has been a pathetic failure.
This regime really is a ship of fools!
By the way, this has been compared to Katrina and President Bush. There is a fundamental difference. This happened in federally controlled waters and all of the regulations put the Federal Government in control, even to the point of making yes/no decisions on building berms offshore of the beaches. On the other hand, Katrina happened in areas controlled by state authorities. By law, the STATE GOVERNORS AND MAYORS ARE IN CHARGE for hurricane post-disaster management. It was required by federal regulations that President Bush was limited to supporting the state and local officials. President Bush’s failure was a failure to recognize that Mayor Nagin and Governor Blanco were grossly, tragically incompetent.
Regards,
Steamboat Jack (Jon Jewett’s evil twin)

mcfarmer
June 2, 2010 6:26 am

Very well done ,very well said
I raise cattle and get to visit with ranchers who suffered from the Al Gore mentality of how to manage the western grazing lands from the day Bill Clinton took offiice as President. Competent people were fired or retired and replaced by people with a wildlife agenda. You can agrue that this is goverments choice but these people have proved they have neither the training or skills to improve lands for wildlife. It has been another agenda driven goverment program that has failed and put hard working people out of work for litttle benefit.
Al Gore who wants to save the world from global warming showed how incopentent he is by the way he changed the management of the resources in the goverment owned land in the western United States.

Olen
June 2, 2010 6:27 am

Dr Schmitt nailed it, decades of bad government promoting bad science, has resulted in regulation and legislation that harm rather than favor the US. Some people blame environmentalists but they have no power without willing legislators and judges.

Douglas Dc
June 2, 2010 6:34 am

Very good article-Pass it on to your congresscritters, as they need to read this.
(Mine will anyway.)

Methow Ken
June 2, 2010 6:50 am

Outstanding article by Dr. Schmitt; in all respects.
In some ways this excerpt sums it up best:
”The President, without any experience in real-world management of anything, much less a crisis, has no idea how to deal with a situation as technically complex as the Gulf oil spill.”
The current President and his team are out of their depth, out of the league, and (finally, perhaps) the ”teflon” is wearing a little thin.
And I’m with Jim in prior comment, where he said this piece should be in the WSJ. And prominent in other MSM outlets. FRONT PAGE.

June 2, 2010 6:50 am

Dr. Schmitt makes some very valid points, although I think he also strays without foundation in trying to tie any failure to contain the leak to any supposed extremist Obama socialist agenda.
In fact, the logical conclusion to Dr. Schmitt’s post is in direct contradiction to where he winds up. He initially argues that there is “no single, competent, courageous and knowledgeable leader in charge of a comparably competent, courageous and knowledgeable team as we had with Apollo 13.”
The obvious conclusion to this statement is that we need a technology leader and team in connection with oil drilling and disaster response, particularly with deep water drilling. This implies more government regulation, and a huge new government agency. BP was left with the responsibility for cleaning up their own mess, and at least initially Dr. Schmitt implies that the failure was in allowing a private enterprise to do so without leadership.
Imagine if the solution to Apollo 13’s crisis was to go back to the air filter manufacturer and just leave it to them to solve the problem. Or imagine the chaos if the solution was to ask all original bidders on the air filter system to get together to form a “team” to solve the problem in the private sector.
Dr. Schmitt then goes on to say:

Responsibility for the Deepwater Horizon accident ultimately lies with the chaotic regulatory environment for petroleum exploration created over recent decades by the Congress, courts, Department of the Interior and environmental pressure groups. Will we learn anything about regulatory overkill from this tragic loss of eleven lives, extensive environmental damage, and disruption of business and employment in the Gulf?

So which is it… too much regulation, or not enough? When was the well first drilled, when “BP installed a defective blowout preventer and did not have a deep-water, robotically emplaced crimping technique as a backup to the blowout preventer” as Dr. Schmitt says? During this administration, under a regulatory environment only recently instituted by President Obama?
Is lack of competent regulation of the oil industry traced to the beginning of the Obama administration, or instead to some previous administration with ties to and a love for the oil industry that are without precedent? Is it really a question of party or administration, or more a question of overall government approach and regulation spanning many decades (i.e. back into the nineties)?
I find it humorous that while the problem is caused by a huge oil corporation which flouted existing regulations, the blame is put onto “regulatory overkill” by a single administration with an exaggerated ideology, and with an implied end-result argument for more of a free hand for oil companies.
So is the problem that Obama is incompetent, or is this just a convenient forum to spout one’s political beliefs, and twist things to make “the other side” look wrong, and then to argue for more freedom and profits for oil companies? The myopic-to-the-point-of-absurdity points of view expressed on this site never cease to amaze me.

Richard
June 2, 2010 6:51 am

Is anyone getting the message?
““Indeed, from “day one,” the expertise of the entire U.S. and British drilling and production industry should have been mobilized to combat this spill, with a single experienced ENGINEERING MANAGER in charge. It still is not too late to start doing it right.”
In fact the ENGINEERING SKILLS from other industries, such as space, construction and manufacturing should also have been mobilised.
And what does Obama do? Give a speech comparing it to the Apollo 13 disaster and start a criminal complaint. As though the law courts and the judges will solve the spill. He has failed your country in its hours of crisis.
Obama – I’m afraid – NO YOU CAN’T

Enneagram
June 2, 2010 7:04 am

peterdek says:
Of course centrifuges exists, to separate oil from water, but Post Normal Scientists, not having ever seen real life, real applied science, gotto build a virtual model instead, where oil spill is caused by GLOBAL WARMING!

gcb
June 2, 2010 7:05 am

How come nobody has been talking about the fact that this has all happened before? A 30,000 barrel per day flow in the Gulf of Mexico was not fully capped for about ten months, and yet the planet recovered…
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ixtoc_1

rogerL
June 2, 2010 7:08 am

Corky Boyd said:
“I can’t believe President Obama has his administration working on criminal charges”
Clearly this is “pour encourager les autres”.

Stacey
June 2, 2010 7:09 am

To blame the President for the oil spill is a nonsense to blame him and the politicians for a lack of political will in dealing expeditiously with the disaster is fair enough.
It seems absurd to me that there was nothing in place to deal with this eventuality no equpiment on station or method for instantly shutting off the drill hole no containment vessel dumbell or other.
It would be good if some light could be thrown on this by specialists in the field who read this blog?
Finally I have the pleasure of living in rip off Britain where one of the main culprits is BP, as an example I litre of petrol on the street £1.19 p a litre at a BP service station £1.28 p a litre? What do they do with all the money obviously not enough is spent on R and D.

June 2, 2010 7:10 am

From what I have read, this is another example of the detrimental effects of centralizing command and control. When it comes to safety and preventing tragic accidents, instant decisions must be made at the operator level and should not require the approval of higher command. Our biggest mistake is centralizing safety decisions in political organizations.

Enneagram
June 2, 2010 7:14 am

AGWrs. must be praying to their Goddess Gaia, through the intercession of Saint Al Baby, the supreme and holy bedwetter, that the spill does not stop so they could blame fossil fuels and condemn them FOR EVER.

June 2, 2010 7:19 am

Jim says:
June 1, 2010 at 9:49 pm
Yow. That’s a barnburner. That needs to be in the WSJ.

Well put!
President Obama’s biggest error here, IMHO, has been to “take responsibility” for the spill. His job is to make sure that those who are responsible (BP and hence its suppliers) do their job, and to prepare a contingency plan for what happens after BP uses up all its net worth in costs and potential damages.
As Sen. Schmidt points out, only the oil industry has the knowhow and equipment to fix this leak. Obama should be conferring with the other big companies to line up a followup strategy after BP goes broke.

North of 43 and south of 44
June 2, 2010 7:21 am

” ….. I agree with Dr. Schmitt: Everything done since day 1 seems to have the effect of prolonging the disaster.
The Daily Dilly-Dally in the Gulf.”
x2 on the slow motion train wreck.

TomRude
June 2, 2010 7:25 am

Great read!
My sincere admiration.

JamesG
June 2, 2010 7:25 am

Once again the Conservatives can’t make up their mind whether they want a take-charge government or a get-out-of the-way government. It must be funny not knowing what your ideology actually is. It seems to consist of nothing more than hating Obama apparently just for not being Bush. It’s certainly not for anything Obama has done because he’s so far only carried on exactly on the same debt-based, war-mongering, Wall-street-owned path started by his predecessor. His so-called “socialist” health plan consists only of a cash grab by big pharma which real socialists hate more than anyone else.
As for this reds-under-the bed delusion that you seem to suffer from. Get real!, the only socialist in American politics is Ralph Nader and you’ll find he talks more sense than all the Republicrat crony-capitalists put together. Socialism, as bad as it can be, would actually even be an improvement over the reverse-socialism that exists now – where all taxes get sucked up the hill to pay for Wall Streets gambing addiction.
Only 2 comments on here are of any use: Cook and Briggs, because they left politics alone. As for Harrison Schmidt – anyone who thinks too much regulation or environmentalists or Obama can be blamed here, is seriously deluded. If the Heartland conference was full of BS artists like this then no wonder it makes no impact.
I dearly try to believe that you guys are interested in actual truths but mostly you let me down. Truth isn’t the guiding notion here – tax-avoidance is! I’m gone and any other non-wingnuts should follow.

North of 43 and south of 44
June 2, 2010 7:27 am

gcb,
Good grief, nobody ever looks at historical information and thus they continually repeat the prior mistakes.

June 2, 2010 7:28 am

Sphaerica says:
“So is the problem that Obama is incompetent…”
Stop right there, we have a winner!!
Obama couldn’t be bothered to cut short his 11 day golfing vacation to show some leadership in this environmental calamity. Even James Carville was exasperated at Obama’s lackadaisical lack of concern. But now that the heat is on, Obama is playing the blame game full tilt. So yes, Obama is incompetent.
Eighteen months ago Obama had no governing experience, no military experience, no foreign policy experience, no economic experience, no business experience, no medical experience, no foreign trade experience, and no energy experience. He does, however, have access to the best minds on the planet.
But rather than learn, or seek out expert help, he continues to surround himself with corrupt politicians, and takes their advice to blame the evil oil companies while ignoring the fact that his Administration hand-waved safety concerns aside and allowed BP to drill this well. Now, rather than insist on safety being the primary concern, Obama has arbitrarily shut down all drilling in his usual effort to hobble the U.S. economy at every possible opportunity.
So yes, to answer your question, Obama is incompetent; an inexperienced young buffoon who failed upwards every step of the way. He is the problem, not the solution.

Pete H
June 2, 2010 7:33 am

First off its hands up time…I am from the UK but I would ask which U.S. President from the past would have had any expertise of oilfield work? PLEASE do not say Bush!
Jackie says:
June 2, 2010 at 6:17 am
“What kind of force is required to crimp the main pipe leak which is only 20″ in diameter? And why is it not being done? ”
Jackie, usually pipeline in shallow waters is “schedule 40” though the depth they are working at may require a larger wall thickness but crimping the usual pipe is hampered by, to what I have read, the drill pipe inside it. Now that pipe is “Heavy Weight Drill Pipe (HWDP)
You can find the specs on HWDP here
http://www.drillpipe.us/drill_pipe_data.htm
By the way, BP did not install the blowout preventer, Horizon did and Halliburton did the cement work. What I am reading now is there were complaints about the blowout protector before it was installed (BP’s responsibility for not ensuring it met specs) and that there was a “discussion” between the rig engineers (the real down hole people) and a B.P. Engineer not long before the blowout. The B.P. guy was insisting the drilling mud (Mud controls the well pressures) be removed and that seawater flushing should take place. After objections from Horizon the B.P. guy is alleged to have said “That’s how it’s gonna be”!!
That is an arrogant attitude I have come across many time in the oilfieds, mainly from people I would not trust to lock a car door!
Hours later the gas bubble erupted!
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article7140776.ece

Steve from Rockwood
June 2, 2010 7:46 am

A well-written slap in the face. Hopefully a country wakes up before the disaster spreads too far. Why was the EPA so concerned with labelling CO2 a pollutant when there was no mandate to ensure safe off-shore drilling? The oil companies are responsible for developing technology, the Government is responsible for setting policy. No policy, no technology. Disaster.