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Oil-Skimming Supertanker Tested
by Roy Bigham
July 2, 2010

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A 1,100-foot long supertanker that was converted to the world's largest oil skimmer will be tested on Saturday, July 3, 2010. Supertankers are known for their capacity to haul large volumes of oil across the oceans. The ship is being called A Whale and is owned by TMT shipping out of Taiwan.

The conversion is expected to create a machine capable of skimming up to 500,000 barrels (at 42 gallons per barrel that is 21 million gallons) of oil from the surface of the ocean waters.

The tests will last 48 hours the Coastguard will oversee the activity. The company hopes the test will result in a contract with BP to increase their capacity to recover oil escaping into the Gulf of Mexico. Sanio Radhakrishnan, the ship's captain, told reporters that the ship was previously tested in waters off the coast of Portugal. However, the tests now have to prove to the Coastguard and BP that it will work in these waters with this waste stream.

BP currently has about 500 to 650 boats taking part in skimming operations. A total of 595,000 barrels of oil and water have been collected from the sea in the first 68 days of the spill event. A Whale could gather up to 300,000 barrels in eight to 10 hours. There is not a good estimate of just how much oil is currently floating on the water.


Roy Bigham
roy@pollutionengineering.com
Roy D. Bigham has been the editor of Pollution Engineering since 2002. Bigham attended Eastern Michigan University where he majored in chemistry and computer science with an associates degree in mathematics. He has worked as a laboratory technician at a research laboratory, managed an electroplating operation and an associated analytical laboratory. He spent three years overseeing environmental operations of five domestic and five overseas operations for a major manufacturer in the Detroit area. He then managed a field services department for an environmental analytical laboratory before moving on to a position as an environmental engineer for a construction aggregates company.

Bigham won a design award for a waste water treatment system for a landfill in the Detroit area from the State Chamber of Commerce. He has been active in the environmental field since 1980.


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