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Oil-Well
Fires
by
Stephen Marshak
To many people, a discussion of oil drilling immediately brings
to mind the image of a gusher fountaining oil into the sky while
gleeful drillers dance about in the black, greasy rain. In reality,
drillers dread gushers, not only because they waste oil, but also
because fires may ignite when the oil comes in contact with sparks
generated by the drilling equipment. This is big troublehow
do you put out a fire fueled by a natural underground reservoir of
flammable liquid? It ain’t easy! Extinguishing oil-well fires requires
highly specialized equipment and know-how. In fact, there are only
a few companies on the planet with the skill to do it. One of these
was operated by the legendary "Red" Adair, whose daring
in putting out well fires was memorialized by John Wayne in the movie
Hellfighters. After the Gulf War, firefighters needed to extinguish
over 600 oil-well fires in Kuwait.
Water can’t be used to put out an oil-well blaze, because oil floats
on top of waterwater will just spread the fireand the
force of the fire generally makes foam ineffective as well. Rather,
firefighters first use bulldozers to drag the red-hot remnants of
the metal drilling equipment away from the fire so that the blaze
won’t be reignited after it’s extinguished. Then they surround the
fire with dynamite and literally blow it out. The explosion robs
the fire of oxygen. With the fire out, they rush in and cap the well
head to staunch further flow.
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