Oil Mop's Method Of Cleaning Studied By French Delegation
A delegation of French maritime experts recently visited Oil Mop, Inc. headquarters, Belle Chasse, La. 70037, to learn more about cleaning up oil spills under adverse sea, weather and shore conditions.
The Frenchmen visited New Orleans on a tour sponsored by the U.S. Coast Guard as part of the U.S.-France Cooperative Project in Oceanography.
The French delegation, composed of naval, merchant marine and technical experts, was particularly interested in Oil Mop's performance on a major European oil spill last summer.
A f t e r the tanker Urquiola grounded, burned and spilled more than 100,000 tons of Arabian crude oil on the Spanish coast near La Coruna, Oil Mop cleaned up oil pocketed in remote bays fronted by rocky cliffs.
OMI vice president Jerome M.
Medicus said that to his knowledge it marked the first time oil from a major coastal spill had been successfully recovered by a completely seaborne operation.
The cleanup was accomplished— often at rates of 15 tons per hour per recovery unit—in spite of 15- foot tides and six-foot swells, he told the visitors.
Other questions concerned methods of picking up spills during cold weather, a serious problem because petroleum becomes thick and difficult to manage at low temperatures.
Mr. Medicus discussed the company's experience in mopping up a large inland spill in New York last winter in subfreezing temperatures, and also in the St.
Lawrence Seaway.
He credited the company's ability to continue recovering oil under the conditions in Spain and New York to the "floating rope" design of Oil Mop's equipment.
OMI spill recovery equipment recovers oil from the surface of water by running a floating oilattracting rope of polypropylene fibers through the floating oil.
The rope is fastened into a continuous loop that is constantly wrung out and sent back across the surface of the spill.
"The rope mop glides over swells and does not clog, even in congealing oil in cold weather," said Mr. Medicus, "although some conditions may slightly decrease the recovery rate." Oil Mop was established in 1970 and has cleaned up spills in North America, South America, Europe and other parts of the world. The company also manufactures oilwater separators, used primarily to clean the oily water in bilges of ships and industrial effluents.
Other stories from February 15, 1977 issue
Content
- SNAME Publishes New Vibration Code page: 4
- Request Aid To Build Four LNG Carriers At Cost Of $800 Million page: 6
- Far East-Levingston Delivers Drillship Diamond M Dragon page: 7
- MarAd Approves CDS For APL To Reconstruct Four Containerships page: 7
- Newport News Signs Letter Of Intent To Build 600,000-DWT Nuclear-Propelled Tankers page: 10
- Calship Receives Loan To Finance Improvements page: 10
- PRMSA Appoints Lugo Executive Director page: 10
- Peterson Receives $33.6-Million Contract For Two Heavy-Lift Ships page: 13
- Free Literature On Fire Extinguishers Available From Kidde page: 13
- SNAME San Diego Announces Site For 1980 Spring Meeting page: 13
- U.S. Navy Awards Maritime Industries Ltd. $1.7-Million Contract page: 14
- Pakistan Nationalizes Entire Merchant Fleet page: 15
- Lemont Shipbuilding Elects Roche President page: 15
- Peterson Launches CF Industries' First Integrated Tug/Barge Unit page: 16
- Dravo Corp. Awarded $4 Million To Build Barge Unloader page: 20
- Navy To Procure Five Boeing PHM Hydrofoils Costing $282.1 Million page: 20
- Owens-Corning Booklet Describes New LNG Containment System page: 20
- Kockums Computer System Speeds Decision Making In Ship Accidents page: 21
- Equitable Shipyards Delivers First Of Five Twin-Screw Tugs To Indonesian Government page: 22
- Puerto Rico's First Shipyard Launched With $9-Million Loan page: 23
- Newport News Launches First Commercial Ship In Eight Years—LNG Carrier El Paso Southern page: 24
- SNAME New York Metropolitan Section Holds First 1977 Meeting—Jakobson Honored page: 24
- PFEL Accepts Bethlehem Bid Of $20 Million For Ship Conversion page: 25
- Martin Named President Of Korea Gulf Oil Co. page: 25
- R.A. Baker To Head New Hillman Company page: 26
- SNAME Publishes Full Computer Analysis Of Shipping Operations page: 27
- APL Makes Personnel Promotions Worldwide page: 32
- Bethlehem's Sparrows Point Yard Delivers 530,000 DWT In 1976 page: 32
- International Paint Enters Commercial Agreement With Nippon Paint Co. page: 33
- Brown & Root Names Executive Committee To Manage Company page: 33
- Newport News Shipyard Apprentice School Graduates First Women page: 34
- Agri-Trans Corporation Christens New Towboat— The St. Louis-Built Cooperative Venture page: 35
- Paducah Marine Ways Names Louis J. Roof page: 35
- The Whitehall Club Honors George W. Rogers page: 35
- 630-Foot Hydranautics Portable Pier Erected And Unloading Ships In 66 Hours page: 36
- Oil Mop's Method Of Cleaning Studied By French Delegation page: 36
- Ben Nutter Retires- Port Of Oakland Appoints Abernathy page: 36
- AquaBeam Appoints Arnessen Marine page: 37
- Liberian Shipping Council Elects Liang Chairman, Presses Safety Program page: 37
- MarAd Publishes Std. Specifications For Diesel Ship Construction page: 39
- R.D. Carter Forms Intermodal Systems Co. page: 40
- PRMSA Names Irizarry Deputy Executive Director page: 40
- Offshore Technology Conference Scheduled For May 2-5 In Houston page: 41
- Alden Data Sheet Lists Marine Weather Chart Transmitting Sites page: 41
- Marathon Receives Contract For 300-Foot Drilling Tender page: 42
- Seatrain Agencies Names J.W. Honan VP page: 42
- Prudential Lines Appoints Assistant Traffic Managers page: 42
- Cali Furnishing Tacoma NC Lofting Services page: 43
- Delta Steamship Lines Names Dale Miller page: 44
- Winthrop A. Wyman Named Executive Vice President Gulf Marine Management page: 44
- Western Shipbuilders Elect Alfred Moloney Association President page: 44
- Velodur Coldwelding Can Cut Costly Repairs page: 45
- Security Bureau Elects W.J. Shields President page: 45
- ICHCA Appoints Finlay New Secretary General page: 46
- MacGregor Describes Cost Saving Hatch Cover page: 52