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Drilling rig that ran aground after storm remains difficult to reach for rescue team

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A Shell official, Sean Churchfield, Shell’s operations manager for Alaska, said the company would investigate what went wrong once the immediate crisis was resolved. He said that report might not be made public.

Capt. Paul Mehler, commander for the Coast Guard’s Anchorage sector, said the Coast Guard will also conduct an investigation, but he promised it would be public.

The Kulluk spent a short drilling season in the Arctic, cutting the top portion of an exploratory well before it had to be moved south for the season. After a stay in Dutch Harbor, it was readied for the tow to the Seattle area for maintenance at a shipyard. In new information reported Tuesday, Churchfield said the go-ahead for the voyage was made by Shell officials but the actual time of departure was in the hands of the captain for the Aiviq, the specially built, four-engine tow vessel.

The journey across the Gulf of Alaska was planned to take place a rowboat’s pace — about 4 knots. With the voyage expected to last up to four weeks, Churchfield acknowledged that any weather forecast available at departure would be meaningless long before the vessels reached their destination.

As it happened, a week out of Dutch, the Aiviq and Kulluk encountered a big winter storm. The towline snapped on Thursday. After a tow was reestablished Friday, the Aiviq’s engines all failed. The causes of both failures are still unresolved.

A fleet of rescue ships and tugs came to the assistance of the Aiviq and Kulluk, and though the Aiviq’s engines were restarted and towlines reestablished four more times, they all failed.

The Kulluk left Dutch Harbor loaded with fuel — about 143,000 gallons of diesel fuel is still on board. Russell, the DEC official, said some was necessary to operate generators and other equipment during the voyage, but most of it was there for ballast. Another 12,000 gallons of other petroleum products, including hydraulic fluid, is also on board.

The problems of the Kulluk has focused unwanted attention on Shell, whose offshore Arctic drilling program was already controversial with delays, regulatory problems and concerns about whether it could manage an oil spill in the far north. After the second news conference Tuesday, Curtis Smith, Shell’s Alaska spokesman, acknowledged the criticism.

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