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Gulf oil spill

By United Press International
A shrimp boat pulls yellow oil containment boom and white absorbent boom through Terrebonne Bay in South Louisiana, skimming oil from the BP spill, July 11, 2010. The boat is part of the "Vessels of Opportunity" program financed by BP, enlisting watercraft sidelined by the spill in the effort to clean up the mess. UPI/A.J. Sisco...
1 of 3 | A shrimp boat pulls yellow oil containment boom and white absorbent boom through Terrebonne Bay in South Louisiana, skimming oil from the BP spill, July 11, 2010. The boat is part of the "Vessels of Opportunity" program financed by BP, enlisting watercraft sidelined by the spill in the effort to clean up the mess. UPI/A.J. Sisco... | License Photo

VENICE, La., July 12 (UPI) -- Oil spewed unimpeded from a Gulf of Mexico wrecked wellhead while engineers took steps for a permanent cap on the leaking pipe.

BP, the company that operated the rig at the time of an April 20 explosion that began the spill, said workers using unmanned submersibles removed the cap that had been limiting the flow of oil. The next step is to install another cap, one that could cut off the flow of oil completely.

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Tens of millions of barrels of oil have fouled the gulf since the Deepwater Horizon rig sank in April. Emergency crews have been trying various methods to shut off the flow, including drilling of relief wells, which are expected to reach the leaking well "the first half of August," BP said in a news release.

BP officials said it would be later this week before they have the new cap in place and can report on progress in stopping the leak. Other containment systems remained in place. The company said it captured more than 15,000 barrels of oil Saturday.

Surface efforts continue to skim oil and carry out controlled burns.

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However, oil has reached beaches across the U.S. Gulf Coast. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said a patch of floating oil threatened shorelines near the Texas-Louisiana border with other patches likely to affect Mississippi and Alabama. Also, gulf currents led NOAA to extend an area of possible additional landfalls into Florida.