But the test itself is risky business. It requires that the well be sealed off temporarily with a snug, specially constructed capping stack that was latched onto the top of the well on Monday. And much like a thumb in a hole-studded garden hose, the cap could push oil out of any cracks that might exist in the well.
That scenario, in turn, could cause oil to seep upward and begin gushing from the sea bed, potentially turning the well into a ragged crater. “That is THE worst case scenario,” said Iraj Ershaghi, a petroleum engineering expert at the University of Southern California. “Nobody has the technology to handle that.”
Read more: BusinessMirror.com.
