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2010-05-12 08:14:25
Marat Gurt
ASHGABAT
Tue Apr 20, 2010 1:20pm EDT
ASHGABAT (Reuters) - Turkmenistan's quest to triple its already copious gas
reserves has a fiery new focus: a flaming pit in the middle of the Karakum
Desert.
Oddly Enough
A gaping crater dubbed "Hell's Gate" has been spewing flames and smoldering in
a remote part of the isolated Central Asian nation since a Soviet-era drilling
accident nearly 40 years ago.
It has attracted some of the few foreign tourists who travel to Turkmenistan --
and hundreds of thousands of hits on YouTube videos such as here .
Now it has caught the eye of President Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov. He visited
the crater this week and ordered local authorities to look for ways to get rid
of it or ensure it would not hinder the development of nearby gas fields, state
television in the tightly controlled nation reported.
Berdymukhamedov said that "existing anomalies have hindered the accelerated
industrial development of the subsoil riches of central Karakum," according to
the report.
The crater, about 60 meters (yards) wide and 20 meters deep, appeared in 1971
when the ground caved under a drilling rig and exposed a methane-choked cave.
Soviet geologists decided to burn off the gas and it has been burning ever
since.
Turkmenistan, which produced about 75 billion cubic meters (bcm) of gas a year,
wants to triple output in the next 20 years to boost export revenues and expand
sales beyond Russia, China and Iran to Western Europe, India and Pakistan.
(Writing by Olzhas Auyezov, editing by Paul Casciato)
"The oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico could be stopped with an underground
nuclear blast, a Russian newspaper reports. Komsomoloskaya Pravda, the
best-selling Russian daily, reports that in Soviet times such leaks were
plugged with controlled nuclear blasts underground. The idea is simple, KP
writes: 'The underground explosion moves the rock, presses on it, and, in
essence, squeezes the well's channel.' It's so simple, in fact, that the Soviet
Union used this method five times to deal with petrocalamities, and it only
didn't work once."