"Natural gas has stopped flowing to a drilling rig on fire in the Gulf of Mexico," NPR's Jeff Brady tells our Newscast Desk.
As he reports:
"A drilling crew lost control of the well on Tuesday, then gas escaping from the well caught fire. No one was injured, but the flames heavily damaged a drilling rig owned by Houston-based Hercules Offshore.
"The Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement says the well — after spewing gas for more than a day — 'bridged over.' When an out-of-control well bridges over, small pieces of sediment and sand flow into the well path and block more gas from escaping.
"The agency says the fire has since decreased to a small flame, fueled by residual gas at the top of the well."
On Wednesday, NPR's Christopher Joyce told us: " Why The Latest Gulf Leak Is No BP Disaster."
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