Kuwaiti oil fires

The Kuwaiti oil fires were caused by the Iraqi military setting fire to a reported 605 to 732 oil wells along with an unspecified number of oil filled low-lying areas, such as oil lakes and fire trenches while retreating from Kuwait in 1991 due to the advances of US-led coalition forces in the Gulf War.[3] The fires were started in January and February 1991, and the first oil well fires were extinguished in early April 1991, with the last well capped on November 6, 1991.[4]
Motives

The dispute between Iraq and Kuwait over alleged slant-drilling in the Rumaila oil field was one of the reasons for Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in 1990.[5][6]

In addition, Kuwait had been producing oil above treaty limits established by OPEC.[7] By the eve of the Iraqi invasion, Kuwait had set production quotas to almost 1.9 million barrels per day (300,000 m3/d), which coincided with a sharp drop in the price of oil. By the summer of 1990, Kuwaiti overproduction had become a serious point of contention with Iraq.
Some analysts have speculated that one of
It is also hypothesized that Iraq decided to destroy the oil fields to achieve a military advantage, believing the intense smoke plumes serving as
The Iraqi military
The military use of the land based fires should also be seen in context with the coinciding, deliberate, sea based
Extent
As an international coalition under United States command assembled in anticipation of an invasion of Iraqi-occupied Kuwait, the Iraqi regime decided to destroy as much of Kuwait's oil reserves and infrastructure as possible before withdrawing from that country. As early as December 1990, Iraqi forces placed explosive charges on Kuwaiti oil wells. The wells were systematically sabotaged beginning on January 16, 1991, when the allies commenced air strikes against Iraqi targets. On February 8, satellite images detected the first smoke from burning oil wells. The number of oil fires peaked between February 22 and 24, when the allied ground offensive began.[12]
According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's report to Congress, "the retreating Iraqi army set fire to or damaged over 700 oil wells, storage tanks, refineries, and facilities in Kuwait."[13] Estimates placed the number of oil well fires from 605 to 732. A further thirty-four wells had been destroyed by heavy coalition bombing in January.[12] The Kuwait Petroleum Company's estimate as of September 1991 was that there had been 610 fires, out of a total of 749 facilities damaged or on fire along with an unspecified number of oil filled low-lying areas, such as "oil lakes" and "fire trenches".[4] These fires constituted approximately 50% of the total number of oil well fires in the history of the petroleum industry,[13] and temporarily damaged or destroyed approximately 85% of the wells in every major Kuwaiti oil field.[12]
Concerted efforts to bring the fires and other damage under control began in April 1991. During the uncontrolled burning phase from February to April,
Financial losses
In March 1991 the accumulated financial losses were estimated to be as much as 10% of 90 billion barrels of Kuwait oil reserves based on a statement made by a Kuwait Oil Company official. At the world prices at the time it would amount to US$ 157.5 billion.[19]
Military effects


On March 21, 1991, a Royal Saudi Air Force
The smoke screening was also used by Iraqi anti-armor forces to a successful extent in the
The fires burned out of control because of the dangers of sending in firefighting crews during the war.
The fires have been linked with what was later deemed Gulf War syndrome, a chronic disorder afflicting military veterans and civilian workers that include fatigue, muscle pain, and cognitive problems; however, studies have indicated that the firemen who capped the wells did not report any of the symptoms that the soldiers experienced.[23] The cause of Gulf War syndrome has since been ascribed to Sarin nerve agent.[24]
From the perspective of ground forces, apart from the occasional "oil rain" experienced by troops very close to spewing wells,
It was like a cloudy day all day long, in fact, we didn’t realize it was smoke at first. The smoke was about 500 feet above us, so we couldn’t see the sky. However, we could see horizontally for long distances with no problem. We knew it was smoke when the mucous from our nostrils started to look black..."
A paper published in 2000 analyzed the degree of exposure by troops to
and in its conclusion: "A literature review indicated negligible to nonexistent health risk from other inhaled particulate material (other than silica) during the Gulf War".Extinguishing efforts
The burning wells needed to be extinguished as, without active efforts, Kuwait would lose billions of dollars in oil revenues. It was predicted by experts that the fires would burn for between two and five years before losing pressure and going out on their own.[27]
The companies responsible for
According to Larry H. Flak, a petroleum engineer for Boots and Coots International Well Control, 90% of all the 1991 fires in Kuwait were put out with nothing but sea water, sprayed from powerful hoses at the base of the fire.
For stubborn
In fighting a fire at a directly vertical spewing
The firefighting teams titled their occupation as "Operation Desert Hell" after
Environmental impact
Oil fire smoke

Immediately following Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, predictions were made of an
On January 10, 1991, a paper appearing in the journal Nature stated
Later when
Singer, on the other hand, said that calculations showed that the smoke would go to an altitude of about 3,000 feet (910 m) and then be rained out after about three to five days and thus the lifetime of the smoke would be limited. Both height estimates made by Singer and Sagan turned out to be wrong, albeit with Singer's narrative being closer to what transpired, with the comparatively minimal atmospheric effects remaining limited to the Arabian Gulf region, with smoke plumes, in general,[1] lofting to about 10,000 feet (3,000 m) and a few times as high as 20,000 feet (6,100 m).[39][40]
Along with Singer's televised critique, Richard D. Small criticized the initial Nature paper in a reply on March 7, 1991, arguing along similar lines as Singer.[41]
Sagan later conceded in his book The Demon-Haunted World that his prediction did not turn out to be correct: "it was pitch black at noon and temperatures dropped 4–6 °C over the Arabian Gulf, but not much smoke reached stratospheric altitudes and Asia was spared."[42]
At the peak of the fires, the smoke absorbed 75 to 80% of the sun's radiation. The particles rose to a maximum of 20,000 feet (6,100 m), but were scavenged by cloud condensation nuclei from the atmosphere relatively quickly.[43][44]
Sagan and his colleagues expected that a "self-lofting" of the sooty smoke would occur when it absorbed the sun's heat radiation, with little to no scavenging occurring, whereby the black particles of soot would be heated by the sun and lifted/lofted higher and higher into the air, thereby injecting the soot into the stratosphere where it would take years for the sun blocking effect of this aerosol of soot to fall out of the air, and with that, catastrophic ground level cooling and agricultural impacts in Asia and possibly the Northern Hemisphere as a whole.[45]
In retrospect, it is now known that smoke from the Kuwait oil fires only affected the weather pattern throughout the Arabian Gulf and surrounding region during the periods that the fires were burning in 1991, with lower atmospheric winds blowing the smoke along the eastern half of the Arabian Peninsula, and cities such as Dhahran and Riyadh, and countries such as Bahrain experienced days with smoke filled skies and carbon soot rainout/fallout.[46]
Thus the immediate consequence of the arson sabotage was a dramatic regional decrease in
According to the 1992 study from Peter Hobbs and Lawrence Radke, daily emissions of sulfur dioxide (which can generate acid rain) from the Kuwaiti oil fires were 57% of that from electric utilities in the United States, the emissions of carbon dioxide were 2% of global emissions and emissions of soot reached 3400 metric tons per day.[43][44]
In a paper in the
Smoke documentary
Peter V. Hobbs also narrated a short amateur documentary titled Kuwait Oil Fires that followed the
Damage to coastline

Although scenarios that predicted long-lasting environmental impacts on a global atmospheric level due to the burning oil sources did not transpire, long-lasting ground level oil spill impacts were detrimental to the environment regionally.[49]
Forty-six oil wells are estimated to have gushed,
The Kuwaiti Oil Minister estimated between twenty-five and fifty million barrels of unburned oil from damaged facilities pooled to create approximately 300 oil lakes, that contaminated around 40 million tons of sand and earth. The mixture of desert sand, unignited oil spilled and soot generated by the burning oil wells formed layers of hard "tarcrete", which covered nearly five percent of Kuwait's land mass.[50][51][52]
Cleaning efforts were led by the
Vegetation in most of the contaminated areas adjoining the oil lakes began recovering by 1995, but the dry climate has also partially solidified some of the lakes. Over time the oil has continued to sink into the sand, with potential consequences for Kuwait's small groundwater resources.[8][53]
The land based Kuwaiti oil spill surpassed the Lakeview Gusher, which spilled nine million barrels in 1910, as the largest oil spill in recorded history.
Six to eight million barrels of oil were directly spilled into the Persian Gulf, which became known as the Gulf War oil spill.[13]
Documentaries
The fires were the subject of a 1992
Lessons of Darkness is a 1992 film by director Werner Herzog that explores the ravaged oil fields of post-Gulf War Kuwait.
Bechtel Corporation produced a short documentary titled Kuwait: Bringing Back the Sun that summarizes and focuses upon the fire fighting efforts, which were dubbed the Al-Awda (Arabic for "The Return") project.[27][54]
Comparable incidents
During the
-
Firefighters fight to secure a burning oil well in the IraqiRumaila oilfields in 2003.[29]
See also
- Devil's Cigarette Lighter – a gas well fire that consumed 16 million cubic meters of gas per day.
- Environmental impact of war
- Gulf War oil spill
- Nuclear winter#Kuwait wells in the first Gulf War
References
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- ^ Thomas C. Hayes, Confrontation in the Gulf; The Oilfield Lying Below the Iraq-Kuwait Dispute Archived 2019-07-30 at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, September 3, 1990
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- ^ Thomas C. Hayes (September 3, 1990). "Confrontation in the Gulf; The Oilfield Lying Below the Iraq-Kuwait Dispute". The New York Times. Archived from the original on July 30, 2019. Retrieved February 10, 2017.
- ^ a b "The Economic and Environmental Impact of the Gulf War on Kuwait and the Arabian Gulf". The Trade & Environment Database. American University. December 1, 2000. Archived from the original on August 2, 2015. Retrieved February 14, 2007.
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- ^ UTSW genetic study confirms sarin nerve gas as cause of Gulf War illness, May 11, 2022
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- ^ a b "Particulate Exposure During The Arabian Gulf War B. R Thomas 2000. PDF". Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved October 5, 2016.
- ^ a b c "Betchel Corporation Kuwait: Bringing Back the Sun". YouTube. 26 September 2008. Archived from the original on 2021-04-10. Retrieved 2014-10-10.
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{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ Kuwaiti Oil Fires – Modeling Revisited[permanent dead link ]
- ^ a b Evans, David (January 21, 1991). "Burning oil wells could darken U.S. skies". Wilmington Morning Star. Retrieved December 22, 2019.[permanent dead link ]
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The fears expressed last week centred around the cloud of soot that would result if Kuwait's oil wells were set alight by Iraqi forces ... with effects similar to those of the "nuclear winter" ... Paul Crutzen, from the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry in Mainz, has produced some rough calculations which predict a cloud of soot covering half of the Northern Hemisphere within 100 days. Crutzen ... estimates that temperatures beneath such a cloud could be reduced by 5–10 degrees C
- ^ ftp://ftp.atmos.washington.edu/debbie/UAE-Award/Enc11-Reprints-Hobbs-etal-Cloud-Active-Nuclei/05-HobbsRadke-1992-Science-v256-987.pdf[permanent dead link ]
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16,000 metric tons of actual soot is produced from 220,000 metric tons of oil burned every day. 'My estimates of the smoke produced by destruction of Kuwait's oil wells and refineries and the smoke stabilization altitude do not support any of the purported impacts. The smoke is not injected high enough to spread over large areas of the Northern Hemisphere nor is enough produced to cause a measurable temperature change or failure of the monsoons.
- ISBN 978-0-394-53512-8.
- ^ a b Airborne Studies of the Smoke from the Kuwait Oil Fires Hobbs, Peter V; Radke, Lawrence F Science; May 15, 1992; 256,5059[permanent dead link ]
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Further reading
- Against the Fires of Hell: The Environmental Disaster of the Gulf War. Hawley, T. M., Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, New York, 1992. [ISBN missing]
External links
- Fighting the Oil Well Fires Archived 2015-02-20 at the Wayback Machine
- Oil fire photographs taken by a Kuwaiti journalist in 1991 Archived 2017-03-20 at the Wayback Machine
- "The Kuwaiti Oil Fires (Environmental Disasters)" Facts on File, Inc., April 2005, ISBN 0816057583, Author: Kristine Hirschmann