BP Says 'Top Kill' Continues, As Reporter Visits Site of Leak for First Time

ABC's Jeffrey Kofman is first journalist allowed onboard Deepwater Enterprise

ByABC News
May 28, 2010, 5:49 PM

May 28, 2010— -- BP's so-called "top kill" operation to plug the oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico continues tonight, though the company has again paused the flow of mud to attempt a second "junk shot" in hopes of stopping up the blowout preventer on the ocean floor.

At a press conference this evening, BP executive Doug Suttles said the halt of the mud flow is not a sign that their efforts are not working.

"We've had periods of pumping followed by periods of monitoring," Suttles said. "I think the key element here is patience."

He said the top kill and junk shot operations will continue for 24 to 48 hours.

Watch 'ABC World News' tonight for more on the attempt to stop the BP oil spill.

Overnight, BP conducted its first junk shot, injecting tons of debris -- like golf balls and shredded tires -- into the pipes leaking oil. They then resumed pumping mud into the leaking well and were able to again stop the oil flow.

But BP doesn't have enough mud in the well to lower the pressure sufficiently to finish the job. Until they reach that point, they cannot inject cement into the well to cap it and declare it dead. It will be Sunday before they know whether the top kill worked and cement can be poured.

But for many in the region, BP is losing credibility faster than it's losing oil. Executives said they would know something in 12 hours, then 24, 48 and now 96 hours. People complain that for 16 hours yesterday, the company put the top kill procedure on pause and didn't bother to tell anyone all day.

Suttles, who flew over the region today, pointed to evidence on the water's surface as reason to hope, describing it as the "least amount of oil that I've seen offshore since my very first flight."

He cautioned against drawing conclusions from the live video feed of the wellhead 5,000 feet below surface.

"Watching the plume is not an indication of how the job is going," Suttles said.