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A blown-out well of a sunken drilling rig in the Gulf of Mexico is threatening to be America's worst natural disasters in decades.
A drilling rig leased by the oil company BP exploded and sank off the Louisiana coast last week in roughly 5,000ft of water after burning for two days. Now a new leak has been discovered in the pipes a mile below the ocean's surface.
It is unclear how much of the estimated 700,000 gallons (approximately 16,700 barrels) of #2 fuel onboard burned before it sank.
US Coast Guard and National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) experts estimate that 5,000 barrels a day of oil are spilling into the gulf -- rather than the 1,000 previously estimated.
"We have urged BP to leverage additional assets," US Coast Guard Rear Admiral Mary Landry said, adding that President Barack Obama has been briefed on the situation.
The Coast Guard and BP have mounted what the latter has called the largest oil spill containment operation in history, involving dozens of ships and aircraft.
Eleven workers are missing and presumed dead after the worst oil rig disaster in almost a decade.
Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal on Thursday declared a state of emergency due to the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
"We will use all available resources, possibly including those at the Department of Defence," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs told media persons in an update briefing on the unfolding environmental catastrophe.
The Department of the Interior and Department of Homeland Security announced a joint enquiry into the explosion and sinking of the Transocean Deepwater Horizon.
The US House of Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations and Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources have also announced investigations.
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, meanwhile, said that the decision to designate the slick a disaster of "national significance" would allow clean-up equipment and resources from across the United States to be used.
"A coordinated group of federal partners, including the Departments of Homeland Security, Defence, Interior and the EPA, continues to work and oversee BP's deployment of a combination of tactics above water, below water, dozens of miles offshore, as well as closer to coastal areas," Napolitano added.
BP continues to use chemical dispersants, which, along with natural dispersions of oil, will address a large portion of the slick.
Nearly 100,000 gallons of dispersant was used on Thursday.
To date, BP's oil spill response team has recovered 16,311 barrels (685,062 gallons) of an oil-water mix. Vessels are in place and continuing recovery operations.
"We are attacking this spill on all fronts, bringing into play all and any resources and advanced technologies we believe can help," said Tony Hayward, BP Group Chief Executive. "Our action plan is safety-focussed, multi-layered and has the full resources of the BP Group behind it."
"The scale of the surface response is truly unprecedented, both for BP and for the oil industry," Hayward added. "At the seabed, we are applying all the resources available to us and also developing and adapting advanced technology to address this complex problem."