API Publ 4665-1998: The Science of Oil Fate and Dispersant Effectiveness in Marine Spills

A Comprehensive Review of the 1998 API Technical Publication on Marine Oil Spill Weathering and Transport

The release of crude oil or refined petroleum products into marine environments initiates a complex series of physical, chemical, and biological processes collectively known as “weathering.” Understanding these processes is critical for effective spill response, damage assessment, and regulatory compliance. API Publication 4665 (API Publ 4665-1998), titled “Fate of Spilled Oil in Marine Waters: Where Does It Go? What Does It Do? How Do Dispersants Affect the Process?”, remains a foundational technical reference for environmental scientists, spill response planners, and regulatory agencies worldwide.

Scope and Intent of API Publ 4665-1998

Developed by the American Petroleum Institute (API), this publication is a technical synthesis designed to provide a holistic understanding of oil fate processes. Unlike prescriptive industry standards (e.g., API Specs or Standards), API Publ 4665 is a comprehensive technical report that consolidates decades of research. Its primary scope is to answer three fundamental questions regarding oil spills:

  • Where does the oil go? Addressing physical transport mechanisms (spreading, advection, dispersion, and deposition).
  • What does the oil do? Detailing the weathering and transformation processes (evaporation, dissolution, biodegradation, photo-oxidation, and emulsification).
  • How do dispersants affect the process? Evaluating the efficacy of chemical dispersants in altering the oil’s mass balance and trajectory.

The intended audience includes federal and state on-scene coordinators, natural resource trustees, and industry environmental managers who require a scientific foundation for decision-making during spill events.

Field Application: The concepts in API Publ 4665 are routinely used to predict the percentage of oil that evaporates, sinks, or washes ashore, allowing responders to prioritize shoreline protection vs. offshore treatment.

Key Technical Findings and Parameters

API Publ 4665 synthesizes data from laboratory studies, mesoscale flume tests, and actual field observations from major spills (e.g., Exxon Valdez, Amoco Cadiz) to quantify the fate of oil. The publication emphasizes that the distribution of oil is highly dependent on oil type, temperature, sea state, and time elapsed since the spill.

Weathering Process Timelines

Process Initial Phase (Hours-Days) Secondary Phase (Days-Months) Long-Term Phase (Months-Years)
Evaporation 25-40% mass loss (light crudes) <5% additional loss Negligible
Natural Dispersion 1-10% mass loss 10-30% in energetic seas Variable
Emulsification Water uptake begins (20-30%) Max stabilised emulsion (60-80% water) Mousse formation persists
Biodegradation Lag phase (hours) Linear degradation (0.1-1% per day) Slow, heavy residuals
Photo-oxidation

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