alex, thank you. water surrounding the broken well in the gulf remain calm again today. they re increasingly confident about the new well cap. after days of watching, still no signs of any leaks. even with the flow of crude apparently stopped for now, a tremendous clean-up lies ahead. nbc s mark potter has the latest from the recovery efforts from pensacola beach, florida. it s almost as if they ve now figured out what seems to be a good stop gap in terms of the leaking oil. now the attention can go full board on the clean-up. reporter: the truth is with the well cap holding, no new oil is going into the gulf of mexico but there s old oil floating out there for miles and miles. we were able to get a fresh look at that on our flight with the u.s. coast guard. on a coast guard flight from mobi mobile, palm, to the deepwater
stay ahead of it but the steady stream of oil now makes it impossible to control. patty and michael hicks are visiting from the gulf shores. it s sad not to be able to get into the ocean. i mean that s terrible. reporter: in nearby pensacola beach, florida, workers were out all neat keeping the beaches clean, a process unlikely to end any time soon. it s still going to be dependent on the tide. so it s going to take months before we re finally able to clean up everything. we still do not have enough assets in the ocean, in the gulf of mexico, to help capture the propensity of this oil. reporter: and officials say the economic recovery here could take much longer, even if all the oil stops flowing. in the past week, the weather here has actually been rather favorable. it s been kind to the coast with the winds and currents keeping most of the oil offshore, but now, as always happens, the wind has shifted. it s clocked around.
horizon site in the gulf of mexico, pilots began spotting oil miles offshore. the closer they got to the damaged well, the more oil they saw. i didn t see any until we were probably about 30 or 40 miles offshore, and then we started seeing some of the stuff, the emulsified below the water, and now the closer we get, the more surface oil that we ve seen. reporter: even with the well capped now, millions of gallons of oil are still in the water, drifting with the winds and currents. in some areas there are long streaks of oil. elsewhere there are miles and miles of sheen. it s starting to turn brownish. reporter: every day these planes fly over the oil slicks out on the gulf and close to shore, directing skimmer boats, alerting officials about where the oil is headed next. all along coastal alabama, some of that oil headed right for the beach, washing in with the tide. clean-up crews are using a variety of methods to try to
we have more. charles, set the scene. what are you looking at for today? reporter: good morning, contessa. today s going to be an interesting day because it will be the end of the 48-hour period with the 24-hour extension given by the coast guard yesterday. the containment cap is holding, as you mentioned, but admiral thad allen who s in charge of the command say ises at the end of the test period will take the cap off arks throw oil to flow into the gulf coast and put in the new containment cap, which is new and improved. collectively they can pick up, scoop up, and suck up more than 80,000 barrels of oil per day out of the containment system is. why they want to change back over, we just don t know yet. bp has opinion evaluating the pressure inside the 13,000-foot well, and they say that are pleased with it. so far, so good is what they say. we get another briefing in about 30 minutes on how the tests have been going over the last 24