BP, for now, appears to have dodged Hurricane Alex. If current forecasts hold, the eye of the storm will miss the site of the Deepwater Horizon blowout by about 600 miles, and the Mexican coast south of Brownsville, Texas, will get the worst of the storm.
But Alex still qualifies as a warning shot. What happens when a hurricane or tropical storm passes over the site of the worst oil accident in America's history?
"This is a first, to see a spill of this size in tropical waters," said Chris Vaccaro of NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which forecasts weather and hurricanes. "So nobody has a lot of experience."
But scientists say some of the effects can be predicted -- some bad, some of them not so bad. A storm could make a mess of the cleanup effort, but it could also speed the effort along.
Some major factors, with the potentially-complicating ones first:
Now imagine all that floodwater ... mixed with oil.
Those are generalities, though, says the agency. The particulars of a storm can be very different.
They work, very simply, because most oil floats -- and won't go under a floating barrier. But if the seas are churned up by a major storm, a flotation boom may not be very effective. More work for already-stressed-out cleanup workers after the storm is over.
"It may change significantly where the oil is located," said Tony Barnston, lead forecaster at the International Research Institute for Climate and Society at Columbia University in Palisades, New York. "It would definitely spread it around both vertically and horizontally. It would break it up, it would mix things up."
A storm passing over the spill zone could spread the oil over a larger area, but it could also have the benefit of dispersing the oil.
In the subtropical climate of the Gulf, the oil is slowly consumed by microorganisms. The hot sun also helps break it down into less volatile components.
Already, the surface slick has been fragmented by the weather, said Hans Graber, professor of marine physics at the University of Miami. "That's partly due to the almost daily, very intense thunderstorms hitting the area."
Still, the prospect of a busy hurricane season is cause for anxiety in the Gulf region. "A hurricane is a powerful engine that turns warm water vapor into wind and rain," said NOAA's Vaccaro. "If one were to come ashore in the northern Gulf, that's a hazard in and of itself."
On Monday, as Alex meandered across the southern Gulf, John Young, the council chairman of Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, said he was frustrated. Jefferson Parish comprises most of the western suburbs of New Orleans, and has been affected both by storms and the BP accident.
"We've already lost over 68 days of decent weather and this is going to be an active hurricane season," Young said. "They're going to start coming, yet there continues to be a lack of a sense of urgency."