The developments in the Gulf situation in the past couple days have been troubling at best with BP starting to show their true colors.
Shifting and easing winds on Monday bought time for weather-beaten crews to bottle up and burn off a massive slick of rust-colored crude oil before it fouls fragile marshes and sugary beaches across four Gulf Coast states.
That reprieve, however, could also have a nasty ripple effect — pushing outlying plumes of polluted surface water and patches of tar balls into the Gulf of Mexico’s powerful loop current. That would propel the mess across the mangrove islands, seagrass beds and coral reefs of the Florida Keys, then up toward Miami Beach, Fort Lauderdale and beyond.
Trajectories from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration suggest the oil will remain offshore at least through Tuesday, and a University of Miami oceanographer said a weather front expected in 24 to 48 hours will likely begin pushing the spill away from the Gulf Coast and toward the loop current…
Inserted from <McClatchy DC>
Once in the loop current, the toxic mess could move right up the eastern seaboard.
My friend Diane tipped me to this next item. Other BP wells in the Gulf may be even riskier.
BP is being investigated by US authorities over claims from a whistleblower that the oil company broke the law by not keeping key documents relating to a giant deepwater production platform in the Gulf of Mexico, the Guardian has learned.
The documents for the huge Atlantis platform act as an "operator’s manual", and a complete up-to-date set of records is vital to shut down the platform properly in case of an emergency.
BP said it was co-operating fully with the investigation and denies the allegations.
It is also dealing with the aftermath of the Deepwater Horizon disaster. Last week the rig sank in the Gulf of Mexico following an explosion. Eleven workers are missing presumed dead and up to 1,000 barrels of oil per day are being leaked, threatening to wreak havoc on the region’s fragile ecosystem.
The Minerals Management Service (MMS), the US government agency responsible for overseeing offshore oil and renewable activities, is expected to launch an investigation into the disaster this week. But the Guardian has learned a separate MMS investigation into the Atlantis rig allegations is being launched. MMS said it would complete its report by the end of next month. Atlantis, 190 miles south of New Orleans, is the world’s largest platform of its kind and began operating in 2007 in the Gulf of Mexico at one of the deepest depths in the world.
A whistleblower employed by a contractor working for BP leaked internal emails from staffers dated August 2008 which appear to reveal concerns that BP may not have been keeping a complete accurate record of drawings of the components used to build the Atlantis platform.
Final "as-built" drawings show how generic parts are modified when they are assembled. They can be crucial to assess how such a complex structure operates in practice. It is federal law for rig operators to keep complete, up-to-date "as-built" drawings. If BP assumed the drawings were accurate and up-to-date, "this could lead to catastrophic operator errors", a BP executive involved in the project warned colleagues, according to one email.
At the end of February, the powerful House committee on natural resources wrote to MMS demanding it investigate the claims. The agency, which declined to provide further details to the Guardian , promised to launch the inquiry soon afterwards.
The Deepwater Horizon accident has reinforced environmental concerns in the US about offshore oil drilling and will put pressure on the MMS to ensure standards are fully met by all operators, particularly in the deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico.
US environmental consumer campaign group Food and Water Watch also passed to the Guardian what appears to be an official reply to the whistleblower from BP’s office of the ombudsman, which was set up to investigate internal safety concerns following the Texas refinery explosion of 2005. Dated 13 April 2010, deputy ombudsman Billie Pirner Garde is quoted responding to the whistleblower’s concerns over BP’s "Project Execution Plan" over Atlantis, centring on the alleged lack of documentation. "Your concerns about the project not following the terms of its own Project Execution Plan were substantiated, and addressed by a BP Management of Change document," he is quoted as writing.
The Guardian asked BP if it acknowledged the authenticity of the emails and ombudsman’s letter and their contents. A spokesman declined to comment. In a statement, the company said: "We are aware that the MMS is conducting an investigation in connection with past allegations made about our Atlantis platform. We will continue to co-operate fully with their requests for information… [emphasis added]
Inserted from <The Guardian>
To out this in simpler terms, it appears that BP did not include engineering statements that justify experimental procedures and cut corners. Without that documentation, platform operators will be working with an invalid set of assumptions should anything go wrong. Why would they do this? I can only surmise that they were uncertain that engineers would sign off that the design changes and cut corners are safe, so they covered-up the ways that are surreptitiously cutting costs to increase profit.
The GOP has their own explanations.
Limbaugh: "Environmental whackos" may have blown up oil rig to "head off more oil drilling." On his April 29 radio show, Rush Limbaugh questioned "the timing" of the explosion and said: "Lest we forget … the cap and trade bill was strongly criticized by hardcore environmentalist whackos because it supposedly allowed more offshore drilling and nuclear plants." Limbaugh added: "[W]hat better way to head off more oil drilling and nuclear plants then by blowing up a rig? I’m just, I’m just noting the timing here."
Perino: "[W]as this deliberate?" On the May 3 broadcast of Fox News’ Fox & Friends, Fox News contributor Dana Perino said of the spill: "I’m not trying to introduce a conspiracy theory, but was this deliberate? You have to wonder…if there was sabotage involved."
Bolling falsely claimed it was "nine days before" the leak "was even addressed" and asked, "Did they let this thing leak? … if they’re going to try and pull drilling, that may be the way they do it." On the same broadcast of Fox & Friends, Fox Business Network host Eric Bolling said: "The question is … why the delay in the response? You guys were pointing out, nine days before it was even addressed, 12 days before he made a formal comment. The question is, did they let this thing leak? I mean, BP said maybe a thousand barrels a day, it went to five thousand. Did they let it leak a little bit and say, boy I don’t know. The conspiracy theorists would say, ‘maybe they’d let it leak for a while, and then they addressed the issue.’" Bolling added: "That would be a humongous accusation and probably the net result would be no different, but if they’re going to try and pull drilling, that may be the way they do it."… [emphasis original]
Inserted from <Alternet>
This article goes on to analyze the timeline of Obama’s response, demonstrating the perfidy of the GOP position.
Faux Noise even trotted out “Heckuva Job” Brownie to parrot the party line.
Oh well, like most Republicans, he is an expert at failure.
In advance of the Oil, the Gulf Coast has been overrun by a hoard of slithering, venomous snakes.
BP has been offering $5000 payments to residents of coastal Alabama areas, in exchange for essentially giving up their right to sue the oil giant over its deadly Gulf Coast spill, according to the state’s attorney general.
AG Troy King last night urged BP to stop the effort, and told Alabamians to be wary. "People need to proceed with caution and understand the ramifications before signing something like that," King said, according to the Alabama press.
A spokesman for BP told a reporter that the waiver clause had now been removed from the contracts, and that the company won’t enforce it in contracts that were previously signed. But King, a Republican, isn’t satisfied. He said last night he’s still concerned that the process could strip people of their right to sue.
Sid Jackson, a Mobile-based lawyer representing a shrimper who last week filed suit against BP, claiming that the spill had already taken a financial toll on his business, told TPMmuckraker that he believed BP would be wise to back down. "I think they kind of drop-kicked that [waiver] clause into the fine print," Jackson said. But, "I think it would backfire" if BP tried to enforce it… [emphasis added]
Inserted from <TPM>
BP originally claimed that the waiver was left over from a previous incident and included by accident. That was an obvious lie, because the waiver included the correct dates and location.
Keith Olbermann and Chris Hayes had a good overview of the problem.
Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy
I have to express my concern that BP will use this bill to try to escape liability. I understand that Democratic Senators have introduced legislation to raise the limit. BP’s duplicity in their documentation provides more than enough justification for retroactivity, if only enough Republicans will support it to defeat the coming filibuster.
24 Responses to “BP: Corporate Criminals”
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I was surprised when at work, a coworker of mine was telling me that he believed it was sabotage and that the Obama administration wasn’t doing enough to prevent the disaster from getting even bigger. He claimed their were SWAT teams on the rig after it exploded. When I asked him where he got his information from, he said “the news.”
I am not sure if he was referring to Limbaugh as “news” but considering how Fox portrays all their stories, it is scary how misleading they are. When I corrected my coworker, he backed off a bit on the craziness, but I doubt it stuck. The right has brainwashed him.
This rig will shed light on why increased regulation is needed. The GOP wanted to “drill, baby, drill,” but they did not want the federal government to accept additional responsibilities for their actions. This is a problem. If we are going to have continued drilling, there needs to be strict enforcement, not the assumption that the sun is shining and everything is AOK.
I am sure that this incident will put off any immediate talks for future exploration, but once the GOP gain a couple seats, I am sure it will be back on the table, and grant greater permissions to the oil companies with far less oversight then if the Democrats were overseeing the bill…
Actually, Kevin, when the rig exploded, Obama did dispatch SWAT teams. What the right is lieing about is that, in this instance, SWAT means SW<IFT ACTION TEAMS.
This is one more reason why the demise of the GOP is a necessity for America’s survival.
I had never heard of Swift Action Teams. Thanks! I just looked it up.
It really bothers me that people are spreading these malicious lies. Hopefully I can convince my coworker. I will feel my work has been done, reversing the damage of Fox one person at a time!
Kevin, I hope you can too. You have to watch anachronyms. For example, I’m a mamber of FAIR, not the racist bigits that wrote the Arizona law, but Fairness and Accuracy In Reporting.
Chris Hayes from the Nation nailed it “It’s not my fault, but we’re going to clean it up anyway.” What kind of bullshit is that? And he’s also right that the oil coming out of these rigs is not just for us – it’s sold on the world market. I have a question for the Tundra Twat – How does this reduce our dependence on foreign oil if what we drill is sold on the world market? She probably wouldn’t even understand the question, but it should be posed to her.
On the other hand, using gas as a bridge fuel will reduce our dependence. hell, if we could tap the methane released from Faux Noise, that would power New York. 😉
I would think that with all the hot air they blow, a wind turbine would be more appropriate!
Point granted. 😉
I’m sorry, but if we’ve learned anything over the past decade, it’s that looking back in order to assign blame accomplishes nothing. We must look forward and hope such a tragedy never occurs again, and I’ve been assured by all involved parties that they will do their utmost to prevent such horror. Thank you.
Randal, did BP hire you? 😉
Let’s face facts here: Michael Brown and Rush Limbaugh are completely full of shit and neither has ever done a beneficial thing for anyone other than themselves EVER. And “bp” really stands for “bullshit propaganda” as that’s all they’ve been feeding us all along. bp is just acting as any corporation does: pursuing any course open to it (including lying, cheating, and stealing) in order to attain and maximize its profit.
So here’s an idea: the Supreme Court has granted, and corporations believe they truly have, the legal status and all the rights of a human being. Since this is apparently the case, they should be treated exactly as a human being would were he or she to break the law, lie, cheat, and then be caught. For human beings not only have rights, but responsibilities as well. One of those responsibilities is to oby the law. Corporations, just like humans, should therefore be TRIED, then CONVICTED, then FINED, and then should be CONFINED BY THE GOVERNMENT for a very long time until they are no longer a threat to the common welfare of the public! Sounds very fair and reasonable to me!
Negilgent homicide?
I like the idea of that. Why should corporations be allowed to skirt around the law?
Because we have the best government money can buy… and has.
All of it just make my stomach churn! The more I learn, the more I’m wondering if there was more to this than just an accident…… I’m sure ‘time will tell’.
Diane, I’m pretty sure that it was just an accident, but it was occasioned by cutting corners to maximize profit. Sooner or later it was bound to happen because profit is the holy grail for corporations.
Once in the loop current, the toxic mess could move right up the eastern seaboard.
And over here in Canada we’re already singing an old song.
Fare thee well Nova Scotia
Your seabound coast
Let you mountains dark and drearie be
Not only the mountains dark and dreary, but soon the coast too?
Ivan, it could get that far. If it flows long enough, it will reach the Gulf Stream.
I agree with Jack. And I haven’t left a comment at your sire in a long time TomCat. Everyone has got things covered.
Truth, it’s been too long. My I suggest just saying Hi if nothing else, I have more blogs in my blogroll than I can visit in a day, so I concentrate on returning visits based on comments.
BP has been offering $5000 payments to residents of coastal Alabama areas, in exchange for essentially giving up their right to sue
That right there tells you every single thing you need to know about BP. And don’t think that Exxon wouldn’t have done the same thing.
They would have, Bee. See today’s #2 piece about the state of Prince William Sound.
Tom Cat
You certainly need no input from me as you and the people that commented covered it pretty good.
Let’s all hope this deep cut in the femoral Artery is soon seen to. OR this could be the beginning of the end as we know it.
Tim, I agree. I hope and pray that they find a way to cap the leaks.