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  • Slick Operator: The BP I've known too well

    Slick Operator: The BP I've known too well

    Wednesday, May 5, 2010

    by Greg Palast for Truthout.org
    May 5, 2010

    I've seen this movie before. In 1989, I was a fraud investigator hired to dig into the cause of the Exxon Valdez disaster. Despite Exxon's name on that boat, I found the party most to blame for the destruction was ... British Petroleum. That's important to know, because the way BP caused devastation in Alaska is exactly the way BP is now sliming the entire Gulf Coast.

    Deepwater Horizon in flames before sinking. Photo provided by D.Becnel

    Tankers run aground, wells blow out, pipes burst. It shouldn't happen but it does. And when it does, the name of the game is containment. Both in Alaska, when the Exxon Valdez grounded, and in the Gulf over a week ago, when the Deepwater Horizon platform blew, it was British Petroleum that was charged with carrying out the Oil Spill Response Plans ("OSRP") which the company itself drafted and filed with the government.

    What's so insane, when I look over that sickening slick moving toward the Delta, is that containing spilled oil is really quite simple and easy. And from my investigation, BP has figured out a very low cost way to prepare for this task: BP lies. BP prevaricates, BP fabricates and BP obfuscates.

    That's because responding to a spill may be easy and simple, but not at all cheap. And BP is cheap. Deadly cheap.

    To contain a spill, the main thing you need is a lot of rubber, long skirts of it called "boom." Quickly surround a spill or leak or burst, then pump it out into skimmers or disperse it, sink it or burn it. Simple.

    But there's one thing about the rubber skirts: you've got to have lots of it at the ready, with crews on standby in helicopters and on containment barges ready to roll. They have to be in place round the clock, all the time, just like a fire department; even when all is operating A-OK. Because rapid response is the key. In Alaska, that was BP's job, as principal owner of the pipeline consortium Alyeska. It is, as well, BP's job in the Gulf, as principal lessee of the deepwater oil concession.

    Chugach Natives of Alaska clean Exxon Valdez oil off their beach, eight years after the spill. ©1997 James Macalpine for Palast Fund.

    Before the Exxon Valdez grounding, BP's Alyeska group claimed it had these full-time oil spill response crews. Alyeska had hired Alaskan Natives, trained them to drop from helicopters into the freezing water and set boom in case of emergency. Alyeska also certified in writing that a containment barge with equipment was within five hours sailing of any point in the Prince William Sound. Alyeska also told the state and federal government it had plenty of boom and equipment cached on Bligh Island.

    But it was all a lie. On that March night in 1989 when the Exxon Valdez hit Bligh Reef in the Prince William Sound, the BP group had, in fact, not a lick of boom there. And Alyeska had fired the Natives who had manned the full-time response teams, replacing them with phantom crews, lists of untrained employees with no idea how to control a spill. And that containment barge at the ready was, in fact, laid up in a drydock in Cordova, locked under ice, 12 hours away.

    As a result, the oil from the Exxon Valdez, which could have and should have been contained around the ship, spread out in a sludge tide that wrecked 1,200 miles of shoreline.

    And here we go again. Valdez goes Cajun.

    BP's CEO Tony Hayward reportedly asked, "What the hell did we do to deserve this?"

    It's what you didn't do, Mr. Hayward. Where was BP's containment barge and response crew? Why was the containment boom laid so damn late, too late and too little? Why is it that the US Navy is hauling in 12 miles of rubber boom and fielding seven skimmers, instead of BP?

    Last year, CEO Hayward boasted that, despite increased oil production in exotic deep waters, he had cut BP's costs by an extra one billion dollars a year. Now we know how he did it.

    As chance would have it, I was meeting last week with Louisiana lawyer Daniel Becnel Jr. when word came in of the platform explosion. Daniel represents oil workers on those platforms; now he'll represent their bereaved families. The Coast Guard called him. They had found the emergency evacuation capsule floating in the sea and were afraid to open it and disturb the cooked bodies.

    I wonder if BP painted the capsule green, like they paint their gas stations.

    Becnel, yesterday by phone from his office from the town of Reserve, LA, said the spill response crews were told they weren't needed because the company had already sealed the well. Like everything else from BP mouthpieces, it was a lie.

    In the end, this is bigger than BP and its policy of cheaping-out and skiving the rules. This is about the anti-regulatory mania which has infected the American body politic. While the "tea baggers" are simply its extreme expression, US politicians of all stripes love to attack "the little bureaucrat with the fat rule book." It began with Ronald Reagan and was promoted, most vociferously, by Bill Clinton and the head of Clinton's de-regulation committee, one Al Gore.

    Americans want government off our backs ... that is, until a folding crib crushes the skull of our baby; Toyota accelerators speed us to our death; banks blow our savings on gambling sprees; and crude oil smothers the Mississippi.

    Then, suddenly, it's, "where was hell was the Government!" Why didn't the government do something to stop it?

    The answer is, because government took you at your word they should get out of the way of business, that business could be trusted to police itself. It was only last month that BP, lobbying for new deepwater drilling, testified to Congress that additional equipment and inspection wasn't needed.

    You should meet some of these little bureaucrats with the fat rulebooks. Like Dan Lawn, the inspector from the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation who warned and warned and warned, before the Exxon Valdez grounding, that BP and Alyeska were courting disaster in their arrogant disregard of the rulebook. In 2006, I printed his latest warnings about BP's culture of negligence.

    When the choice is between Dan Lawn's rule book and a bag of tea, Dan's my man.

    ***

    This just in: Becnel tells me that one of the platform workers has informed him that the BP well was apparently deeper than the 18,000 feet depth reported. BP failed to communicate that additional depth to Halliburton crews who therefore poured in too small a cement cap for the additional pressure caused by the extra depth. So it blew.

    Why didn't Halliburton check? "Gross negligence on everyone's part," says Becnel. Negligence driven by penny-pinching bottom-line squeezing. BP says its worker is lying. Someone's lying here: the man on the platform – or the company that has practiced prevarication from Alaska to Louisiana?

    Greg Palast investigated the Exxon Valdez disaster for the Chucagh Native villages of Alaska's Prince William Sound. An expert on corporate regulation, Palast, now a journalist, authored the New York Times bestseller, The Best Democracy Money Can Buy.

    http://www.gregpalast.com/slick-oper...nown-too-well/

  • #2
    Re: Slick Operator: The BP I've known too well

    Originally posted by Chomsky View Post
    Slick Operator: The BP I've known too well

    Wednesday, May 5, 2010

    by Greg Palast for Truthout.org
    May 5, 2010

    I've seen this movie before. In 1989, I was a fraud investigator hired to dig into the cause of the Exxon Valdez disaster. Despite Exxon's name on that boat, I found the party most to blame for the destruction was ... British Petroleum. That's important to know, because the way BP caused devastation in Alaska is exactly the way BP is now sliming the entire Gulf Coast.

    Deepwater Horizon in flames before sinking. Photo provided by D.Becnel

    Tankers run aground, wells blow out, pipes burst. It shouldn't happen but it does. And when it does, the name of the game is containment. Both in Alaska, when the Exxon Valdez grounded, and in the Gulf over a week ago, when the Deepwater Horizon platform blew, it was British Petroleum that was charged with carrying out the Oil Spill Response Plans ("OSRP") which the company itself drafted and filed with the government.

    What's so insane, when I look over that sickening slick moving toward the Delta, is that containing spilled oil is really quite simple and easy. And from my investigation, BP has figured out a very low cost way to prepare for this task: BP lies. BP prevaricates, BP fabricates and BP obfuscates.

    That's because responding to a spill may be easy and simple, but not at all cheap. And BP is cheap. Deadly cheap.

    To contain a spill, the main thing you need is a lot of rubber, long skirts of it called "boom." Quickly surround a spill or leak or burst, then pump it out into skimmers or disperse it, sink it or burn it. Simple.

    But there's one thing about the rubber skirts: you've got to have lots of it at the ready, with crews on standby in helicopters and on containment barges ready to roll. They have to be in place round the clock, all the time, just like a fire department; even when all is operating A-OK. Because rapid response is the key. In Alaska, that was BP's job, as principal owner of the pipeline consortium Alyeska. It is, as well, BP's job in the Gulf, as principal lessee of the deepwater oil concession.

    Chugach Natives of Alaska clean Exxon Valdez oil off their beach, eight years after the spill. ©1997 James Macalpine for Palast Fund.

    Before the Exxon Valdez grounding, BP's Alyeska group claimed it had these full-time oil spill response crews. Alyeska had hired Alaskan Natives, trained them to drop from helicopters into the freezing water and set boom in case of emergency. Alyeska also certified in writing that a containment barge with equipment was within five hours sailing of any point in the Prince William Sound. Alyeska also told the state and federal government it had plenty of boom and equipment cached on Bligh Island.

    But it was all a lie. On that March night in 1989 when the Exxon Valdez hit Bligh Reef in the Prince William Sound, the BP group had, in fact, not a lick of boom there. And Alyeska had fired the Natives who had manned the full-time response teams, replacing them with phantom crews, lists of untrained employees with no idea how to control a spill. And that containment barge at the ready was, in fact, laid up in a drydock in Cordova, locked under ice, 12 hours away.

    As a result, the oil from the Exxon Valdez, which could have and should have been contained around the ship, spread out in a sludge tide that wrecked 1,200 miles of shoreline.

    And here we go again. Valdez goes Cajun.

    BP's CEO Tony Hayward reportedly asked, "What the hell did we do to deserve this?"

    It's what you didn't do, Mr. Hayward. Where was BP's containment barge and response crew? Why was the containment boom laid so damn late, too late and too little? Why is it that the US Navy is hauling in 12 miles of rubber boom and fielding seven skimmers, instead of BP?

    Last year, CEO Hayward boasted that, despite increased oil production in exotic deep waters, he had cut BP's costs by an extra one billion dollars a year. Now we know how he did it.

    As chance would have it, I was meeting last week with Louisiana lawyer Daniel Becnel Jr. when word came in of the platform explosion. Daniel represents oil workers on those platforms; now he'll represent their bereaved families. The Coast Guard called him. They had found the emergency evacuation capsule floating in the sea and were afraid to open it and disturb the cooked bodies.

    I wonder if BP painted the capsule green, like they paint their gas stations.

    Becnel, yesterday by phone from his office from the town of Reserve, LA, said the spill response crews were told they weren't needed because the company had already sealed the well. Like everything else from BP mouthpieces, it was a lie.

    In the end, this is bigger than BP and its policy of cheaping-out and skiving the rules. This is about the anti-regulatory mania which has infected the American body politic. While the "tea baggers" are simply its extreme expression, US politicians of all stripes love to attack "the little bureaucrat with the fat rule book." It began with Ronald Reagan and was promoted, most vociferously, by Bill Clinton and the head of Clinton's de-regulation committee, one Al Gore.

    Americans want government off our backs ... that is, until a folding crib crushes the skull of our baby; Toyota accelerators speed us to our death; banks blow our savings on gambling sprees; and crude oil smothers the Mississippi.

    Then, suddenly, it's, "where was hell was the Government!" Why didn't the government do something to stop it?

    The answer is, because government took you at your word they should get out of the way of business, that business could be trusted to police itself. It was only last month that BP, lobbying for new deepwater drilling, testified to Congress that additional equipment and inspection wasn't needed.

    You should meet some of these little bureaucrats with the fat rulebooks. Like Dan Lawn, the inspector from the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation who warned and warned and warned, before the Exxon Valdez grounding, that BP and Alyeska were courting disaster in their arrogant disregard of the rulebook. In 2006, I printed his latest warnings about BP's culture of negligence.

    When the choice is between Dan Lawn's rule book and a bag of tea, Dan's my man.

    ***

    This just in: Becnel tells me that one of the platform workers has informed him that the BP well was apparently deeper than the 18,000 feet depth reported. BP failed to communicate that additional depth to Halliburton crews who therefore poured in too small a cement cap for the additional pressure caused by the extra depth. So it blew.

    Why didn't Halliburton check? "Gross negligence on everyone's part," says Becnel. Negligence driven by penny-pinching bottom-line squeezing. BP says its worker is lying. Someone's lying here: the man on the platform – or the company that has practiced prevarication from Alaska to Louisiana?

    Greg Palast investigated the Exxon Valdez disaster for the Chucagh Native villages of Alaska's Prince William Sound. An expert on corporate regulation, Palast, now a journalist, authored the New York Times bestseller, The Best Democracy Money Can Buy.

    http://www.gregpalast.com/slick-oper...nown-too-well/
    Sorry but righteousness and poverty, faith and hope, sunlight and wind are not solutions to America's dependence on oil from the Middle East. Better to deal with BP than to deal with the little Hitler in Tehran to obtain oil.

    You make the case for honouring Joseph Stalin because at least he got the job done: the victory for the Allies in WWII. And what America and the West need now is another leader like Stalin who would defeat our enemies in the Middle East, especially Iran..... We need energy independence, at any cost, as soon as possible. Thank you.

    So I honour the drillers, maybe even BP.
    Last edited by Starving Steve; May 10, 2010, 02:12 PM.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Slick Operator: The BP I've known too well

      Sorry Steve, it simply does not follow.

      Spending a few bucks for a true emergency spill response capability makes too much sense to avoid.
      There is good money to be made in commercial fishing and tourism -we can't just ruin those industries because BP prefers to risk those folks's livlihood to enlarge BP's own profits.

      No matter who is in power in Iran, we don't want gulf oil in our fish nurseries and on our white sand beaches.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Slick Operator: The BP I've known too well

        Originally posted by thriftyandboringinohio View Post
        Sorry Steve, it simply does not follow.

        Spending a few bucks for a true emergency spill response capability makes too much sense to avoid.
        There is good money to be made in commercial fishing and tourism -we can't just ruin those industries because BP prefers to risk those folks's livlihood to enlarge BP's own profits.

        No matter who is in power in Iran, we don't want gulf oil in our fish nurseries and on our white sand beaches.
        I could not agree with you more: "BP would have been wise to have spent a few bucks to prepare for a true emergency spill response capability."

        But I still honour BP and the other drillers. We need oil, even oil one mile below the sea surface.

        Yes, BP is going to be liable for damage to other industries. And BP will write a cheque to settle for this damage, but be nice to BP.:confused:

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Slick Operator: The BP I've known too well

          There's bumper sticker... "Be nice to BP."

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Slick Operator: The BP I've known too well

            Originally posted by Starving Steve View Post
            I could not agree with you more: "BP would have been wise to have spent a few bucks to prepare for a true emergency spill response capability."

            But I still honour BP and the other drillers. We need oil, even oil one mile below the sea surface.

            Yes, BP is going to be liable for damage to other industries. And BP will write a cheque to settle for this damage, but be nice to BP.:confused:
            I disagree and do not chose to honor a company that put greed ahead of simple preparation to avoid a disaster . . . TWICE . . . (Alaska and now the Gulf).

            The U.S. needs to lessen our dependence on foreign oil, true, but why can't we do it through companies that are responsible? God knows they make a windfall off each barrel at almost $80/per when the price of production is so much less.

            Chartsky

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Slick Operator: The BP I've known too well

              BP Was Drilling In A Mine Field! Gulf of Mexico Is Major Dumping Ground For Unexploded Bombs.

              maybe they found something they weren't looking for

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Slick Operator: The BP I've known too well

                Originally posted by Chartsky View Post
                I disagree and do not chose to honor a company that put greed ahead of simple preparation to avoid a disaster . . . TWICE . . . (Alaska and now the Gulf).

                The U.S. needs to lessen our dependence on foreign oil, true, but why can't we do it through companies that are responsible? God knows they make a windfall off each barrel at almost $80/per when the price of production is so much less.

                Chartsky
                Whether I own BP stock or not, I would make a deal with the devil, even Stalin himself, to win this war against dependency on Middle East oil.

                The fact that we are in this mess underscores my remarks in prior posts about the eco-nuts. We need REAL energy, not a penny of energy here and there, from solar and wind.

                If we had a real energy policy in America, we would be embracing the producers of energy, especially the producers of up-graded oil from the Alberta oil sands. The difficulty we are having with undersea oil recovery means the Alberta oil sands are VITAL to Canada and America and the world.

                I only deal in reality, not dreams, and not righteousness. And that is why I despise the eco-frauds in Greenpeace who have been trying to kill the oil sands project.

                Up-graded oil, nuclear, hydro-electric, and natural gas are the way to go now. We need to unite and build these projects--- especially now with the difficulties we are having in recovering oil from the ocean depths.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Slick Operator: The BP I've known too well

                  Originally posted by Chartsky View Post
                  I disagree and do not chose to honor a company that put greed ahead of simple preparation to avoid a disaster . . . TWICE . . . (Alaska and now the Gulf).

                  The U.S. needs to lessen our dependence on foreign oil, true, but why can't we do it through companies that are responsible? God knows they make a windfall off each barrel at almost $80/per when the price of production is so much less.

                  Chartsky
                  Hold on a minute. I didn't get any sense of the true expense of maintaining fleets of rubber booms at the ready from the article. This is a matter of raw probability. Oil disasters of any significant magnitude are exceedingly rare. This disaster so far has yet to rival any major one, but in enough time it could perhaps become the largest. Time will tell.

                  But how much insurance is enough? Do you build 1000 ft levees to absolutely guarantee against all forms of flooding? Do you build them around every coastline?

                  By that same token, does maintaining this mystical fleet of rubber booms make drilling economically inviable? Do you place them everywhere? No data was given by the author, just anti-BP propaganda. I remain unconvinced that a rubber boom fleet is a viable safety measure.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Slick Operator: The BP I've known too well

                    Originally posted by Chartsky View Post
                    I disagree and do not chose to honor a company that put greed ahead of simple preparation to avoid a disaster . . . TWICE . . . (Alaska and now the Gulf).

                    The U.S. needs to lessen our dependence on foreign oil, true, but why can't we do it through companies that are responsible? God knows they make a windfall off each barrel at almost $80/per when the price of production is so much less.

                    Chartsky
                    The "fire department" analogy is a good one.

                    Clearly, the oil companies can't organize this themselves. The government should have the Coast Guard do this, and charge a special tax at all oil ports for funding purposes.

                    Comment

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