http://wsws.org/articles/2010/jun2010/gulf-j16.shtml
Internal documents reveal criminal negligence
Obama administration’s “escrow” account will shelter BP
By Tom Eley
16 June 2010

As more evidence comes to light showing that BP disregarded basic 
safety considerations at its Deepwater Horizon drill site, it has 
become clear that the Obama administration’s move to create an 
escrow account to compensate victims is a maneuver to shield the 
corporation and its top shareholders.

According to law, there is potentially no cap to liability for 
damages if criminal negligence can be proven. A mountain of 
evidence proves this is in fact the case. This includes internal 
BP documents and memos released by the House Energy and Commerce 
Committee this week. Written in the days before the explosion, the 
documents reveal that the company knowingly disregarded concerns 
over safety in the rig’s drill capping operations. The rig 
exploded on April 20, killing 11 workers and creating one of the 
worst environmental catastrophes in history.

“We found a pattern,” concluded committee chair Rep. Henry Waxman 
(Democrat, California) in an accompanying letter. “Every time [BP] 
had a decision to make they decided to cut corners; to do things 
faster than they otherwise should have been done; to do it less 
expensively and the consequence of this, as one independent expert 
told us, was horribly negligent. They violated what their own 
employees were recommending they do, they violated their own 
industry practices and they ignored the recommendation of 
contractors who told them to do certain tests to avoid safety 
concerns.”

BP made at least five dangerous cost-cutting decisions in the days 
and hours before the explosion, the committee found. “Time after 
time, it appears that BP made decisions that increased the risk of 
a blowout to save the company time or expense,” the letter to 
Hayward stated. “If this is what happened, BP’s carelessness and 
complacency have inflicted a heavy toll on the Gulf, its 
inhabitants, and the workers on the rig.”

Among other negligent acts, BP chose to use a well tubing design 
that left few barriers against the eruption of gas. This was 
despite an internal review prepared in mid-April which warned that 
such a design would leave the seal assembly on the wellhead as the 
“only barrier” in the event of cement failure—and even though an 
internal BP study had predicted cement failure. “Cement 
simulations indicate it is unlikely to be a successful cement job 
due to formation breakdown,” BP wrote days before the blast.

“Despite this warning...BP did not run a 9- to 12-hour procedure 
called a cement bond log to assess the integrity of the cement 
seal” or bond log, the House Committee commented. “BP had a crew 
from [contractor] Schlumberger on the rig on the morning of April 
20 for the purpose of running a cement bond log, but they departed 
after BP told them their services were not needed. An independent 
expert consulted by the Committee called this decision ‘horribly 
negligent.’”

More damning revelations emerged related to the process of placing 
centralizers, which insure that tubing is centered in the well 
bore. If the tubing is placed incorrectly, experts say it is 
difficult or impossible to properly replace mud at the time of 
well capping, increasing the chances of blowout. The industry 
standard is to use 21 centralizers—also the number suggested by 
contractor Halliburton for the Deepwater Horizon—but BP chose to 
use only six. Four days before the explosion, Halliburton warned 
BP that if it proceeded as planned the well would have a “SEVERE 
gas flow problem.”

BP responded by stating that putting in place additional 
centralizers would take too long. “It will take 10 hours to 
install them,” a BP representative wrote. “I do not like this.” 
Another BP official acknowledged the risks related to using few 
centralizers, but concluded, “who cares, it’s done, end of story, 
will probably be fine.”

The House Energy Committee also found that BP skipped over 
recommended testing of heavy mud circulation in the well, which 
requires at most 12 hours, and that it bypassed placing an extra 
seal known as a “lockdown sleeve” that might have prevented a 
blowout. It found further evidence that company officials were 
aware of the dangers. One engineer even referred to the operation 
as “a nightmare well.”

Dozens of similarly negligent decisions were made dating back to 
the planning and environmental risk assessment of the drilling 
site, as numerous government documents, investigative reports, and 
worker testimony have revealed. Most of these decisions—including 
several in the lead-up to the blast—were approved by Obama 
administration regulators, especially the Minerals Management 
Service (MMS) of the Department of the Interior. Any serious 
investigation of the BP Gulf spill would turn up further evidence 
of government culpability in the disaster—and would expose the 
dire safety conditions under which scores of oil rigs continue to 
operate.

The ongoing revelations of BP’s negligence expose the content of 
Obama’s plan for an escrow account, of an as yet unstated funding 
level, that would be administered by a supposedly independent 
third party. BP will likely go along with the plan—“provided that 
it has certain assurances,” the Washington Post notes. At a 
Wednesday meeting in the White House, BP CEO Tony Hayward and 
Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg will ask Obama to impose “a limit to 
its liability” and see to it that the “escrow account [is] 
administered by someone the company can trust.”

Indeed, whatever the escrow account’s value—reports vary from $5 
billion to over $20 billion—it will serve to shield BP from the 
real financial damages the spill has caused, which could be 
upwards of $1 trillion and far surpass the London-based firm’s 
market capitalization.

After the Exxon Valdez disaster, Congress passed the Oil Pollution 
Act of 1990, which capped at $75 million oil firms’ total 
liability for economic and environmental damages to private 
parties. The paltry sum was not indexed for inflation and remains 
at the same level.

However, legal experts say that the cap does not apply to spills 
caused by criminal negligence. Given the overwhelming evidence of 
BP’s willful disregard for standard and legally-mandated safety 
and environmental procedures, BP could face years of lawsuits from 
those affected—fishermen, small business owners, oil industry 
workers, and even home owners. Obama’s escrow account proposal 
seeks to forestall this possibility while mollifying popular anger.

The US corporate elite, predictably, responded with hostility to 
Obama’s latest gesture—which came after a week of bitter 
denunciations from British financial circles over supposedly 
“irresponsible” criticism of BP by US politicians.

On Monday, markets sent lower by 9 percent BP shares, which have 
now fallen by almost half since the explosion. On Tuesday, Fitch 
Ratings downgraded BP’s credit rating from AA to BBB, just above 
junk status, citing the possibility of a $20 billion escrow 
account. The cost of insuring $10 million in BP debt rose to 
$515,000 from $424,000.

BP’s bond yields simultaneously increased by more than three 
percentage points, to 10.847 percent, triggering “buy” 
recommendations from financial analysts skeptical that BP will be 
allowed to enter bankruptcy. “As a bondholder all you really care 
about is that they stay in business,” Keith Springer, president of 
Capital Financial Advisory Services told the Wall Street Journal. 
“Once this is over, they’re going to be a viable company.”

More likely than bankruptcy is a scenario in which BP’s 
shareholders would be protected by the absorption of the company 
by another oil major, such as Exxon Mobil or Shell—who are 
“licking their chops” over the prospect, according to the New York 
Times’ Andrew Ross Sorkin. Sorkin speculated that BP’s oil spill 
liabilities could then be dumped into a “Bad BP,” but Obama’s 
escrow account may make such a step unnecessary.

Such commercial calculations no doubt played a role in the 
Congressional testimony given by executives of Exxon, Shell, 
ConocoPhillips, and Chevron, who joined Lamar McKay, BP’s head of 
US operations, before the House Energy Committee. The other oil 
majors left McKay to fend for himself, each indicating that the 
disaster resulted from BP departing from industry norms.

“This incident represents a dramatic departure from industry norms 
in deepwater drilling,” said Rex Tillerson, CEO of the world’s 
largest oil firm, Exxon. “We do not proceed with operations if we 
cannot do so safely.”

The chance to further weaken a wounded rival dovetailed with the 
effort to portray offshore oil drilling as safe and the disaster 
as a one-off accident. Under questioning the oil executives 
admitted that they are no better prepared to deal with a deep-sea 
spill than BP. “Like BP in its much-ridiculed disaster plan, the 
companies listed the phone number of a long-dead marine scientist 
and raised concerns about protecting walruses—not found in the 
gulf,” noted the Guardian.

The Deepwater Horizon disaster is no more an accident than the 
implosion of financial markets two years ago that has led to the 
worst economic and social crisis since the Great Depression. In 
both cases, the decades-long promotion of the “free market,” the 
subordination of the productive forces to the profit demands of 
the corporate and financial elite, and the gutting of regulations 
created conditions that, sooner or later, would inevitably lead to 
disaster.
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