NY Times June 19, 2010
BP Chief Draws Outrage for Watching Yacht Race
By LIZ ROBBINS

BP officials on Saturday scrambled yet again to respond to another 
public relations challenge when their embattled chief executive, Tony 
Hayward, spent the day off the coast of England watching his yacht 
compete in one of the world’s largest races.

Two days after Mr. Hayward angered lawmakers on Capitol Hill with his 
refusal to provide details during testimony about the worst offshore oil 
spill in United States history, and one day after BP’s chairman said the 
chief executive would not be as involved in daily operations in the Gulf 
of Mexico, Mr. Hayward sparked new controversy from afar.

“He is having some rare private time with his son,” a BP spokeswoman, 
Sheila Williams, said in a telephone interview on Saturday.

But Rahm Emanuel, the White House chief of staff, who taped an interview 
for ABC’s “This Week,” called Mr. Hayward’s attendance at the race “part 
of a long line of P.R. gaffes and mistakes” that he has made.

“To quote Tony Hayward, he’s got his life back,” Mr. Emanuel said.

On May 31, six weeks after the spill began, Mr. Hayward uttered “I’d 
like my life back,” a comment that struck many in the gulf region as 
insensitive, and for which he eventually apologized.

On Saturday, Senator Richard Shelby, Republican of Alabama, called Mr. 
Hayward’s yacht outing the “height of arrogance,” in an interview with 
Fox News.

“I can tell you that yacht ought to be here skimming and cleaning up a 
lot of the oil,” Mr. Shelby said. “He ought to be down here seeing what 
is really going on. Not in a cocoon somewhere.”

But Mr. Hayward’s role in the gulf became the topic of further 
speculation on Saturday, even as Ms. Williams, the BP spokeswoman, 
insisted that Mr. Hayward was still in charge of the company and the 
enormous cleanup operations.

“Tony receives regular updates from the gulf,” she said in an e-mail 
message.

On Friday, the chairman of the board of BP, Carl-Henric Svanberg, told 
the British TV network Sky News that Mr. Hayward would be “now handing 
over” the daily operations in the gulf to Robert Dudley, an American who 
joined BP as part of its acquisition of Amoco a decade ago.

On Saturday, BP tried to clarify what Mr. Svanberg had said about the 
transition of leadership in the gulf. “What he meant by ‘now,’ ” Ms. 
Williams said, was that “there would be a transition over to Bob over a 
period of time.”

“Obviously, Tony’s main priority remains overseeing all BP operations,” 
she said. “Over all, there will be some responsibilities handed over, 
but Tony will remain in full control until we have stopped the leak.”

When that might happen is not clear. Crude oil is flowing at a rate 
estimated between 35,000 and 60,000 barrels of oil a day from the 
damaged well, and BP has been able to capture only a percentage of that 
with its current containment methods.

BP said it was aiming to stop the leak in August, when two relief wells 
it is drilling will intersect with the damaged one. The company said on 
Friday that it was ahead of schedule on one of the wells and within 200 
feet of the side of the damaged well, but that the drilling would 
proceed slower the closer it got.

Workers had captured 24,500 barrels of oil on Friday before shutting 
down the operation because of a malfunction on the vessel that is 
siphoning the oil from the leaking well — 1,000 fewer barrels than on 
Thursday. Operations restarted early Saturday.

By then, Mr. Hayward was already in Cowes on the southern coast of 
England for the J. P. Morgan Asset Management Round the Island Race, a 
yacht race around the Isle of Wight. A spokeswoman for the race said in 
an e-mail message “that a gentleman by the name of Tony Hayward is a 
co-owner of an entered boat called ‘Bob’ that was racing today, however 
his name did not appear on any crew list.”

The boat finished fourth in a class of 45 others.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to