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BP's Own Investigation Found Problems With Another Gulf Oil Rig

RAMIT PLUSHNICK-MASTI and NOAKI SCHWARTZ   05/15/10 03:48 PM ET   AP

Bp Atlantis Rig

HOUSTON — The company whose drilling triggered the Gulf of Mexico oil spill also owns a rig that operated with incomplete and inaccurate engineering documents, which one official warned could "lead to catastrophic operator error," records and interviews show.

In February, two months before the Deepwater Horizon spill, 19 members of Congress called on the agency that oversees offshore oil drilling to investigate a whistle-blower's complaints about the BP-owned Atlantis, which is stationed in 7,070 feet of water more than 150 miles south of New Orleans.

The Associated Press has learned that an independent firm hired by BP substantiated the complaints in 2009 and found that the giant petroleum company was violating its own policies by not having completed engineering documents on board the Atlantis when it began operating in 2007.

Stanley Sporkin, a former federal judge whose firm served as BP's ombudsman, said that the allegation "was substantiated, and that's it." The firm was hired by BP in 2006 to act as an independent office to receive and investigate employee complaints.

Engineering documents – covering everything from safety shutdown systems to blowout preventers – are meant to be roadmaps for safely starting and halting production on the huge offshore platform.

Running an oil rig with flawed and missing documentation is like cooking a dinner without a complete recipe, said University of California, Berkeley engineering professor Robert Bea, an oil pipeline expert who has been reviewing the whistle-blower allegations and studied the Gulf blowout.

"This is symptomatic of a sick system. This kind of sloppiness is what leads to disasters," he said. "The sloppiness on the industry side and on the government side. It's a shared problem."

BP and the Minerals and Management Service, which regulates oil drilling, did not respond to calls from the AP seeking comment on the whistle-blower allegations. But in January an attorney for BP wrote a letter to Congress saying the company is compliant with all federal requirements and the Atlantis has been operating so safely that it received an MMS award.

"BP has reviewed the allegations and found them to be unsubstantiated," said Karen K. Westall, managing attorney for BP.

The MMS is expected to complete its probe later this month.

Last month, the Deepwater Horizon exploded and sank 5,000 feet to the ocean floor. Since then at least 210,000 gallons of oil a day has been leaking into the Gulf, endangering wildlife, shutting down large areas to commercial fishing and threatening coastal tourism.

Government officials and critics of the oil industry say the alleged problems with the Atlantis are further evidence of systemic safety problems and lax federal regulation of offshore drilling.

"I think it's a legitimate area of concern to ask serious questions about any rig that bears any similarity whatsoever to the Deepwater Horizon," said Richard Charter, a senior policy advisor with Defenders of Wildlife. "If we've got another Deepwater Horizon waiting to happen, we'd better know about it soon."

BP operates and holds 56 percent ownership in the Atlantis. The company leased the Deepwater Horizon from Transocean Ltd.

The Atlantis subcontractor who lodged the complaint was Kenneth Abbott. He was laid off in February 2009 and said in a written statement a few months later that he believes it was partly in retaliation, which the company denied.

When reached by the AP, Abbott said, "I had complained about BP's problem," but declined to elaborate.

In a statement read on an October 8, 2009, conference call he said he has 20 years of experience as a project control supervisor on various engineering projects and that part of his concern about rig safety stems for the fact that he lives on the Gulf and enjoys recreation on its waters.

"I have never been against offshore production because I believe it can be done safely but I am very concerned that BP is acting unsafely and that it may lead to a disastrous spill in the Gulf ... " he said, according to a copy of the statement.

Sporkin, the former judge who heads the Washington, D.C.-based ombudsman office hired by BP, told the AP his office found in August 2009 that BP's execution plan for the Atlantis called for all documents to be finalized and onboard before production started.

"That did not happen," Sporkin said.

Last month, Sporkin's deputy, Billie Pirner Garde, indicated in an e-mail to Abbott that BP had long known there was a document problem aboard the Atlantis.

"It was ... of concern to others who raised the concern before you worked there, while you were there and after you left," she wrote. "Your raising the issue did not result in any change to the schedule of BP addressing the issues."

BP production member Barry C. Duff said in an August 2008 e-mail to two colleagues that "hundreds if not thousands" of subsea documents had not been finalized, and warned having the wrong documents on board the Atlantis "could lead to catastrophic operator errors."

Abbott provided e-mails, a BP database and other documents to an environmental group called Food & Water Watch, based in Washington. The AP obtained copies.

Members of Congress were provided the documents and a report by Mike Sawyer, a safety engineering consultant who previously assisted the plaintiffs in a suit aginst BP after the 2005 explosion at its Texas City, Texas, refinery that killed 15 workers.

Sawyer reviewed a database detailing the status of thousands of Atlantis safety-related engineering documents provided by Abbott. He concluded in May 2009 that the majority were incomplete, introducing "substantial risk of large-scale damage to the deep water Gulf of Mexico environment and harm to workers."

Sawyer said he found that about 85 percent of the piping and instrument designs "have no final approval" and more than 95 percent of the welding specifications had no approval at all.

"I think it's very serious," said U.S. Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., who led the call for an investigation. "I think it speaks to the lack of the federal government's ability to protect its own public property. It speaks to the opportunism and advantage these companies took of the taxpayer."

More than a year after Abbott first lodged his complaint, it remains unclear whether BP updated the documents.

Sporkin said BP told his office the company was not federally required to have the documents on board the Atlantis and could change its execution plan at any time.

Sporkin said BP recently told his office they had fixed the problem, yet provided no written documentation.

Kenneth Arnold, a consultant to the offshore oil and gas industry for safety and project management, read the whistleblower's allegations.

Without knowing which documents were incomplete, Arnold said it would be difficult to draw any conclusions as to how much of a threat the omissions might be. When his company worked on BP projects, Arnold said they were sticklers.

"If anything they're so anal about these processes they require more engineering and man hours than I think might be necessary," said Arnold, who recently retired after 45 years in the industry. "If I had a complaint about BP, it is they were too detailed. People are piling on."

___

Ramit Plushnick-Masti reported from Houston. Noaki Schwartz reported from Los Angeles.

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HOUSTON — The company whose drilling triggered the Gulf of Mexico oil spill also owns a rig that operated with incomplete and inaccurate engineering documents, which one official warned could "l...
HOUSTON — The company whose drilling triggered the Gulf of Mexico oil spill also owns a rig that operated with incomplete and inaccurate engineering documents, which one official warned could "l...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wassilij
shamanlight
04:49 PM on 05/17/2010
There is a major coverup going on with this oil spill.....a microbe exists that will literally eat this oil and neutralize the toxic effects of this oil in the Gulf of Mexico!The major corporations refuse to use it because they cannot patent it, own it, or sell it because its very inexpensive....It is available all over the world!!...It' time for BP to stop the BS...and use what has been proven to work,,,,

http://www.gatorinternational.com/
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UFO
I love the smell of biodiesel in the morning
05:52 PM on 05/17/2010
Not exactly. It will deplete all the oxygen around it, and the surround area will die, and that is happening right now.
01:53 PM on 05/17/2010
Last night's 60 minutes sure kicked BP in the teeth.
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Totto
"Not 'Noise' One Round: *Music*
03:43 PM on 05/17/2010
Absolutely. I hope there was a great audience.
01:53 PM on 05/17/2010
"Running an oil rig with flawed and missing documentation is like cooking a dinner without a complete recipe, said University of California, Berkeley engineering professor Robert Bea ... "

No, it's more like driving an 18-wheeler with bad brakes at 90 mph in a rainstorm while stinking drunk. You know exactly what's going to happen, you just don't know exactly when it will happen.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wassilij
shamanlight
12:16 PM on 05/17/2010
"Man did not weave the web of life - he is merely a strand in it.
Whatever he does to the web, he does to himself."

Chief Seattle
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LastAngryWoman
waiting for godot
06:48 AM on 05/17/2010
Americans are a funny people.
They allow their government to incarcerate pot smokers by the thousands, but the evil geniuses who destroy large swaths of the ACTUAL PLANET?
Nada. Zip. Excuses. Allowances.
Is America dead?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Giverny
Truthiness
08:03 AM on 05/17/2010
If they keep letting these BP people do what they do, we'll all be dead. The planet can only take so much. The oceans are a major player in oxygen production. If I remember right, it's needed for breathing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ladybug7
10 miles left of Palm Beach!
01:56 AM on 05/17/2010
I highly doubt BP is the only oil drilling corp that is taking shortcuts. They are just the only one (SO FAR) to get caught. Every rig needs to be closely inspected and shut down if they are deemed not safe. We cannot afford this disaster, much less a repeat.
01:06 AM on 05/17/2010
Equivalence of BP and MMS is trash. BP is the responsible party. The BP CEO set the style and manor of operations. The BP CFO set the cost priorites. You cannot blame a murder on the police just because the patrol car missed the drive through. The eleven people died because of BP 100%.
The police (MMS) is a seperate issue, very serious, but seperate. Some high up's need to be fired.
But BP needs some jail time. Dollars will not fix them. Watgh the voice change if the jail key is rattled and the rectum gets really tight. They only respect jail.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bon1042
01:06 AM on 05/17/2010
Did anyone watch 60 Minutes tonight !! If the other rig, the Atlantis blows, it would make the Deep Horizon look like a blip of a bubble ! Before explosion, a BP exec was arguing with a Trans Ocean rep re. oil pressure and wanted to go faster. The BP exec won the argument..... and then 11 men were incinerated. It was all there. JC, I am so full of rage and pain at this I sometimes want my hed to blow up. It hurts so much. An engineer called into Diane Riem's (sp?) show Thursday and said they would have handled it differently in other parts of the world. The industry is designed for pipes and cylinders, not boxes and top hats. They shld've cut off the pipe down to one hole and closed it off that way.
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sven1olaf
Liberty and Justice for all!
12:50 AM on 05/17/2010
gonna bump this for Rich Misty

rich misty 8 minutes ago (4:04 PM)
1819 Fans
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These are the permalinks back to the critical posts I left yesterday. You have to remove the dash from the sitename. The links pend without the dash, clicking won't work, so copy and paste the string out and edit. In IE I have to scroll down a few posts after the window stops bumping.

http://www.huf-fingtonpost.com/2010/05/15/gulf-oil-spill-bp-tries-t_n_577401.html?show_comment_id=47299998#comment_47299998

Flow rate analysis^ two part post, this is the top - 50,000 - 70,000 bbl per day, fully documented

http://www.huf-fingtonpost.com/2010/05/15/gulf-oil-spill-bp-tries-t_n_577401.html?show_comment_id=47299684#comment_47299684

Relief well ^ - How they are going to shut this down, how long it will take, fully documented

http://www.huf-fingtonpost.com/2010/05/15/gulf-oil-spill-bp-tries-t_n_577401.html?show_comment_id=47303495#comment_47303495

Hydrocarbon formation & Bore info ^ This is about the well itself, depth, proven reserve

http://www.huf-fingtonpost.com/2010/05/15/gulf-oil-spill-bp-tries-t_n_577401.html?show_comment_id=47302731#comment_47302731

Failure analysis ^ What went wrong, how, and whys - Fully documented
----------------------

Feel free to save that material to disk for personal use, reposting, emailing, etc. without restrictions.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:14 AM on 05/17/2010
It's not an oil spill. Use the correct and accurate language.

It is an underwater oil gusher.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ashabot
Environmentalists are the true Conservatives.
12:40 AM on 05/17/2010
Thanks for pointing that out. Correct language is critical. "Spill"? They uncorked a catastrophic environmental disaster.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Giverny
Truthiness
08:05 AM on 05/17/2010
My cousin who worked on a rig said they call it a "blowout".
01:43 AM on 05/17/2010
It is a crime scene. Eleven people died because of cost cuts, faked info and dead batteries. Not an accident not a gusher.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Devilslakewoman
Flaming Liberal
04:39 AM on 05/17/2010
Fanfanfan. And knowingly baseless 'assurances.'

Saaay, isn't this getting to criminal territory? Homicide? Reckless disregard? Manslaughter?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:02 AM on 05/17/2010
It's simple. They'll break the laws until they are stopped.
11:47 PM on 05/16/2010
Yes, I am sure BP really did a real good job going through their rigs to make sure they are ok

What they did was make up a story which makes it seem like they are inspecting their rigs

They aren't
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
espressobeans
. . . just saying it like it is.
11:21 PM on 05/16/2010
Why aren't we shutting these things down until they get this one under control?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ladybug7
10 miles left of Palm Beach!
01:57 AM on 05/17/2010
And freezing their US assets.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:43 PM on 05/16/2010
Can't all the upper echelon of BP executives do the honorable thing and commit hari kari?

Oh, I forgot, rattlesnakes don't commit suicide.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Timma
nihil habentes omnia posidentes
10:05 PM on 05/16/2010
These guys are like that kid who used to think it was funny around July 4 to light a black cat or cherry bomb and throw it at your feet. Same mentality just bigger and more seriously dangerous toys.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Oonagh
Old sins have long shadows
10:25 PM on 05/16/2010
Yes, they never grew up just got bigger projects.
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10:30 PM on 05/16/2010
Agree, they have only contempt for all laws, all governments, all people who are harmed by their obsessive greed.
We have NO reason whatever to believe a single word they say, and countless well-documented reasons to recognize that they are practiced, amoral liars.
They have shows over and over and over and over that they gladly destroy anyone and any environment that stands in the way of their ambitions and profits.
Again, we know we can not believe anything they say. Nothing.