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AP: Big Oil Hasn't Learned Lessons Of BP Oil Spill

Oil Spill Lessons

HARRY R. WEBER   10/ 4/10 06:26 PM ET   AP

NEW ORLEANS — Oil industry and government officials could get caught flat-footed again by another deep-water blowout in the coming months because they have yet to incorporate many of the lessons learned during the BP disaster, experts inside and outside the business tell The Associated Press.

For one thing, it could be another year before a bigger, better cap-and-siphon containment system is developed to choke off leaks many thousands of feet below the surface. Also, existing skimmers still don't have the capacity to quickly suck up millions of gallons of oil flowing at once.

In interviews with the AP, environmental experts, industry veterans and government officials also said the industry needs better technology and more thorough testing and analysis to prevent blowouts from happening in the first place.

And despite an overhaul of the federal agency that regulates the industry, there are lingering doubts about whether the government can effectively police Big Oil at the same time it relies on the industry for revenue.

"It's going to take five years before all those lessons are fleshed out and can be implemented," warned Louisiana State University environmental sciences professor Ed Overton.

The Obama administration's moratorium on deep-water drilling in the Gulf of Mexico is set to expire Nov. 30 and could be lifted even sooner amid pressure from the industry and its allies.

BP signaled last week that it realizes there is still a lot of work to do, firing a top official responsible for deep-water wells. It also welcomed a new CEO on Friday, the first American ever to lead the British company.

Erik Milito, director of upstream and industry operations for the industry group American Petroleum Institute, acknowledged room for improvement. But he insisted that the industry learned from the BP disaster, which began with a rig explosion April 20 that killed 11 workers. The blown-out well spewed more than 200 million gallons of crude before it was finally capped in mid-July.

"If this happens again, the difference will be it will get capped a heck of a lot quicker," Milito said. "It won't take 90 days again."

Exxon Mobil Corp. is leading a coalition of oil companies building a one-of-a-kind system to contain an oil leak in up to 10,000 feet of water – twice the depth of the BP blowout. BP recently joined the $1 billion project and agreed to submit the equipment it used to eventually kill its runaway well.

But it could be 16 months before the system is completed, tested and ready to be used. Drawings of the proposed system show a cap and a series of undersea devices – including cables, a riser, a manifold and a piece of equipment that would pump dispersant. Lines would be hooked up to vessels on the surface.

Cleaning up oil once it reaches the surface also still poses problems. Even with a fleet of large skimmers used during the BP crisis, the process was slow-going at times. Industry experts and others are pressing for development of more effective skimmer technology.

"We have to do whatever we can to get the most out of those technologies," Milito said.

Industry and the government are also faced with trying to prevent such a disaster in the first place.

In its own report on the blast, BP acknowledged among other things that it misinterpreted a key pressure test of its well before the explosion. BP, which was leasing the rig from Transocean, also blamed employees from both companies for failing to respond to other warning signs that the well was in danger of blowing out.

Testimony before a federal investigative panel showed that real-time data from the rig was available to BP managers on shore, but not to Transocean. And two men who were key to the successful operation of the rig – one for BP and one for Transocean – rarely had contact with each other, according to testimony.

Elgie Holstein, a former Energy Department official who now works for an environmental group, said it is a problem that real-time data on a well's ability to withstand pressure is usually only transmitted from the rig to the headquarters of the company in charge of the well. He said data should be made available more widely to industry experts, a safety consortium or government safety officials so they can determine if the readings are being interpreted correctly.

Energy Secretary Steven Chu recently cited the need for more effective sensors in key components such as blowout preventers that can quickly detect whether the devices are functioning properly. In the BP episode, the blowout preventer failed to clamp off the flow of oil. Investigators are trying to figure out why.

Preventing another such disaster is going to require a change in the industry's safety culture, some experts say.

Last week, BP's new CEO announced creation of a special unit to police safety practices throughout the company.

"Our response to the incident needs to go beyond deep-water drilling," Bob Dudley said. "There are lessons for us relating to the way we operate, the way we organize our company and the way we manage risk."

Rich Haut, an engineering expert who previously worked as a well technology manager for Exxon and as a deep-water technical manager at Halliburton, said it is important that all oil and gas companies develop a culture of safety and "make sure everyone from the executive suite to the rig floor understand that."

Because of the moratorium, exploratory drilling on 33 deep-water rigs in the Gulf was put on hold.

By law, BP had a major role in cleaning up the spill. But retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, who was in charge of the government's response to the crisis, recently proposed that in the event of another such disaster, a third party from the oil and gas industry that does not have a stake in the polluter's profits coordinate the cleanup.

Allen did not elaborate except to say that it may require a change in federal law. In Congress, there has been no movement on the idea.

The government's relationship with the very companies it is supposed to regulate has also raised questions.

In the wake of the BP spill, the Obama administration overhauled the Minerals Management Service, renaming it the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management and separating its conflicting responsibilities for both policing the oil and gas industry and collecting billions in royalties from it.

But the commission appointed by President Barack Obama to investigate the spill has questioned whether the government has truly eliminated the conflict. It was noted that the reorganization would have the bureau responsible for managing leases along the Outer Continental Shelf and the bureau responsible for enforcing safety and environmental standards report to the same person.

"I won't be satisfied until the government demonstrates a continued willingness, not just a brief willingness, to be a tough cop on the beat, and the industry delivers on its promises that something like the BP blowout will never happen again," said Holstein, the former Energy Department official.

___

Associated Press Writer Dina Cappiello contributed to this report from Washington.

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NEW ORLEANS — Oil industry and government officials could get caught flat-footed again by another deep-water blowout in the coming months because they have yet to incorporate many of the lessons...
NEW ORLEANS — Oil industry and government officials could get caught flat-footed again by another deep-water blowout in the coming months because they have yet to incorporate many of the lessons...
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
10:49 AM on 10/16/2010
School was in session for the US public. Didn't you do your lesson? Lesson was Big Oil can do anything it wants and you can't stop them. In fact, you have to do whatever Big Oil wants. If they want to kill and destroy, you have to let them. The two trillion dollar's worth of deep water oil is worth more than your billions of dollar Gulf of Mexico state's total economy, according to the Cato Institute. So, we don't count. Did we learn our lesson?
03:30 PM on 10/11/2010
What happened to that "database of ideas" containing over 13,000 suggestions that BP obtained (freely) at the request of our President? Why haven't we heard anymore about it? Why is it now "secret" and not available to outside scientists, journalists and the public (that contributed all the ideas)? Why wasn't it a government maintained database? Why weren't the ideas sent to a ".gov" or ".org" site, instead of BP's proprietary DeepWaterHorizon site (a ".com")?????
07:28 PM on 10/11/2010
Questions are sins!
03:52 PM on 10/12/2010
What does that mean????
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
truth67
11:06 AM on 10/07/2010
ok, so if the goverment's estimate of the leaking oil was off by 2 million barreals a day, do you question their judgement when saying the seafood is safe?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NWBrunette
Blessed Girl
02:16 AM on 10/07/2010
Why should they? Their liability is capped at squat. The get to write off all their clean up costs. They continue to make more money in one quarter then the total of all liabilities, fines, payments, fees and various and sundry expenses related to the spill. And the regulatory "burden" on the industry still amounts to not much more than a hill of beans.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Omnix
Buddhist with an attitude...
05:40 PM on 10/05/2010
This is regulatory capture at it's finest... Let's not impose the regulations that are already on the books, and reinforced by the recent disaster, because it could hurt the economy and government revenue - oh, and the billionaires that control the oil industry.

We need to start considering other options besides waiting for our less/non-corrupt politicians to figure out how to take control of our government, and weed out or stop the totally corrupt ones...
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
12:07 AM on 10/07/2010
I agree. Suggestions, please!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
babyboomerorig
Finally, it's spring!
12:21 PM on 10/05/2010
Everybody always thinks that "it couldn't happen to me"....everybody.....until it does. None of us takes proper precautions on much of anything until we've been hit with something....anything from a traffic ticket to a life threatening illness.

It seems, though, like the other big oil companies (there aren't really that many of them) wouldn't want to take the chance on having to set up a $20B fund or to damage the ecosystem more than they already have. But....it could never happen to them, right?
12:14 PM on 10/05/2010
Is anyone surprised?

If we followed the right-wing, BP would be responsible for NOTHING and there would be NO RULES or regulations whatsoever.

So, we should stop bothering poor BP!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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07:46 AM on 10/05/2010
Ah! Big Oil!! Can't live with 'em, can't live without 'em!
07:02 AM on 10/05/2010
What a foolish article! Of course they they've learned. Just because they don't have a simple one-size fits all solution on the shelf ready to show a reporter doesn't mean a thing. It's a complex problem which is why it took BP months to stop the last one. I'm not a fan of "Big Oil" but I work on the fringes of the oil industry and I can tell you that the spill opened a lot of eyes. Several companies and a few former colleagues are making lots of money planning the response to the next disaster.
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DrBlunt
Telling it like it is....
06:18 AM on 10/05/2010
Come to think of it, what ever happened to those, Drill Baby Drill" freaks? You no longer hear a PEEP from them...
05:12 AM on 10/05/2010
Big oil is intimately tied to Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil producer. Prominent elements of the Saudi ruling family are intimately tied to Al Quaida and international terrorism (16 of the 19 9/11 hijackers came from there). The BP oil gusher and its response showed the ruthless criminal mindset of Big Oil executives for all the world to see. Draw your own conclusions.
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
05:28 PM on 10/05/2010
Something similar was posted on Huffpost two months before: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Mammon/final-deepwater-horizon-f_n_673880_56328468.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SierraSon
04:45 AM on 10/05/2010
For $200B in plant capex we can use forest waste and produce about 175B gallons of 80% clean burning fuel. Go to sites I listed in my last comment and see the technology is here. We do not need big oil. Wish we could have a similar path for healthcare!
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04:39 AM on 10/05/2010
WAKE UP AND EVOLVE OR ELSE.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=20TUY1yxGkg
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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
04:12 AM on 10/05/2010
GASP! Big Oil cares more for profit than safety?!! I'm flabbergasted!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lasjazzman
Stress = perfectionist + lousy typist!
04:02 AM on 10/05/2010
This is so ridiculously obvious that there should have been no reason to write this article at all!!! Of course the oil industry as a whole hasn't learned anything from the BP disaster -- duhhhhhhh! BP's mindset of maximum profit is the only priority (to the exclusion of all other considerations) is identical to the mindset of every other major oil company in the United States as well as most around the world. I see no reason or incentive, financial or otherwise, for this mindset to change, which to me is the ultimate tragedy!!