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Halliburton Cited By Oil Spill Commission For Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Blowout

DINA CAPPIELLO   10/29/10 12:40 AM ET   AP

Deepwater Horizon

WASHINGTON — Tests performed before the deadly blowout of BP's oil well in the Gulf of Mexico should have raised doubts about the cement used to seal the well, but the company and its cementing contractor used it anyway, investigators with the president's oil spill commission said Thursday.

It's the first finding from the commission looking into the causes of the April 20 explosion that killed 11 workers and led to the largest offshore oil spill in U.S. history. And it appears to conflict with statements made by Halliburton Co., which has said its tests showed the cement mix was stable. The company instead has said BP's well design and operations were responsible for the disaster.

The cement mix's failure to prevent oil and gas from entering the well has been identified by BP and others as one of the causes of the accident.

BP and Halliburton decided to use a foam slurry created by injecting nitrogen into cement to secure the bottom of the well, a decision outside experts have criticized.

The panel said that of four tests done in February and April by Halliburton, only one – the last – showed the mix would hold. But the results of that single successful test were not shared with BP, and may not have reached Halliburton, before the cement was pumped, according to a letter sent to commissioners Thursday by chief investigative counsel Fred H. Bartlit Jr.

BP had in hand at the time of the blowout the results of only one of the tests – a February analysis sent to BP by Halliburton in a March 8 e-mail that indicated the cement could fail. The slurry tested in that case was a slightly different blend, and assumed a slightly different well design, but there is no indication that Halliburton flagged the problem for BP, or that BP had concerns, the letter said.

"Halliburton (and perhaps BP) should have considered redesigning the foam slurry before pumping it at the Macondo well," Bartlit wrote.

Independent tests conducted for the commission by Chevron on a nearly identical mixture were also released Thursday. The results concluded that the cement mix was unstable, raising questions about the validity of Halliburton's final test.

BP, as part of its internal investigation, also conducted independent tests that showed the cement mix was flawed, but its analysis was criticized by Halliburton, which said it was not the correct formula. BP's report also mentioned a cement test Halliburton performed in mid-April, but it appears BP obtained the results after the accident and considered its methods flawed.

By contrast, the commission obtained proprietary additives from Halliburton as well as a recipe to re-create the slurry that was used on the well. One and a half gallons of the actual mix used on the rig remain, but it is being held as evidence in criminal and civil investigations.

A spokeswoman for Halliburton said the company was reviewing the findings. BP said it would not have a comment on the panel's conclusions Thursday.

Halliburton shares dropped from near $34 to below $30 in New York trading in the half hour after the commission released its finding. The shares recovered a bit, and closed at $31.68, down $2.74, or 8 percent. BP shares rose from $40.38 to $41.28, then quickly reversed course and fell to $40.28. The shares finished trading with a gain of 49 cents at $40.59.

In testimony before the joint Coast Guard-Bureau of Ocean Energy Management investigative panel, Halliburton engineer Jesse Gagliano, when asked if he would pour the same cement again, said he would. Thomas Roth, a vice president at the company, said before a panel assembled by the National Academy of Engineering in September that Halliburton had used foam cement on 1,000 jobs, including 279 wells at 15,000 feet or deeper.

Roth faulted BP's well design and BP's decision not to run a test to confirm the cement had set properly. He also said Halliburton's cement could have been contaminated by the oil-based muds BP used to drill the well. Such contamination can form channels in the cement through which oil and gas can escape.

The independent investigators do not address other decisions that could have contributed to the cement's failure and the eventual blowout, such as BP's decision to use fewer centralizers than recommended by Halliburton. Centralizers make sure the well's piping is centered inside the well so the cement bonds correctly.

BP has also been criticized for not performing a cement bond long, a test that checks after the cement is pumped down whether it is secure. There are also questions about whether BP pumped down enough cement to seal off the bottom of the well, which was located more than three miles below sea level.

___

Associated Press writer Harry R. Weber in Atlanta contributed to this report.

___

Online:

Presidential Oil Spill Commission: http://www.oilspillcommission.gov

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WASHINGTON — Tests performed before the deadly blowout of BP's oil well in the Gulf of Mexico should have raised doubts about the cement used to seal the well, but the company and its cementing ...
WASHINGTON — Tests performed before the deadly blowout of BP's oil well in the Gulf of Mexico should have raised doubts about the cement used to seal the well, but the company and its cementing ...
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01:35 PM on 10/29/2010
Sue both HP AND Halliburton!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
waynesmyer
09:25 AM on 10/29/2010
Gulf Shrimp cooked in crude oil! Yum Yum! If you don't eat it then just go Cheney yourself!
09:20 AM on 10/29/2010
Will the billions paid out and earmarked for payment By BP now be shared by Transocean, MOEX Offshore, Anadarko Corporation and Halliburton?
Do the irate villagers not get so irate when the Unsub turns out to be American?
All of the above with the exception of BP went to court to try to limit their liability-All of the above with the exception of BP are American. Are any of the above US firms sharing involvement, contributing to the monies BP is paying in the region to subsidize for lost employment?
06:52 AM on 10/29/2010
They SHOULD have used the cement from Dick Cheney's arteries.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
peegan
Silence like a cancer grows...S/G.
06:10 AM on 10/29/2010
Well, sure enough, pull back the curtain on another disaster and there is Cheney, pulling the strings and pushing the levers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
haystakt
05:22 AM on 10/29/2010
Just another affirmation that, in equating corporations with individuals, we dig a perfect hole through what progress remains for civilization, and seed a current of neglect while awaiting the receipt, when it was us, alone, that did or did not do the work needed to have had been gotten done, to humbly move forwards ~

we can commit to enticing research and development without the instrument of war to fund it, and without the element of war to justify anticipated though misguided conflict resolution, a bastard-logic if ever there were one, impacted for profit and impractical for peace

we push for a mandate, in which all major corporate sources of pollution must adhere to a plan whereby they receive proportional subsidies to that percentile commitment of their factory floor to the specific green energy tech which will most naturally take the place of the product currently being manufactured on those floors ~

so each aspect of production morphs into green energy and craft, instrumentally, and its a phased-in approach which do the companies better good than not for their potentially rapid and sizable commitment ~ over the years and one by one, the straws will break each offender to the earth's corporate cling upon the back of our self-destruction ~ it's only an awesome test of human will & conflict resolution if we can survive our imbalance

the free market does not offer peace, it offers a profit

the peace market does not offer profit, it offers freedom
05:20 AM on 10/29/2010
Surprise! Thank you Reagan for the awsome start of the deregulation of everything and the beginning of privatisation of America. The good thing is Americans can afford to go to WalMart which markets stuff made by virtual slave labor. What a waste of time and money and men the Civil War was.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lasjazzman
Stress = perfectionist + lousy typist!
04:45 AM on 10/29/2010
Weeeelllll, THAT's a shocker! Its almost as it you could play the Six Degrees of Separation game with Dick Cheney instead of Kevin Bacon and quickly link him in some fashion to every act of major evil in the last 40 years!!!
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bub26
graze my back
05:32 AM on 10/29/2010
just look at cheney's face, it is the most sinister looking face ever to hold a high office. you don't develop a look like that from doing good deeds
05:45 AM on 10/29/2010
I have always been amazed at how many do not see what you see, what I see on that face. Wanna talk about evil....it was right there in front of us for 8 years and it lived in the white house with many jobs for nearly 30 years. Yet, again and again people turned a blind eye to what is so clearly the truth about this one. And now the price is paid with the spill and no one will ever go to jail for it b/c the rich criminals who run everything take care of each other.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
editor
My Two Sense
04:44 AM on 10/29/2010
If there is death and destruction and/or shoddy work associated with a big corporation; somehow you know that somewhere are the fingerprints of bush or cheney......
05:57 AM on 10/29/2010
yes and they will never be held accountable and no doubt none of the villians that created the Gulf spill will be held accountable. But eat the seafood....dumb unsuspecting gullible americans. Tartar sauce anyone? :)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WhatDaBleep
Right is Wrong and Left is Correct
04:42 AM on 10/29/2010
Boy its a good thing Halliburton moved its corporate headquarters to Dubai - they have no extradition treaties with the United States so the execs can do anything they want and get away with it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vetxcl
03:00 AM on 10/29/2010
added the additional dollar sign because it is big money involved.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vetxcl
02:59 AM on 10/29/2010
there's a common term members of the military might be familiar with, but could get censored here, so i'll redact it: cluster- f$$$k.
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MichaelMcKLA
I'm moving to Pandora.
04:47 AM on 10/29/2010
SNAFU: Situation Normal, All Fouled Up, only the military version doesn't use the word: Fouled. I leave the rest to your imagination.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vetxcl
04:06 AM on 10/30/2010
indeed. also that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StephenJK
All your consciousness are belong to us
02:27 AM on 10/29/2010
Can't forget about Goldman Sach's, Nalco and Corexit products. I know the people in this article won't.....

http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/features/2010/10/20101027132136220370.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lindaj3884
01:21 AM on 10/29/2010
Is anyone surprised at Halliburton. Remember they caused the electrocution of many of our soldiers in faulty installed showers in Iraq. They are all about cutting corners and shoddy work. It does not surpise me at all to hear their name come up.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
William1950
everything I say could be wrong.
01:06 AM on 10/29/2010
have y'all stopped buying petroleum products? i doubt it..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vetxcl
02:53 AM on 10/29/2010
the amzing thing is how much stuff is made from oil.