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BP Oil Spill Cleanup: Coast Guard Approves Plan To End Operation

Bp Oil Spill Cleanup

CAIN BURDEAU and DINA CAPPIELLO   11/ 8/11 10:50 PM ET   AP

NEW ORLEANS — BP will no longer be responsible for cleaning up oil that winds up on shores of the Gulf Coast unless officials can prove it comes from the company's well that blew out in 2010, causing the worst offshore spill in U.S. history, according to a plan approved by the Coast Guard and obtained by The Associated Press on Tuesday.

The plan marks the near end of the cleanup phase of the oil spill, according to the Nov. 2 agreement. Now, BP will turn its attention to restoring areas damaged by the spill that began on April 20, 2010, when the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded, killing 11 workers. About $1 billion has been set aside for those projects, an official says.

About 90 percent of the Gulf coast has been deemed clean, according to officials. The plan spells out protocol for when an area still needs to be cleaned and when BP's responsibility for that ends.

Louisiana officials wouldn't give their approval because they were concerned about what they perceived as a lack of long-term monitoring in the document. They also complained that the Coast Guard gave them only five days to review the plan, according to a letter sent to the agency by Garret Graves, a top aide to Gov. Bobby Jindal for coastal affairs.

That concern was echoed by Ralph Portier, an oil spill cleanup expert with Louisiana State University.

"If we have learned anything from Valdez and Ixtoc, there needs to be an awareness for long-term monitoring," Portier said.

He was referring to the Exxon-Valdez tanker spill in 1989 in Alaska and the 1979 Ixtoc oil rig spill in the Gulf of Mexico. He said the Coast Guard should have a plan to respond to problems that may arise.

Despite the concerns, the Coast Guard said its finalized plan would apply to Louisiana and all the Gulf states.

New oil that shows up on clean shores would be treated "as any kind of oil response," said Coast Guard spokeswoman Lt. Suzanne Kerver. Officials would try to determine where it came from. If a link to BP's now-plugged Macondo well was found, then the Coast Guard would ask the oil giant to clean it up.

Kerver says the shoreline plan outlines "the standard for clean."

BP can now start work on restoring areas damaged by the spill. Restoration plans could entail plantings, placing new sand on beaches and establishing new marsh.

"This is an important milestone in the recovery process for the Gulf Coast," said Mike Utsler, head of BP's Gulf Coast Restoration Organization. Utsler said BP has set aside $1 billion.

The company is responsible to try to fix the plant and wildlife ecosystems that were disrupted by the spill.

"We still have ongoing cleanup in sensitive wildlife nesting habitat and archeological sites," said Coast Guard Capt. Julia Hein, the federal on-scene coordinator. "However, there are significant portions of our coastline that are ready to move into the next phase, so that the Gulf Coast can start restoration projects critical to help heal the region."

Edward Owens is a technical adviser for BP and a veteran of the cleanup of the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska. He said the Gulf cleanup was in its final stages.

"We call it the polishing stages, where you try to get that nice shine on your car," he said.

Under the plan, the cleanup standards will depend on the terrain.

A bit more oil will be allowed to remain on remote wild beaches where intense cleanup could do more damage. On beaches where people live and play, BP will be off the hook once there is no visible oil or oil is "as low as reasonably practicable" to clean up.

Marshes will be deemed clean when there is no thick oil left or when officials decide that it's best to let nature clean up the mess.

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NEW ORLEANS — BP will no longer be responsible for cleaning up oil that winds up on shores of the Gulf Coast unless officials can prove it comes from the company's well that blew out in 2010, ca...
NEW ORLEANS — BP will no longer be responsible for cleaning up oil that winds up on shores of the Gulf Coast unless officials can prove it comes from the company's well that blew out in 2010, ca...
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01:29 PM on 11/10/2011
What's the plan to end BP?
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DANIELISTICALL
HISTORY IS BUT A FABLE AGREED UPON,,NAPOLEON
02:58 PM on 11/09/2011
Seize and freeze ALL of B P assets in the United States until this disaster is paid for in full THAT SHOULD SPEED THINGS UP A LITTLE………………..
EXXON CLAIMED THEY WOULD PAY FOR THEIR MISTAKES ALSO
Lessons From Exxon Valdez
But in past cases, corporations have been able to talk their way out of hefty damages. In the case of the Exxon Valdez oil spill of 1989, for example, Exxon spent more than a decade weaseling its way out of paying $5 billion in punitive damages to plaintiffs, which included more than 34,000 fishermen, natives, local governments, etc.

Exxon appealed a 1994 verdict in which an Anchorage jury awarded $5 billion in punitive damages to the plaintiffs; the damages were then halved to $2.5 billion. Then the company appealed to the Supreme Court, which capped damages at a little more than $500 million. (The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals later ruled that the company was still obligated to pay $470 million for interest on the damages.)
02:27 PM on 11/09/2011
Typical. Head over to the other article "Obama to Expand Drilling Off Gulf, In Alaska" and read the comments. As long as there's still public outcry of "drill, baby drill" and "the animals are migratory, let them move if they don't like it," how can we ever make any of these oil companies accountable when we can't be accountable ourselves and call an end to polluting the environment we live in? I suppose if some of us don't like the oil pollution, then we can just "migrate" with the animals. To where? Hell I guess.
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DANIELISTICALL
HISTORY IS BUT A FABLE AGREED UPON,,NAPOLEON
02:09 PM on 11/09/2011
B/P WE ARE SORRY FOR GETTING SALT WATER IN YOUR OIL…..

Dear B P officers,, I would like to take this time to APOLIOGIZE to you one and all for any incontinence that may occur while you were busy trying to stop the WORST MAN MADE DISASTER IN THE HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES,,, Sure I understand that SAFTEY while you drill baby drill ,, is quite EXPENSIVE and it may hurt you’re profit margin, who needs safety anyway and all YOU KILLED IS 11 PEOPLE SO FAR,,,The nerve of those American people,, demanding that you pay for the damage you have done to THE ENTIRE SOUTHERN COAST OF THE UNITED STATES,,,THE PEOPLE YOU HAVE PUT OUT OF WORK,, THE OIL SOAKED BIRDS,, AND THE MULTITUDE OF FISH ,SHRIMP, CRAB, OYSTERS AND ALL THE OTHER SEA LIFE THAT IS NOW DYING OFF BY THE THOUSANDS is small potatoes compared to the MEGA BUCKS that folks like you are raking in because there is a OIL SHORTADGE YOU KNOW,,,hopefully in twenty, thirty or forty years from now if the GULF OF MEXICO returns to its natural state I am sure the exects of B P will look back on this trying time and LAUGH,,,,,,, Meanwhile Exxon has still not payed off on the Alaska oil spill,,, what makes you think B P will not do the same?
03:01 PM on 11/09/2011
I assume you mean "incompetence" when you mention "incontinence"?

Also, as someone who actually lives on the Gulf Coast, I can assure you that the most damage to my area was done by the media rather than the actual oil spill. Our beaches and water remained almost spotless (there were clumps of oil about the size of small peas in extremely small quantities--I actually had to get down on my hands and knees and look hard to find them strewn among the driftwood, seaweed, and shells that are always present on the beach), yet the media portrayed it as such a huge catastrophe that our restaurant and other tourist venues suffered major losses for the two years following.
I'm not saying oil in the water is a GOOD thing by any means, I'm just saying that it didn't seem to be as traumatic as you make it out to be. I'm by no means an expert, but I'd definitely be telling the truth when I say that I saw no "oil-soaked birds" nor "multitude[s] of fish, shrimp, crab, oysters and all other sea life...dying off by the thousands."

If you can provide evidence, I'll readily believe it. I just haven't experienced it for myself.
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DANIELISTICALL
HISTORY IS BUT A FABLE AGREED UPON,,NAPOLEON
04:05 PM on 11/09/2011
you dont say where you live I live in the new orleans area and was working in the LA Rose LA. DURING THE SPILL,,,, the for mentioned was a common sight every day
01:28 PM on 11/10/2011
They's a beautiful beach & a sunrise here on my teevee.
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Max Shaw
My micro-bio is no longer empty.
01:31 PM on 11/09/2011
We should be sending them bill for everything that happens in that region.
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Maria Korovessis Sewell
To decimate is to reduce by one tenth.
11:37 AM on 11/09/2011
Long-term monitoring should be absolute requirement.
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Angel Whitebird
Invest in America..Buy a Congressman!
10:31 AM on 11/09/2011
90% cleaned up??!!!..Do they take us a fools!!??..
01:29 PM on 11/10/2011
In a word ... yes.
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Angel Whitebird
Invest in America..Buy a Congressman!
10:30 AM on 11/09/2011
What a bunch a creeps!
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lambdin1
What's this?
09:05 AM on 11/09/2011
Yep. This is the usual response to all disasters. Throw our hands up in the air and walk away!
01:31 PM on 11/10/2011
What's the problem? Just call your broker, put the beach house on the market and move into your Aspen house.

Or your Phoenix house if you don't like the snow.

Jeez, what a whiner.
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lambdin1
What's this?
01:49 PM on 11/10/2011
Giggle. Oh, if that were only true!
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cyanmanta
Thinking outside the box is for smart people...
06:26 AM on 11/09/2011
And now our government is bailing out the oil companies that manipulate our gas prices, pollute our coastline, and trash our nation's energy policy in order to protect their own selfish interests. And these same companies give their money to talking heads who tell us, the individual taxpayers, to pull ourselves up by our own bootstraps and stop asking for handouts. So people don't deserve bailouts, but multinational conglomerates do? "Small government", my ass...
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
02:20 AM on 11/09/2011
Oh, and this is as bassacwards as the XL Keystone pipeline and oil sands mining. Anything to keep the Big Energy owners happy, right? Might even generate a little re-election money on the side. Just saying.
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
02:15 AM on 11/09/2011
It should be plain to everyone that the 2012 re-election bid is now officially underway. Do you see anything on the news besides political coverage on MSM? No, you don't. That means the official story is politics, not pollution of the earth.
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onasphere
Job Creator. Democrat.
01:48 AM on 11/09/2011
The Macondo well is still leaking. The US Department of Justice is still barring all vessels from the site. Corexit is still being sprayed on the oil.
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cadawa
01:14 AM on 11/09/2011
Lucky BP. Poor Americans.
First the Coast Guard helps them hide the full extent of ther crimes. Now it's letting them off the hook and putting us firmly on it. I imagine the standard of proof will be incredibly high.
01:24 AM on 11/09/2011
Oil is a gift of nature. The gulf is full of oil and it comes to the surface naturally like it has been doing for thousands of years. Just because you see something that looks like oil doesn't mean it came from an oil company.
12:37 PM on 11/09/2011
true but nature created a balance with natural seeps--it can't handle what was added by incompetence of humans!
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DANIELISTICALL
HISTORY IS BUT A FABLE AGREED UPON,,NAPOLEON
02:06 PM on 11/09/2011
FALSE,,, the bp oil spill has a fingerprint that can be traced back to that well,,,TURN OFF FOX NEWS
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Bon1042
12:15 AM on 11/09/2011
wasn't there worry and speculation that the "plugged" Macondo well was or might leak oil seepage? Always thought the Coast Guard was inept at this and in bed with British Petroleum, excuse me, their ads used to say BP for "BEYOND" Petroleum. What happened to THAT concept?? I wonder. The U. S. Government is just as responsible for the toxic destruction of this Earth of ours as the actual destroyers. On Diane Riehm at the time one man said the Niger Delta is dying, like an immune system constantly being battered.

We watched while Malia asked Daddy if he had plugged the hole .... while the big oil slick was slowly.... for two... and a half.... months .... floated... it's ... way ... to the... marshes and estuaries. And then, guess what, after Obama and the gov't and BP were watching, the toxic ooze slopped over and under the "5 million feet of boom" (rah rah rah, sis boom bah) and destroyed the most unique and precious eco system of its kind on the planet.