BP
engineer's arrest may force company to reveal internal estimates on
Gulf spill
Company
disputes government figures but has fought release of its own data on
how much oil leaked into Gulf of Mexico in 2010
25
April, 2012
The
unveiling of the first criminal charges in the Gulf of Mexico
disaster could force BP to disclose a closely guarded secret – its
internal estimate of how much oil actually gushed out of its stricken
well.
It's
quite literally a billion-dollar question. The justice department,
which
announced the charges on Tuesday, against a former BP engineer,
is also suing the oil company for damages in a civil case.
Those
fines under the Clean Water Act will be decided by the amount of oil
that flowed into the Gulf, up to $4,300 per barrel if the release is
the result of gross negligence.
By
the government's account, which estimated the well released more than
4m barrels of oil before it was brought under control, that could
mean penalties as high as $17.6bn.
But
BP has always disputed the government figures, and those of
independent scientists. It has also fought in court to keep its own
internal estimates of the flow rate a secret.
Now
the affidavit released on Tuesday suggest that BP knew more oil was
coming out of the well in the early days after the explosion on 20
April 2010 than it was reporting to the federal government or the
public.
The
discrepancy could have sweeping legal implications for the oil
company in civil and criminal proceedings arising from the Gulf of
Mexico disaster.
A
day after the explosion, Kurt Mix, the former engineer charged on
Tuesday, began modelling the potential flow rate from the BP well,
according to the affidavit. He shared his estimates with an unnamed
supervisor, suggesting the well was gushing between 64,000 and
138,000 barrels of oil a day.
At
the time, however, BP and the coast guard were telling the public
there was as little as 1,000 barrels of oil coming out of the well.
BP
gradually raised its estimates in the days and weeks before the well
was finally brought under control in July 2010.
However,
the oil company refused at the time to even discuss how much oil was
coming out of the well, claiming that it was a distraction from
efforts to control the well.
The
federal government adopted a similar position – much to the
frustration of environmentalists and scientists.
"The
flow rate has never impacted the response," BP America's chief
operating officer, Doug Suttles, told the New Orleans Times Picayune
in June 2010.
He
went on to say the flow rate was "irrelevant".
The
oil company and the federal government initially claimed it was
impossible to arrive at an accurate estimate of the spill. However,
independent scientists came up with a 70,000 barrel a day flow rate
in May 2010 that turned out to remarkably close to the federal
government's final estimate.
However,
the affidavit released on Tuesday suggests that the flow rate was
crucial to the success of BP's efforts to stop the well, with a
procedure known as Top Kill. At a time when BP executives insisted
Top Kill had a 70% chance of success, Mix and other engineers were
privately warning that the procedure had little chance of working if
the flow rate was more than 15,000 barrels a day. "Too much flow
rate – over 15,000 and too large an orifice," Mix warned in a
text to a supervisor.
In
public, though, BP officials continued to say Top Kill was going
according to plan for another two days.
Those
arguments are set to continue in a federal court in New Orleans on
Wednesday, where a judge is reviewing the $7.8bn settlement reached
with 100,000 individuals for economic and medical claims.
A
few hours after Mix's arrest, the justice department filed papers
demanding BP produce its internal estimates of the flow rate, The
Times-Picayune reported.
"It
appears that BP intends to argue that the United States internal flow
rate work should be produced while BP's should be protected,"
the justice department wrote. "That position is neither fair nor
grounded in the law."
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