Political Hotsheet
By

Dan Farber /

CBS News/ June 18, 2010, 3:05 PM

BP CEO Hayward's Flimsy Ignorance Defense

BP CEO Tony Hayward testifies before the House Oversight and Investigations subcommittee.

/ Haraz N. Ghanbari

This commentary is by CBSNews.com Editor-in-Chief Daniel Farber.

BP CEO Tony Hayward didn't help his personal cause much in his testimony before the House Committee on Energy and Commerce subcommittee

He was consistently evasive, maintaining that he was not involved in the decision-making that may have led to the disaster in the Gulf or that he couldn't recall things.

Of course, subcommittee members, many of whom are lawyers, could hardly have expected Hayward to come clean. By asserting his ignorance of the situation and deferring any other salient information, admissions or conclusions until a thorough investigation has been completed at some undetermined time, he avoided doing more damage to BP's precarious legal and financial position.

As chief executive, Hayward wasn't likely involved in day-to-day operations at the Deepwater Horizon rig and the Macondo well. But as CEO of the oil giant, which generated $239 billion in revenue for 2009,  claiming ignorance is not a defense, it's a legal strategy. 

CBSNews.com Special Report: Disaster in the Gulf

After 59 days, he has more than a clue as to what decisions were potentially fatally wrong and who was responsible for making them before the Deepwater Horizon disappeared into the Gulf of Mexico and oil started pouring out.

For example, the letter from House members Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) and Bart Stupak (D-Mich.) to Hayward on June 14 outlined several issues related to decisions around the Macondo well that could have been factors in the blowout. 

The letter also said that  BP executives may have been under pressure to complete drilling of the Macondo well because Transocean's Deepwater Horizon rig was 43 days late for its next drilling location, costing BP as much as $21 million in leasing fees.

Among the factors cited in the letter was the number of centralizers, which keep the well casing in the center of the borehole as it is lowered into the well.  Following is a portion of the letter that describes the interactions among BP executives and contractors on the rig about the centralizers:

On April 15, BP informed Halliburton's Account Representative, Jesse Gagliano, that BP was planning to use six centralizers on the final casing string at the Macondo well. Mr. Gagliano spent that day doing a computer analysis of a number of cement design scenarios to determine how many centralizers would be necessary to prevent channeling. With ten centralizers, the modeling resulted in a "MODERATE" gas flow problem. Mr. Gagliano's modeling showed that it would require 21 centralizers to achieve only a "MINOR" gas flow problem.

Mr. Gagliano informed BP of these results and recommended the use of 21 centralizers. After running a model with ten centralizers, Mr. Gagliano e-mailed Brian Morel, BP's drilling engineer, and other BP officials, stating that the model "now shows the cement channelling" and that ''I'm going to run a few scenarios to see if adding more centralizers will help us or not." Twenty-five minutes later, Mr. Morel e mailed back:

"We have 6 centralizers, we can run them in a row, spread out, or any combination of the two. It's  a vertical hole, so hopefully the pipe stays centralized due to gravity. As far as changes, it's too late to get any more product on the rig, our only option[ ] is to rearrange placement of these centralizers."

The following day, April 16, the issue was elevated to John Guide, BP's Well Team Leader, by Gregory Walz, BP's Drilling Engineering Team Leader. Mr. Walz informed Mr. Guide: "We have located 15 Weatherford centralizers with stop collars ... in Houston and worked things out with the rig to be able to fly them out in the morning." The decision was made because "we need to honor the modeling to be consistent with our previous decisions to go with the long string."  Mr. Walz explained: "I wanted to make sure that we did not have a repeat of the last Atlantis job with questionable centralizers going into the hole." Mr. Walz added: "I do not like or want to disrupt your operations . . .. I know the planning has been lagging behind the operations and I have to turn that around."

In his response, Mr. Guide raised objections to the use of the additional centralizers, writing: " it will take 10 hrs to install them . .. . I do not like this and ... I [am] very concerned about using them."

An e-mail from Brett Cocales, BP's Operations Drilling Engineer, indicates that Mr. Guide's perspective prevailed. On April 16, he e-mailed Mr. Morel: 

"Even if the hole is perfectly straight, a straight piece of pipe even in tension will not seek the perfect center of the hole unless it has something to centralize it."

"But, who cares, it's done, end of story, will probably be fine and we'll get a good cement job. I would rather have to squeeze than get stuck ....So Guide is right on the reward equation."

On April 17, Mr. Gagliano, the Halliblllton account representative, was informed that BP had decided to use only six centralizers. He then ran a model using seven centralizers and found this would likely produce channeling and a failure of the cement job. His April 18 cementing design report states: "well is considered to have a SEVERE gas flow problem." Mr. Gagliano said that BP was aware of the risks and proceeded with knowledge that his report indicated the well would have a severe gas flow problem. 

Mr. Gagliano's findings should not have been a surprise to BP. As noted above, BP's mid-April plan review found that if BP used a single string of casing, as BP had decided to do, "Cement simulations indicate it is unlikely to be a successful cement job." Nonetheless, BP ran the last casing with only six centralizers.

During the House hearing, Rep. Jay Inslee (D-Wash.) asked Hayward about emails concerning the centralizers. He declined to address any of the specifics in the letter or discuss any of the people associated with the incident.

"I don't want to be evasive or difficult, but until we understand all that contributed to the accident, it's not easy to say," Hayward said. 

He also repeatedly said, "If there is any evidence that people put cost ahead of safety, we will take action," and declared that there is no evidence of "recklessness" on the part of BP, contradicting President Obama's characterization of the company's drilling operations in the Gulf.

It's no wonder that Congress and people suffering on the Gulf coast, among others, don't believe that the BP CEO was forthcoming enough or credible in his testimony in his appearance Washington DC. 

Hayward is a man following legal advice to "not recall" certain events, and desperately trying to keep BP and his own "rig" from sinking. 

  


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    Dan has more than 20 years of journalism experience. He has served as editor in chief of CBSNews.com, CNET News, ZDNet, PC Week, and MacWeek.

23 Comments Add a Comment
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jim3154 says:
The bottom line is that BP is the culprit here, they do what they want, when they want, they seem to br above the law as most of our politicians have dirty hands in BP. BP thinks they can do what they want to, in my city just outside Los Angeles the big shot lawyers from BP came to our Planning Commission to enlarge an Arco station into an AM/PM gas, mini mart, they were sharply dressed, knew all the laws, or thought they did. There were so many variences needed for their project, and changing zones, they knew they had our city because other cities buckled under for them to have their way, one varience was to have the gasoline isles used for parking to let customers go into their mini mart to buy what they need, plus liquor. Because there were not enough parking spaces for their size building they told the city to give them a varience on it so they could have the parking spaces needed, plus the other variences needed for BP to operate thier gas pumps and store, but our excellent planning commissioners voted them down. After their loss they could only say how BP was trying to make my city a better place. Traffic problems also were included for a no vote, they stormed out of the City Hall Chambers, only to force our City Council to vote and to overturn the no vote from the planning commission.............But they were rebuffed a second time...NO AM/PM, no mini mart, no phony parking spaces....We haven't heard from them since, but they did have a nice drawing of what they wanted, very expensive drawings and blue prints....
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user000049586849302948602 says:
Go to jail!
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gig76 says:
No more Anglican religion -- it's a farce anyway indoctrinated by immoral King Henry VIII of England's throne. Sham! Do away with anything English or British. Tea Time is a farce as well. Do away with Tea!
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gig76 says:
Put Jaguar in the red -- buy American made cars. Support America and demolish England. They deserve nothing now -- Take down Aristocrats. They ruin lives --- Gulf Coast lives and livelihood and wetland and marine life. And then they go for "boat" rides. These folks are crass! No more Jaguars in America! No more anything British in America!
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gig76 says:
Start walking, use a bicycle, lightrail that doesn't use fuel, and drive your fuel source vehicle sparingly. One of the ways to fight obesity is to walk, ride a bicycle, and keep moving. Have you ever tried to eat something while riding a bicycle? It's not easy.
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gig76 says:
Hayward is a loser, a total loser now in the business world. He may be part of the Aristocrats and celebrated in that group, but as with the fall of Rome, so too will Hayward and his cohorts.
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cuban casinoh says:
There are literally hundreds of wells in the Gulf that are owned and operated by companies far smaller then BP. What happens when there is a blowout with one of these? If memory serves the Mexican well that blew in the Gulf took over a year to control, and was in less than 200 feet of water. The U.S. taxpayer will pick up the tab just like we did for the banks.I guess we can call it GARP. Bankers and oil execs, why don't we send them all to Texas and nuke it!
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cuban casinoh says:
There are literally hundreds of wells in the Gulf that are owned and operated by companies far smaller then BP. What happens when there is a blowout with one of these? The U.S. taxpayer will pick up the tab just like we did for the banks.I guess we can call it GARP. Bankers and oil execs, why dont we send them all to Texas and nuke it!
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babooph says:
Another CEO testimony"did not know what the company does & makes no decisions"while the US propaganda system blames the union workers for company failures-the suckers believe it...
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cktirumalai says:
Tony Hayward is hardly alone in resorting to carefully orchestrated lawyer-speak in facing careful grilling, to avoid saying anything which could well have huge financial liability implications for BP. He stands out because his manner and accent are British.
Candadai Tirumalai
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