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CBS/AP/ May 25, 2010, 11:55 AM

BP Played Central Role in Exxon Valdez Disaster

Since a busted oil well began spewing crude into the Gulf of Mexico a month ago, the catastrophe has constantly been measured against the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster. The Alaska spill leaked nearly 11 million gallons of crude, killed countless wildlife and tarnished the owner of the damaged tanker, Exxon.

Yet the leader of botched containment efforts in the critical hours after the tanker ran aground wasn't Exxon Mobil Corp. It was BP PLC, the same firm now fighting to plug the Gulf leak.

BP owned a controlling interest in the Alaska oil industry consortium that was required to write a cleanup plan and respond to the spill two decades ago. It also supplied the top executive of the consortium, Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. Lawsuits and investigations that followed the Valdez disaster blamed both Exxon and Alyeska for a response that was bungled on many levels.

People who had a front row seat to the Alaska spill tell The Associated Press that BP's actions in the Gulf suggest it hasn't changed much at all.

Special Section: Disaster in the Gulf

The Gulf leak has grown to at least 6 million gallons since an oil rig exploded April 20, killing 11, and is almost certain to overtake Valdez as the nation's worst oil spill.

An overwhelming portion of Americans - 70 percent - disapprove of the way BP has handled the Gulf disaster, according to a new CBS News poll. Just 18 percent are satisfied.

The U.S. government has also taken a hit, though not nearly as bad.
Watching the current crisis is like reliving the Valdez disaster for an attorney who headed the legal team for the state-appointed Alaska Oil Spill Commission that investigated the 1989 spill.

"I feel this horrible, sickening feeling," said Zygmunt Plater, who now teaches law at Boston College.

The Alaska spill occurred just after midnight on March 24, 1989, when the Exxon Valdez tanker carrying more than 50 million gallons of crude hit a reef after deviating from shipping lanes at the Valdez oil terminal. Years of cost cutting and poor planning led to staggering delays in response over the next five hours, according to the state commission's report.

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What could have been an oil spill covering a few acres became one that stretched 1,100 miles, said Walter Parker, the commission's chairman.

"They were not prepared to respond at all," Parker said, referring to Alyeska. "They did not have a trained team ... The equipment was buried under several feet of snow."

The commission's report dedicated an entire chapter to failures by Alyeska, which was formed by the oil companies to run a pipeline stretching from the Arctic Ocean to the Valdez terminal. BP had the biggest stake in the consortium and essentially ran the first days of containment efforts in Prince William Sound an inlet on the south coast of Alaska.

"What happened in Alaska was determined by decisions coming from (BP in) Houston," Plater said.

Alyeska officials were notified within minutes of the Valdez spill, but it took seven hours for the consortium to get its first helicopter in the air with a Coast Guard investigator. A barge that was supposed to be carrying containment equipment had to be reloaded and did not arrive on the scene until 12 hours after the spill.

During the spill, Alyeska only had enough booms to surround a single tanker. The few skimmers it had to scoop up oil were out of commission once they filled up because no tank barge was available to handle recovered oil.

"Exxon quickly realized Alyeska was not responding, so 24 hours into the spill Exxon without consultation said, 'We're taking it over,"' said Dennis Kelso, former commissioner of the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation. "That was not necessarily a bad thing."

BP's role in the Valdez spill has been far less publicized than Exxon's, in part because the state commission wanted to stay focused and avoid fingerpointing by saying who ran Alyeska in its report. Plater said he now regrets that approach.

"In retrospect, it could've focused attention on BP and created transparency which would've changed the internal culture," he said. "As we see the internal culture appears not to have changed with tragic results."

According to Alyeska, BP owned a controlling 50.01 percent share in the consortium in 1989, while a half-dozen other oil companies had smaller stakes. Since then, BP's share in Alyeska has dropped to 46.9 percent, with the next highest owner Conoco-Phillips Inc. at 28.3 percent. The consortium works like a corporation with owners voting based on their percentage shares.

Alyeska's chief executive officer was in 1989, and is currently, a BP employee who's on the company payroll, said Alyeska spokeswoman Michelle Egan.

BP spokesman Robert Wine declined by e-mail to comment on the company's role in the Valdez spill, saying the incident was already examined thoroughly.

"We can't add to something that has been so thoroughly and publicly investigated in the past, and the results of which have been so robustly and effectively implemented," he said.

Many who observed both disasters say there are striking parallels.

For example, during BP's permit process for the Deepwater Horizon, the company apparently predicted a catastrophic spill was unlikely and if it were to happen, the company had the best technology available. Prior to the 1989 spill, Alyeska made a similar case, arguing that such a spill was unlikely and would be "further reduced because the majority of the tankers ... are of American registry and all of these are piloted by licensed masters or pilots."

Critics say the tools in both spills have been largely the same, as has BP's lack of preparedness. Then as now, the cleanup tools used across the industry are booms, skimmers and dispersants.

David Pettit, who helped represent Exxon after the Alaska spill, said he knew BP was the "main player in Alyeska" even though everyone at the time was more focused on Exxon's role.

"This is the same company that was drilling in 5,000 feet of water in 2010 knowing that what they had promised ... was no more likely to do any good now than it did in 1989," said Pettit, now a senior attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council. "It's the same cleanup techniques."

For the Gulf spill, a 100-ton containment box had to be built from scratch and wasn't deployed until two weeks after the spill, leading some to question why such emergency measures weren't ready to begin with.

"If you've told the government there's not a serious risk of a major spill, why should you spend shareholder money building a 100-ton steel box you've publicly claimed you don't think you'll ever use?" said Pettit.

Since the Gulf explosion, BP's companywide preparedness and safety record have come under sharp focus.

Onshore, BP has been criticized for the pace of improvements at some refineries. Government officials gave BP a massive $87 million fine for failing to make improvements in the five years since a blast killed 15 at its massive Texas City refinery. BP is appealing the fine.

For those who endured the Valdez spill and are now watching another catastrophe unfold, industry improvements aren't coming fast enough.

"We've gone 20 years since Exxon Valdez and have advanced ourselves as a nation and world tremendously, yet the ability to control and deal with something of this magnitude still has not been addressed," said former Homer Mayor John Calhoun, who choked up at the memories. "This is as serious and difficult a situation as you can possibly imagine."
CBS/AP
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wjksea says:
Ronald Reagan: The nine most terrifying words in the english language. "I'm from the government and I'm here to help".

Grover Nordquist, teaparty guest and speaker has said he wants government so small it can be shrunk in a bathtup.

Years of the intrusion of this sinister corporate capitalist propaganda has shrunk a strong central government that once saw to things such as school lunches and stronger education. The politicians have no boundaries between working for the private sector and entering periodically into public life to privatize the commons. Private interests whose wealth and power have over decades of legal battles and bribes, trumped the interests of communities with the interests of the bottom line and insatiable greed that couldn't care less about national boundaries other than socializing the cost of defending their global pursuits.

The people have through the years been sold a bag of deception and they have taken on the government they were seduced into asking for.
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gig76 says:
Washington Speakers Bureau -- there are many young women and young men who are just like Bristol Palin. They will go out and speak for $15,000 a speech as well. If you are going to give young Palin this, then you need to also offer to all these students who have the same story. Young Palin isn't that special. So, what is good for young Palin is also great for these young students who are single parents. Young Palin is a GED student. So are you saying that higher education is a bad thing? How hypocritical is this Washington Speaker's Bureau? How can you trash education. Does your agency receive federal matching funds? If so, we need to make sure you don't get any, since that is receiving funding from the United States of America. If you are a private industry, make it on your own. Private industry doesn't want anything to do with federal government, then strip all private industries of any and all federal funding immediately. Make private large, medium sized, and small businesses bite the dust and make it own their own or bust. Washington Speakers Bureau is no diff.
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patocc123 replies:
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same story? How many daughters of VP candidates got pregnant while thier political mother preached against pre-martial sex. The how many of the father of the child went on talk show circuits to bad mouth the grandmother of the baby.

Hmm I guess that happens alot in this country . . . Oh wait I forgot people are going to attack her for anything just for being Palins offspring. My bad I forgot how vindictive and hypocritical people are.
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tsigili says:
They also never fully cleaned up the spill (effects are still being found today), nor did Exxon ever pay all of the penalties assessed.

They simply bought off the politicians, whose personal incomes grew while in office.
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gig76 says:
This is Cheney's Castro move. Cheney has created a major problem for President Obama since he wasn't able to get to Obama with birther ignorance. Castro was rumored to have led Kennedy assassination -- Cheney has led BP to give GOP a huge boost for one more Contract on America. Cheney, hope he is proven as a treason for this BP spill and sentenced in open court firing squad. Nope Palin will be along side him for her terrible acts of violence in American Tea Party manipulation. She is just as low as Cheney. Both are great at manipulating for their personal gain. Again both Cheney and Palin did a Castro on American soil -- BP international waters drifted up on American soil. Cheney and Palin are treasonists and should be tried as such.
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gig76 says:
Palin, Tea Party members, GOP, Republicans, Libertarians want less government so why don't they drill without federal funds? Why don't these politicians from the GOP as a whole work for free, especially if they don't like federal government paying out funds. So Rand Paul should work for free. Why is he running for a political office if he is against federal funding of any sort. These people on the GOP side just want to be in control of America's dollars for their causes. They don't want any of their tax cuts to be taken away. At the end of this year, the tax cuts are to end. Hopefully they will go away. If Democrats are smart, they will block anymore wins from GOP. Anyway, Palin is just like Sarah Fergie Duchess of York. She will be broke in less than 10 years or be living on a federal pension. Now how ironic is that.
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patocc123 replies:
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Hey why don't they also quit paying into entitlement programs. Oh wait we can't go that far.
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gig76 says:
Anyone who knows anything about the oil industry knows this is an industry that is snail mail delivery. BP is from the old school of Richard Cheney who is just plain creepy. BP uses old desolvants and cleans up 20 years ago style and people are surprised. Shows many people don't understand how oil industry will take huge profits but put very little into new research. They are money hogs, greedy, and hide behind the Cheney facade. Halliberton is no different. Cheney is just as greedy and shady.
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sjc_1 says:
Alyeska said that they had the equipment and people to respond to a spill more than 20 years ago. BP lied then and they are lying now. They are incompetent idiots with only greed as their motivation. We should not believe a word they say, but we should make them pay a TON.
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Gulfcoastfish says:
Excellent reporting which confirms facts of the Valdez spill that were until now rumored. Let me say that I am an ex oil man who has lost a month of sleep over this incredulous avoidable tragedy brought on by stupid actions of a greedy company. What I propose to our US legislators is to find BP liable for environmental damage in all state and federal waters and lands. The fines should be commensurate with ability to pay. To ensure payment a lien should be placed on all US properties and assets owned by BP. I assure you they are re-titling assets as we speak. The damages I predict will be no less than $250 Billion dollars and that is if it does not kill the coral reefs off the keys you can times the damages by 5 if it does.
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patocc123 replies:
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The problem is that Democrats and Republican are in bed with them. Within todays policital extremists you can not even criticize one or the other without any/all of them screaming its not our fault or its the other guys fault.
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