Screw the Environment: BP and the Audacity of Corporate Greed

by: Dave Lindorff  |  ThisCan'tBeHappening

Screw the Environment: BP and the Audacity of Corporate Greed
(Image: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: Thomas Hawk, futureatlas.com)

Even as BP's blown well a mile beneath the surface in the Gulf of Mexico continues to gush forth an estimated 70,000 barrels of oil a day into the sea, and the fragile wetlands along the Gulf begin to get coated with crude, which is also headed into the Gulf Stream for a trip past the Everglades and on up the East Coast, the company is demanding that Canada lift its tight rules for drilling in the icy Beaufort Sea portion of the Arctic Ocean.

In an incredible display of corporate arrogance, BP is claiming that a current safety requirement that undersea wells drilled during the newly ice-free summer must also include a side relief well, so as to have a preventive measure in place that could shut down a blown well, is "too expensive" and should be eliminated.

Yet clearly, if the US had had such a provision in place, the Deepwater Horizon blowout could have been shut down almost immediately after it blew out, just by turning of a valve or two, and then sealing off the blown wellhead.

A relief well is "too expensive"? 

The current Gulf blowout has already cost BP over half a billion dollars, according to the company's own information. That doesn't count the cost of mobilizing the Coast Guard, the Navy, and untold state and county resources, and it sure doesn't count the cost of the damage to the Gulf Coast economy, or the cost of restoration of damaged wetlands. We're talking at least tens of billions of dollars, and maybe eventually hundreds of billions. Weigh that against the cost of drilling a relief well, which BP claims will run about $100 million. The cost of such a well in the Arctic, where the sea is much shallower, would likely be a good deal less.

Such is the calculus of corruption. BP has paid $1.8 billion for drilling rights in Canada's sector of the Beaufort Sea, about 150 miles north of the Northwest Territories coastline, an area which global warming has freed of ice in summer months. And it wants to drill there as cheaply as possible. The problem is that a blowout like the one that struck the Deepwater Horizon, if it occurred near the middle or end of summer, would mean it would be impossible for the oil company to drill a relief well until the following summer, because the return of ice floes would make drilling impossible all winter. That would mean an undersea wild well would be left to spew its contents out under the ice for perhaps eight or nine months, where it's ecological havoc would be incalculable.

BP and other oil companies like Exxon/Mobil and Shell, which also have leases in Arctic Waters off Canada and the US, are actually trying to claim that the environmental risks of a spill in Arctic waters are less than in places like the Gulf of Mexico or the Eastern Seaboard, because the ice would "contain" any leaking oil, allowing it to be cleared away. The argument is laughable. This is not like pouring a can of 10W-40 oil into an ice-fishing hole on a solidly frozen pond, where you could scoop it out again without it going anywhere. Unlike the surface of a frozen pond, Arctic sea ice is in constant motion, cracking and drifting in response to winds, tides and currents. Moreover, the blowout in the Gulf has taught us that much of the oil leaked into the sea doesn't even rise to the surface at all. It is cracked and emulsified by contact with the cold waters and stays submerged in the lower currents, wreaking its damage far from wellhead and recovery efforts. Finally, as difficult a time as BP has had rounding up the necessary containment equipment and personnel in the current blowout 50 miles from the oil industry mecca of Texas and Louisiana, the same task would be far harder to accomplish in the remote reaches of the Beaufort, far above the Arctic Circle, where there aren't any roads, much less rail lines or airports.

In fact, it was the remoteness of the Arctic staging area, and the lack of infrastructure, that has been the oil industry's main argument against a mandatory simultaneous relief well drilling requirement for offshore Arctic drilling. The industry claims it would be "too difficult" to drill two wells simultaneously, as this would require bring in and supplying double the personnel, and two separate drilling rigs.

In a hearing in Canada's Parliament last week, Ann Drinkwater, president of BP Canada, told stunned and incredulous members of Parliament that she had never compared US and Canadian drilling regulations. In fact, whether by design or appalling ignorance, she had precious little in the way of information to offer them about anything to do with drilling rules, effects of spills, or containment strategies. All she wanted was relief from "expensive" regulation, so BP could go about its business of putting yet another region of the earth and its seas at risk in the pursuit of profits.

Asked if BP knew how it would clean up oil spilling out under the winter ice in a blowout, Drinkwater told the parliamentary hearing, "I'm not an expert in oil-spill techniques in an Arctic environment, so I would have to defer to other experts on that."

"You'd think coming to a hearing like this that British Petroleum would have as many answers as possible to assure the Canadian public. We got nothing today from them," groused Nathan Cullen of the left-leaning New Democrats, after hearing from the ironically-named Drinkwater.

The fundamental problem in the US is that politicians purchased by campaign contributions are unwilling to look at the real risks of offshore drilling, whether on the two coasts or up in the Arctic region.  With luck, maybe at least the Canadian government will conclude that such drilling in their northern seas makes no economic or environmental sense. In both countries, the amount of oil provided from offshore drilling would, over the next decade, be less than could be saved by simply making automobile mileage standards stricter.

All this is even more true when the drilling in question is in the fragile ecological environs of the Arctic Ocean.

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Dave Lindorff is a Philadelphia-area journalist. His latest book is "The Case for Impeachment" (St. Martin’s Press, 2006). His work can be found at www.thiscantbehappening.net. Lindorff may be reached at dlindorff@yahoo.com


Comments

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"Well" to quote Reagan, it's

"Well" to quote Reagan, it's "too expensive" if it's your Barackorporatocracy's INTENT to despoil the respective seas' ecosystems to the ends of it being pointless to oppose further petroleum drilling therein. The Porcupine's safe, but BPrey on the polar bears and hope you prefer your baby harp seal fur stained in blood and oil, like US!



Looking to the Canadians for

Looking to the Canadians for inspiration on environmental issues is laughable. Tar Sands says it all.



Oil corps aren't expert at

Oil corps aren't expert at controlling leaks anywhere.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26315908/ns/msnbc_tv-rachel_maddow_show#37368377



If preventive measures are

If preventive measures are "too expensive" for BP then BP is too expensive for the world. We should take preventive measures to keep them from polluting the whole ocean.



The cure for all of this is

The cure for all of this is to take to the streets and begin the fight. Until and unless Americans are willing to do that, things will continue to get worse.

Seize BP's assets, arrest their corporate executives and put them in prison awaiting their trials. This is the proper response. But until and unless Americans run their own country, there will be no justice.

Running the country begins in the streets. Curing diseases like BP begins in the streets.



I don' t get--why doe s

I don' t get--why doe s ANYONE expect a large corporation, whose purpose is to maximize short term profits by doing whatever it does, should CARE if it's going to wreak environmental havoc? There is NO reason for it to do so, because if it can cut costs by polluting, history has shown that just about every corporation will. Why? Because it maximizes short term profits.

Has no one ever heard of risk/benefit analysis? One use is for large corporations to determine if a risk of some action (i.e., not using safety measures) is outweighed by the potential profits and that analysis generally includes any costs such as fines, predicted litigation, etc. Guess what? Pollution often "pays."

It is the public and its representatives--the GOVERNMENT whose responsibility it is to take into account the public's interest and, if the public has determined that maintaining a natural and relatively unpolluted environment, along w/public health is a priority (clean water act, clean air act, etc.) then to act to protect the environment or selected bird species or whatever.

It's when people, the elite or whomever they are, decide that the really only important member of the "public" is the heads of corporations, or that the primary job of gov't is to facilitate business profits by whatever means possible and EVEN IF it means thwarting or neutralizing or just ignoring those public priorities as implemented in statute & regulation that you have a problem.

You have BIG problems and that is one of main problems in the US today--people think that corporations really somehow have the greater good at "heart" or that somehow maximizing short term profits (corporate goal or maybe handing out huge bonuses to select employees becomes a primary corporate goal) will bring the "greatest good to the greatest number" or will somehow protect the environment.

All I can say to the people who continue to believe and so now are shocked, shocked that BP wants to bribe, avoid complying with safety regulations and behaves in a way the implies it could care less about oil spills in the Arctic is--what dream world have you been living on for all these years?

One of the primary functions of gov't since at least the 1800's is--when it has accepted that responsibility from the damage & injuries done by corporations, or trusts or "big business" in seeking to maximize profits.



This is so pathetically

This is so pathetically laughable that it defies logic and reason. In this politically incorrect climate, however, it will probably fly. Every man, and country, has a price. It's as if there was a bounty tag on the environment... wanted dead only. Seems everyone is trying to kill it for a pair of leather boots.



15:14, you're absolutely

15:14, you're absolutely right. There is little doubt, the Stephen Harper government will cave in on this one.
Interesting that this story should appear on the same page as the one announcing Obama's moratorium on arctic drilling.
In Canada, perhaps more than any where, greed trumps environmentalism every time, and you're right, the Tar Sands stand as a stinking example of that.



"The social responsibility

"The social responsibility of business is profit". - Milton Friedman.

Our national motto is NOT "in God we trust", it is Friedman's simple definition of capitalism. The social responsibility of business is NOT clean water or air, is NOT excellent schools, is NOT a low infant mortality rate or accessible health care for all. It IS profit.

If you vote for the capitalist imperialist candidates put forward by the two-party ruling class consensus of the Democrats/Republicans, you are voting for the perpetuation of the Friedman vision of the world. There is no half way measure. There is no nicer, kinder, more environmentally conscious, less militarily aggressive candidate, such as an Obama or a Clinton. They are expedient, pro-capitalist, pro-imperialist, bought and paid for (literally) members of the ruling class. Their job (especially the well-spoken, gentile, pretty boy Democrats like Kennedy, Carter, Clinton, and Obama) is calm you down, up you back to sleep, make you feel good while the rape, pillage, and plunder continues.