Oil Spill

  • March 17, 2011
    Guest Post

    By Sidney Shapiro, Associate Dean for Research and Development, University Distinguished Chair in Law, Wake Forest University School of Law. Shapiro is a member of the Board of Directors of the Center for Progressive Reform (CPR).
    It's been nearly a year since crude oil from deep beneath the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig, under lease to BP, began to surge into the Gulf of Mexico, in what would turn out to be the beginning of a three-month polluta-polluza. Rather like the unfolding nuclear disaster in Japan, the prospect of such an oil well blowout in the Gulf was regarded by industry and regulators as extremely unlikely. At least in the Gulf, that meant that planning for such a catastrophe was given low priority - too often a mere paper-pushing exercise. When the all-but-impossible turned out to be all too possible, it laid bare a string of failures that helped make the disaster happen, complicated clean-up, and now, 11 months later, is making it difficult for the victims and their surviving family members to recover damages from BP and its contractors.

    For the 126 workers on the Deepwater Horizon that night, the sounds and images of those failures must have been terrifying beyond imagining. Eleven of them didn't make it home alive, and another 17 were severely injured. The rest escaped in lifeboats or by jumping into oily seawater while a fire raged overhead. Nearly three months later, after an estimated 4.9 million barrels of oil had spewed into the Gulf of Mexico, the damage spanned hundreds of miles of shoreline and thousands of square miles in the Gulf. Clean-up efforts continue to this day, and will for some time, although oil along the bottom of the ocean is unreachable.

    The BP Oil Spill was not just a really unlucky break, as the oil industry would like us to think it was, but was the product of corner-cutting by industry, with the tacit approval of government. If the agency then called the Minerals Management Service (MMS) had been serious about its job of reviewing safety plans to make sure they would work, BP might never have gotten approval to drill. But that wasn't how MMS worked. It saw its role as helping to keep the oil flowing, not making sure that BP and the rest of the industry took their safety obligations seriously.

    There were other regulatory failures, as well, and a number of Member Scholars from the Center for Progressive Reform meticulously documented them in our October 2010 report, Regulatory Blowout: How Regulatory Failures Made the BP Disaster Possible, and How the System Can Be Fixed to Avoid a Recurrence. But there's another failure, an ongoing failure, at work in the Gulf as well, one that's making it harder for the victims of the BP Spill - the survivors, the relatives of those killed, businesses and employees who lost their livelihoods as a result of the damage, and others - to recover.

  • June 21, 2010
    Guest Post

    By Amanda Cohen Leiter, Associate Professor, Columbus School of Law, Catholic University of America
    The latest estimate of the rate of oil spilling from BP's well in the Gulf of Mexico is a staggering 60,000 barrels per day. But what does that number mean?

    We are growing sadly familiar with the qualitative implications of this deluge: economic catastrophe and immeasurable heartache for Gulf Coast residents; utter devastation for the Gulf's treasured ecosystems; another unsolvable problem for an administration already overwhelmed.

    Leak statistics:

    The quantitative implications, too, are shocking. Based on the latest estimate, the Deepwater Horizon well has leaked:

    • 3.8 million total barrels;
    • 159 million total gallons, or 
    • 8 cups of oil for every man, woman, and child in the United States.

    Oil use statistics:

    There's another side to the quantitative story, though. Although 8 cups of oil per American sounds like a lot-and no doubt feels like far too much to the unsuspecting denizens of Gulf wetlands, fishing grounds, and shorelines-that quantity pales in comparison to our per-capita oil use. Here are a few statistics:

    • According to the Department of Energy's Energy Information Administration, every person in the United States consumes an average of 3 gallons of oil each day, so
    • A well leaking 60,000 barrels of oil per day would barely meet the needs of a single city the size of Jacksonville, Florida, and
    • The entire quantity of oil that has spilled into the Gulf would only be enough to power this country for about 4 hours.

  • April 30, 2010

    The massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, which has reportedly reached the coast, is threatening fisheries and fragile ecosystems, and spurring litigation.

    A group of Louisiana fisherman, shrimpers and commercial boaters filed suit against BP, the oil company renting the offshore drilling rig that continues to spill oil into the Gulf after a deadly explosion. According to an attorney involved in the suit, Daniel Becnel Jr., people from all five states lining the Gulf Coast have voiced interest in joining the expanding class action.

    Coast Guard officials estimate that the now-sunken rig is continuing to leak 5,000 barrels of oil daily -- five times the initial estimate. There is no indication that the well will be sealed any time soon.

    The spill provoked significant responses from federal and state officials. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal declared a state of emergency. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano called the incident "a spill of national signifigance," and created two command posts in Alabama and Louisiana to monitor the federal response. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar launched an immediate review, including on-site inspections of 30 offshore drilling rigs and 47 production platforms operating in the Gulf. The U.S. Navy and Air Force are also included in managing the spill, lending scores of vessels and aircraft to an operation already involving over 1,000 people.