Monday, October 25, 2010

BP Chief Says Spill Furor Was Overblown

By REUTERS - October 25, 2010

LONDON (Reuters) — BP’s new chief executive said Monday that its rivals and the media had helped cause a climate of fear during the summer when the oil giant’s blown-out Gulf of Mexico well caused the worst ever oil spill in the United States.

The comments by the chief executive, Bob Dudley, (a dickhead, through and through) represented the latest volley in BP’s battle to rebuild its battered reputation by taking a harder line with those who have attributed the disaster to a safety culture at BP that, they said, put cost-saving before safety.

In an address to the annual conference of a British business lobbying group, the CBI, Mr. Dudley said there had been “a great rush to judgment by a fair number of observers before the full facts could possibly be known, even from some in our industry.

“I watched graphic projections of oil swirling around the gulf, around Florida, across and around Bermuda to England — these appeared authoritative and inevitable,” he said. “The public fear was everywhere.”

BP said in late July that Mr. Dudley would take over as chief executive on Oct. 1, succeeding Tony Hayward who had come under fire for his handling of the oil spill.

Mr. Dudley’s comments on Monday echoed those he made early in the 87-day crisis during a television interview, when he said scientists who argued the well was gushing up to 70,000 barrels a day were “scaremongering.”

At the time, Mr. Dudley said the “best estimate” of the flow rate was 5,000 barrels a day.

A government panel later put the flow rate at 62,000 barrels a day.

BP’s rivals including Chevron, Exxon Mobil and Royal Dutch Shell, have said they would not have drilled the blown-out well the way BP did.

The companies have also rankled at BP’s argument that the disaster highlighted failures in the industry, rather than flaws specific to BP.

Mr. Dudley also thanked the British government for its “stalwart support” in the face of harsh attacks from United States lawmakers during the crisis. “At the height of the crisis it made a big difference knowing we had such good friends at home,” said Mr. Dudley, an American.

Separately on Monday, BP said it was to sell fields in the Gulf of Mexico to the Marubeni Corporation of Japan for $650 million as it seeks to raise up to $30 billion from asset sales to pay for the oil spill.

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(What a cunt!--jef)

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