Originally posted by: CaptnKirk
Originally posted by: Whoozyerdaddy
Check up a couple of posts and you can see where I reversed field. Obviously they are not keeping the standards that others on the slope are. Pig maintenance and inspection is supposed to be conducted every two weeks or so.
The last time BP ran a full pig inspection was in 1992. 14 years ago. Totally unacceptable. Other camps up there are running routine pig tests every two weeks. The main pipeline that runs from Prudhoe to Valdez get "pigged" every two weeks as well.
BP is obviously negligent in the maintaining of their feeder lines as well as their main artery to the pipeline. The process to hold them criminially responsible for the spill last winter is under way. This negligence will most likely involve more criminal charges against the company and rightfully so.
Accidents happen and they are a part of the oil business. But this is no accident. This is pure neglect and BP should have the book thrown at them.
Noted your re-evaluation of the developing culpability of BP & it's association of unindicted co-conspirators.
If you re-read any of my posts on this thread, each was an attempt to disclose and point out an obvious
management decision to ignore performing of maintainence and upkeep on a critical section of pipeline
where they had a shared responisbility with at least 2 other cororations.
Those companies did their job and it was at an added cost to those companies.
BP's oversight was detramental to the industry as a whole, and the only reason would be for BP to make more profit,
as simply not doing those PM tasks that were required would result in more run time for them to transport product
as wel as side stepping the cost of performing the workmanship and labor costs associated with it . . . for 14 damn years.
So now here we are, with a severly compromised POL conduit which will have to be partially and sequentially shut down
to replace sections of pipeline that have deteriorated under BP's oversight, and drive everyones price up . .
but potentially to award even higher proffit to the bad actor who facilitated this mess.
BP has no loyalty to Alaska and it's citizens, nor to the United States as a whole.
Their loyalty lies with maximizing profit at the expense of the United States and their customers
for the financial gain of a close minded group of protected British Businessmen who are only loyal to themselves.
Question of the moment: Do we continue to reward these cheating bastards by letting them keep control
of the assets that they have proved over and over again that they continue to mis-manage,
or do we punish them by not only fining them, but stripping them of their undeserved assets and
reassign those assets to a different Petrochemical Consortium who has a better track record?
Personally - I have not bought a drop of product from any Exxon dealer since the Spill way back when,
&
I am adding ALL BP products to my Personal Boycot list.
There are other companies around that I can choose to deal with, don't need their BP-BS.