The 'other' spill BP will be keeping quiet

ericlp

Diamond Member
Dec 24, 2000
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http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/index.php/news/content/view/full/91000



With the Gulf Coast dying of oil poisoning, there's no space in the press for British Petroleum's most recent spill.
Just last week over 100,000 gallons were lost at its Alaska pipeline operation. A hundred thousand used to be a lot. It still is.
Last Tuesday, Pump Station 9, at Delta Junction on the 800-mile pipeline, busted. Thousands of barrels began spewing an explosive cocktail of hydrocarbons after "procedures weren't properly implemented" by BP operators, say state inspectors.
"Procedures weren't properly implemented" is, it seems, BP's company motto.
Few in the US know that BP owns the controlling stake in the transalaska pipeline. Unlike with the Deepwater Horizon rig, BP keeps its name off the big pipe.
There's another reason for the company to keep its name off the pipe - its management of it stinks. The pipe is corroded, undermanned and "basic maintenance" is a term BP has never heard of.
How does BP get away with it? The same way the Godfather got away with it, bad things happen to folks who blow the whistle. BP has a habit of hunting down and destroying the careers of those who warn of pipeline problems.
In one case, BP's CEO of Alaskan operations hired a former CIA expert to break into the home of whistleblower Chuck Hamel, who had complained of conditions at the pipe's tanker facility.
BP tapped his phone calls with a US congressman and ran a surveillance and smear campaign against him. When caught, a US federal judge said BP's acts were "reminiscent of nazi Germany."
This was not an isolated case. Captain James Woodle, once in charge of the pipe's Valdez terminus, was blackmailed into resigning from the post when he complained of disastrous conditions there. The weapon used on Woodle was a file of faked evidence of marital infidelity. Nice guys, eh?
Two decades ago, I had the unhappy job of leading an investigation of British Petroleum's management of the Alaska pipeline system. I was working for the Chugach villages, the Alaskan natives who own the shoreline slimed by the 1989 Exxon Valdez tanker grounding.
Even then, a courageous, steel-eyed government inspector, Dan Lawn, was hollering about corrosion all through the BP pipeline. I say "courageous" because Lawn kept his job only because his union's lawyers have kept BP from having his head.
It wasn't until 2006, 17 years later, that BP claimed to have suddenly discovered corrosion necessitating an emergency shutdown of the line.
It was pretty damn hard for BP to claim surprise in August 2006 that corrosion required shutting the pipeline. Five months earlier, Lawn had written his umpteenth warning when he identified corrosion as the cause of a big leak.
BP should have known about the problem years before that - if only because it had taped Dan Lawn's home phone calls.
I don't want readers to think BP is a British marauder unconcerned about the US.
The company is deeply involved in US democracy. Bob Malone, until last year the chairman of BP America, was also Alaska State co-chairman of the Bush re-election campaign.
Bush, in turn, was so impressed with BP's care of Alaska's environment that he pushed again to open the state's Arctic wildlife refuge to drilling by the BP consortium.
You can go to Alaska today and see for yourself the evidence of BP's care of the wilderness. You can smell it - the crude oil is still on the beaches from the Exxon Valdez spill.
Exxon took all the blame for the spill because it was dumb enough to have the company's name on the ship.
But it was BP's pipeline managers who filed reports that oil spill containment equipment was sitting right at the site of the grounding near Bligh Island.
However the reports were bogus - the equipment wasn't there and so the beaches were poisoned. At the time, our investigators uncovered four-volumes worth of faked safety reports and concluded that BP was at least as culpable as Exxon for the 1,200 miles of oil-destroyed coastline.
Nevertheless, we know BP cares about nature because it has lots of photos of solar panels in its annual reports - and it has painted every one of its gas stations green.
The green paint job is supposed to represent the oil giant's love of Mother Nature. But CEO Tony Hayward knows it stands for the colour of the Yankee dollar.
In 2006, BP finally discovered the dangerous corrosion in the pipeline after running a "smart pig" through it. The "pig" is an electronic drone that BP should have been using continuously, though it had not done so for 14 years. Another "procedure not properly implemented."
By not properly inspecting the pipeline for over a decade, BP failed to prevent that March 2006 spill which polluted Prudhoe Bay. And cheaping out on remote controls for its oil well blow-out preventers appears to have cost the lives of 11 men on the Deepwater Horizon.
But then failure to implement proper safety procedures has saved BP not millions but billions of dollars, suggesting that the company's pig is indeed, very, very smart.
Greg Palast investigated charges of fraud by BP and Exxon in the grounding of the Exxon Valdez for Alaska's Chugach Natives. This article appeared at buzzflash.com



Just goes to show why you REALLY should BOYCOTT anything and EVERYTHING BP!

The company can't maintain anything and it doesn't have a back up plan for anything. Our government should just boot PB out of the USA they seem pretty incompetent to me.
 

cubeless

Diamond Member
Sep 17, 2001
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oliver stone movie time...

great job our enviro conscious admin is doing all around... glad they replaced the greedy incompetents that came before them...
 

CLite

Golden Member
Dec 6, 2005
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To be fair the spill occurred in an area that had containment dikes. This spill will have pretty much no environmental impact, although it will increase the bad press for BP and raise questions about their maintenance and reliability programs (as it should).
 

ericlp

Diamond Member
Dec 24, 2000
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I guess your waiting for it to spill someplace where it's going to have a REAL environmental impact? Sheesh. It's just a matter of time. Maybe we should just wait around for that happen to give you a good excuse huh?
 

Thump553

Lifer
Jun 2, 2000
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I could not access the original story, but I question the authenticity of a news report that doesn't use proper grammar. Is this some kind of blog?

BTW a while back I saw an excellent documentary on the building of the Alaskan pipeline on either History or Discovery. One thing I got from that is crude oil is corrosive. I forget what the expected lifetime of the pipeline was but I remember we were getting close to or had already exceeded it, so maintainence costs will go way up.
 

CLite

Golden Member
Dec 6, 2005
1,726
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I guess your waiting for it to spill someplace where it's going to have a REAL environmental impact? Sheesh. It's just a matter of time. Maybe we should just wait around for that happen to give you a good excuse huh?

If you read my responses to any other thread you will recognize I fully condemn BP as a terrible company. I am merely pointing out why this story might not have been getting as much press.
 

Nik

Lifer
Jun 5, 2006
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Boycotting is fucking ridiculous. What a bunch of freakin lunatic fanatics. Clean it up, fire those who broke the law and company policy and safety guidelines, replace them, move on.
 

Throckmorton

Lifer
Aug 23, 2007
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Boycotting is fucking ridiculous. What a bunch of freakin lunatic fanatics. Clean it up, fire those who broke the law and company policy and safety guidelines, replace them, move on.

Exercising the power of your wallet on the free market is fucking ridiculous?
 

Nik

Lifer
Jun 5, 2006
16,101
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Exercising the power of your wallet on the free market is fucking ridiculous?

Boycotting has become an ignorant fad. The only thing it does is inconvenience the few who do it. It doesn't have ANY impact on a company that big.
 

CrossFyer

Member
Dec 31, 2009
50
0
0
no impact, unless the whole country gets pissed at them?
wait, I think we might just be.

you sure won't catch me buying from BP, impact or not, I just won't.
 

FaaR

Golden Member
Dec 28, 2007
1,056
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The company can't maintain anything and it doesn't have a back up plan for anything. Our government should just boot PB out of the USA they seem pretty incompetent to me.
What are you so upset over? This is the free market at work. It's what you americans want. Hell, some of you want to make it even free-er, so that companies don't have to report to anyone for anything.

Again, it's what you people want. Why are you complaining when you're getting that which you desire...? This is how free predatory capitalism works. If something costs money, you can save that money by not paying. Simple as that.
 

CycloWizard

Lifer
Sep 10, 2001
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I could not access the original story, but I question the authenticity of a news report that doesn't use proper grammar. Is this some kind of blog?
Agreed. I don't even think BP's name is "British Petroleum" anymore.
BTW a while back I saw an excellent documentary on the building of the Alaskan pipeline on either History or Discovery. One thing I got from that is crude oil is corrosive. I forget what the expected lifetime of the pipeline was but I remember we were getting close to or had already exceeded it, so maintainence costs will go way up.
Yes, oil is corrosive. The first petroleum engineering course I took was taught by a guy who wrote his dissertation on oil pipeline corrosion (funded by Shell). Turns out it's very complicated, but there are plenty of strategies to combat it, such as injecting additives into the feed stock, varying relative gas/liquid flowrates, superficial velocities of both phases, and the operating pressures of the pipelines.
 

CycloWizard

Lifer
Sep 10, 2001
12,348
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What are you so upset over? This is the free market at work. It's what you americans want. Hell, some of you want to make it even free-er, so that companies don't have to report to anyone for anything.

Again, it's what you people want. Why are you complaining when you're getting that which you desire...? This is how free predatory capitalism works. If something costs money, you can save that money by not paying. Simple as that.
Do you really think this occurred in a free market? If so, you're an idiot. The alternative - that you're simply trolling - also makes you an idiot. Either way, you're an idiot.
 

CLite

Golden Member
Dec 6, 2005
1,726
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Despite the blog source there is other news coverage of this spill, including a Google image of the location showing the contained spill.

While oil lines are naturally corrosive the blog is correct in pointing out that BP has been criminally negligent in maintaining and inspecting the Alaska pipelines it owns. The wiki article regarding the Prudhoe Bay incident is actually very well documented linking many news sources with direct quotes from the congressional hearings.

They purposely reduced the corrosion inhibitor injections due to budget, failed to use the smart pig inspection for over a decade, and ignored the loss of flow alarms a total of four times in the week leading up to the spill. As the CEO of the CSB is quoted as saying the root causes leading up to Prudhoe Bay strongly echoed the Texas City explosion, which were a complete lack of desire to invest in the plants for even the most basic safety measures.

The bottom-line is that BP lets budget dictate safety measures, which is a striking difference from my experience working at Valero & Exxon refinery sites.
 

Nik

Lifer
Jun 5, 2006
16,101
3
56
no impact, unless the whole country gets pissed at them?
wait, I think we might just be.

you sure won't catch me buying from BP, impact or not, I just won't.

Why are you getting all up in arms about an oil spill?

You're acting like they did the Gulf spill on purpose. :rolleyes:
 

JEDIYoda

Lifer
Jul 13, 2005
33,986
3,321
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Originally Posted by CrossFyer
no impact, unless the whole country gets pissed at them?
wait, I think we might just be.

you sure won't catch me buying from BP, impact or not, I just won't.

hahahha you probably borrow your fathers car........rofl..hahaha