Congress Opens Probe Into Gulf Coast Oil Spill

May 10th, 2010 (3) Posted By Pat Dollard.

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The Hill:

BP and other oil industry executives may discover this week just how heavy the boot at their throats can get.

Three congressional committees are set to open investigations of the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, which was triggered by an explosion on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig last month.

Since then, an estimated 5,000 barrels of oil a day have streamed into Gulf waters, threatening fragile coastal habitats and reconfiguring the politics of offshore drilling.
BP is also under pressure from the executive branch; Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has pledged the administration will keep its boot to BP’s throat to make sure the oil giant stops and cleans up the spill.

“BP is under huge pressure to justify their practices and to explain what could have gone wrong to the extent that they know,” said Kenneth Green, an energy expert at the American Enterprise Institute.

BP officials have tried to contain the spill by lowering a giant steel and concrete structure designed to capture most of the oil flowing from the ruptured well and pump it to ships on the surface. But as dome approached the sea floor a mile below the surface, a slush of gas and water clogged the top and made it buoyant.

Now company officials are studying using a smaller box to cap the leak and sending debris into the rupture in hopes of clogging the well.

On Tuesday morning, the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee will be the first to hear from executives.

Lamar McKay, president and chairman of BP America; Steven Newman, president and chief executive of Transocean; and Tim Probert, chief health, safety and environmental officer at Halliburton, are expected to testify.

BP leased the drilling rig from Transocean. Halliburton supplied workers on the rig.

The same three executives are also scheduled to appear before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee later that day.

The House Energy and Commerce Oversight and Investigations subcommittee, meanwhile, will review the spill on Wednesday.

BP executives, including CEO Tony Hayward, have scrambled to limit the political damage from the spill by meeting with members of Congress.

So far, however, they seem to have done little to dampen criticism of the company. Several lawmakers are supporting legislation that would increase BP’s liability for economic damages from the spill, from a $75 million cap to $10 billion.

Hayward has pledged to pay to clean up the spill and for all “legitimate” damage claims.

Rep. Edward Markey (D-Mass.), the chairman of the Energy and Environment subcommittee, emerged from a closed-door meeting with oil company executives to issue a warning to the industry.

“There is going to be a blistering, scalding indictment of the practices the industry engaged in to avoid the kinds of implementation of safeguards that could have removed the likelihood or possibility of this kind of accident occurring,” Markey said last week.

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  • Hawkerdriver (Pisson the Koran)

    They will “probe” untill they find a way to cover their asses first.Just like they all have with regard to the eligibility issue.It never stops. The perpetrators never have to face accountability.

    I would wager the little oil rig sabotage plans that were meant to enable the swift passage of cap-n-kill is paying dividends beyond what any of these cretins thought at this point.With this new “I told you so” leverage for the anti-capitalist greens,we will never see domestic oil production return to what is was on our shores.Brilliant if I must say so.Sadly, for the oceans,it shows what hypocrits these enviro-nazis really are.The beauty of the natural world is the very last thing that concerns the callow bastards.

    Remember the agency that “Maxwell Smart” worked for?….”CONTROL”….They were hard at work even back then…

  • CPLGolden

    Sad thing is, all of us who work offshore have nothing but respect for our marine life and oceans; hell, most of the hands on these rigs are huge fisherman, and frequently fish the area that their own rigs occupy.

    “There is going to be a blistering, scalding indictment of the practices the industry engaged in to avoid the kinds of implementation of safeguards that could have removed the likelihood or possibility of this kind of accident occurring,” ………
    What the hell does this mean? What “practices” does this douchebag refer too? Like he has any clue. I guess he thinks that we circumvent safety measures during our drilling………..easy to say from a plush office in Washington. Out of the million or so successfully completed wells in the GOM………..he has a lot to stand on, eh?

    • Hawkerdriver (Pisson the Koran)

      Centralized control never works anywhere,anytime,ever,in anything.Those REMFs in DC will never get it,even after they have caused their very own doom.