Posts Tagged ‘Gulf oil spill’

AP News Video: U.S. Sues BP, 8 Other Companies in Gulf Spill

Evans Liberal Politics
December 15, 2010

 

U.S. Sues BP, 8 Other Companies in Gulf Spill

Read The AP article hosted on Google News:
Govt sues BP, 8 other companies in Gulf oil spill

Video: Fishermen question Gulf seafood safety

Evans Liberal Politics
December 5, 2010

 

Fishermen question Gulf seafood safety

BP Readies New Plan to Contain Oil Leak

Evans Liberal Politics
July 10, 2010

 

BP Readies New Plan to Contain Oil Leak

 

BP Readies New Plan to Contain Oil Leak, © The Wall Street Journal, July 10, 2010, by Susan Dakar, photo © BP, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Oil giant BP PLC said it could start work on a new effort to contain the crude gushing from the leak in the Gulf of Mexico as early as Saturday.

BP said in a letter to the federal government’s spill recovery coordinator Friday that it would commence work on a new containment cap because there was a good weather window even though it means more oil will flow into the Gulf temporarily.

27,000 Abandoned Wells
Pose Threat to Gulf Coast


The letter came in response to Ret. Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen’s demands that BP outline its plans. BP projected it could finish the new-cap operation in five days if it doesn’t encounter any unexpected hurdles. Its contingency plan puts the finish time as nine days from commencement of the work. If all goes well, the new system could stop the flow of oil into the Gulf, which has despoiled the fragile coast, rendering some fishing area off limits and soaking untold numbers of sealife in toxic crude.

However, removal of the cap in place now before another collection vessel is brought into full operation would mean significantly more oil would gush into the Gulf as work on the new containment system progresses.

BP could begin removing the containment cap over its gushing well tomorrow kicking off a process to replace it with a stronger device that could take several days. Ben Casselman has details. Plus, behind the rally in stocks and World Cup Preview.

BP declined to comment on the contents of its letter.

Oil has been spewing into the Gulf at many thousands of barrels a day after a BP-owned well had a blowout on April 20, killing 11 workers. The containment cap currently being used has allowed some of that oil to be captured and funneled to a ship on the surface of the water.

The process of putting the new cap in place needs to be started soon because the weather forecast is clear for the next week, Adm. Allen said. The stronger cap will increase the collection system’s ability to withstand storms during what’s expected to be a very active hurricane season.Once BP removes the cap from the top of the failed blow-out preventer on the sea floor, the capacity to capture oil gushing from the leak will temporarily drop.

BP also said the latest arriving oil-collecting vessel, known as the Helix Producer, could start up by Sunday. It should roughly double the site’s capacity to capture oil to about 53,000 barrels a day.

a new containment cap manufactured in the last several weeks promises to shut off all oil leaking from the Deepwater Horizon well

While the new cap could be able to contain all of the oil flowing from the well, BP and the government have always placed more faith in the ability of a relief well to stop the spill. Adm. Allen said drilling of the relief well, underway now, could be finished by mid-August. Some BP officials are more optimistic and told The Wall Street Journal in an interview this week that they hope to have it done by the end of July.

Read the full story here.

See Is it Almost Over? BP Will Try to Stop Oil Flow Next Week , Truthout, July 9, 2010, by Marc Seibel, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Washington – In a dramatic turn of events, the Obama administration has given BP the go-ahead to remove the containment cap atop the runaway Deepwater Horizon oil well and replace it with a tighter fitting one in an attempt to stop all the oil now flowing into the Gulf of Mexico, perhaps as soon as the middle of next week.

If successful, no oil would gush into the Gulf of Mexico for the first time since soon after the Deepwater Horizon exploded in flames on April 20.

Thad Allen, the Obama administration’s point man on the oil spill, said Friday that the current containment cap will be removed on Saturday and that installation of the new one would begin three or four days later.

Once the new cap is in place, engineers will attempt to stop any oil from flowing out.

“Our first goal,” Allen said of the new containment device, “would be to shut . . the well in. In other words, close all the means of oil to escape.”

UPDATE: Watch Gulf Well Cap Removed, Oil Gushes Freely Again, AP News Video on YouTube — 1:17.

Mitigating Annihilation

Evans Liberal Politics
July 7, 2010

 

Mitigating Annihilation

 

Mitigating Annihilation, Truthout, photo essay, July 2, 2010, by Dahr Jamail, quoted verbatim:

From the air, the area north of Grand Isle, Louisiana, much of it around Barataria Bay, looks like scorched earth. This area has been and is heavily afflicted by BP’s oil. The so-called cleanup efforts, including laying out booms to supposedly prevent oil from destroying more marsh and killing more wildlife, are a farce.

Opaque, multi-color sheen stains much of the bay and is visible in countless inlets that snake their way into the marsh. The contrast between the green marsh area yet to be soiled and the marsh already blackened by the oil and the sheen covered Gulf water is stark. The afflicted water appears as a lifeless, dull, silvery fluid.


Photo by Erika Blumenfeld © 2010


Photo by Erika Blumenfeld © 2010

While BP has put forth great effort in securing tax benefits acquired from leasing rigs like the sunken Deepwater Horizon,  it has also saved money by choosing not to pursue better cleanup methods and technologies. We live in a corporate world where profit is god. Profit rules. Showing a profit on the next quarterly earnings statement is everything. This is how a multi-billion dollar oil giant like BP (yes, we can include the others as well – Exxon/Mobile, ConocoPhillips, Royal Dutch Shell, Chevron, Total S.A.) spends vast troughs of money on developing the latest oil exploration and drilling technologies. But when it comes to cleaning up their toxic mess when disaster strikes, every expense is spared.

Many people across varying industries working in the so-called cleanup effort understand that laying out boom to contain oil is largely an act designed primarily to impress politicians and uninformed media. The so-called cleanup work BP is engaged in on the soiled Gulf Coast has been shoddy, at best,  including allegations that BP has been dumping sand atop oil on beaches to cover it up. Controlled oil burns in the Gulf are also, needless to say, coming under criticism for their devastating impact on the environment, in addition to negatively impacting the human health of residents on Louisiana’s coast.

But this should not come as a surprise, given that one of the first things BP did in the immediate aftermath of the Deepwater Horizon disaster was to launch a campaign to strengthen its legal defense with the best attorneys money can buy, rein in legal teams and buy up experts who might otherwise work for plaintiffs in cases against the oil giant.

The more we see of this so-called cleanup and containment plan of BP’s, the more it appears to be the second largest contributing factor in destroying the ecology and culture of the Gulf region, behind, of course, BP’s oil volcano at the floor of the Gulf.

From the air, we see the same boom catastrophe as we did from our recent boat trip into the marsh. In some areas, boom does little more than outline the dead areas of the marsh, having gathered into piles and left to soak oil directly onto the land.


Photo by Erika Blumenfeld © 2010

Time after time, we fly over small marsh islands, their shores scorched by oil, the marsh grass immediately dying, surrounded by boom.


Photo by Erika Blumenfeld © 2010

Sheen covers the water, held against the islands by the booming.


Photo by Erika Blumenfeld © 2010

“It’s as though the booms do nothing more than hold oil in the marsh, rather than keeping it out,” I comment into my headphones as we fly low, just above the soiled islands. Charlie, our pilot, nods.

Erika hangs out her open window, taking hundreds of photos of the destruction caused by BP’s criminal negligence.


Photo by Erika Blumenfeld © 2010


Photo by Erika Blumenfeld © 2010

The vile physical destruction of these fragile wetlands is an ominous precursor of worse that is to come. Wildlife experts recently reported that the toll on sea birds from the BP catastrophe will soon change dramatically for the worse.

“Scientists warn that as shifting weather and sea conditions conspire with the dynamics of avian life cycles, a tremendous number of birds will soon be put in jeopardy,” says an article in Scientific American. “In the coming weeks, millions of waterfowl and other birds that flock to the U.S. Gulf Coast on their annual fall migration will arrive in the region either to roost for the winter or to make brief stopovers en route farther south. With toxic crude still gushing from the floor of the Gulf of Mexico and streaks of the slick creeping inexorably farther inland, many more birds and other wildlife that nest, feed and find shelter on shore are likely to become casualties.”

This warning has sparked a desperate rush to try to find ways to lure tens of millions of migrating birds away from the oil-infested marsh that has historically served as their habitat.

“The impact of the Gulf disaster on migrating birds will be like a train derailment during rush hour,” Frank Gill, president of the National Audubon Society, said. “Not only will it affect the entire system, but its repercussions will be long-lasting.”

This concern has spurred the USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service to launch a $20 million program that aims to pay landowners in the Gulf region to idle land, restore wetlands and enhance habitat.

Will it work? This worsening disaster shows us how futile it is to tinker with nature – whether it be via drilling for oil in the depths, or then trying to mitigate the annihilation of nature and life in ways that often make the situation worse via unforeseen consequences.

And this comes on the heels of destruction in this area caused by oil and gas companies that spans decades. “They dug these canals that have let the saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico into what used to be fresh-water marshes,” Charlie, who has spent more than five years flying over this area, tells us while we fly over the remnants of what used to be a fertile, green carpet of a marsh, “that let all the saltwater in that killed the marsh. This land is now fractured. It’s blown all to hell.”

Most of the small marsh islands we fly over are soiled black and brown by BP’s oil. Some of the worst areas are surrounded by brand-new, pure white boom that has no oil on it. This boom, aside from possibly keeping more oil from reaching the already destroyed area, functions as little more than show, given that the oil has already contaminated the marsh island.


Photo by Erika Blumenfeld © 2010

Sheen covers most of the bay. As we fly low over shallower areas, ripples move across the sheen that are caused by schools of fish moving just below the surface.

In another area, a pelican flies parallel to a red boom. I wonder if it will land in sheen-covered water, or if its rookery has already been destroyed.


Photo by Erika Blumenfeld © 2010


Photo by Erika Blumenfeld © 2010

Charlie flies us out near the barrier islands that separate the bay from the Gulf of Mexico. Between two of the islands, just behind one of them, a series of barges are being set up, end on end, in a crude attempt to block off the pass between two islands.


Photo by Erika Blumenfeld © 2010

“Here’s where they are trying to block a pass to keep the oil from getting into the bay,” Charlie explains while banking the plane so Erika can get a clear view, “But the wolf is already in the hen house.”

It is impossible to articulate the futility of these cleanup and preventative efforts.


Photo by Erika Blumenfeld © 2010

We do not see one marsh island surrounded by boom that has actually kept oil or sheen from reaching it.


Photo by Erika Blumenfeld © 2010

But, again, we are looking at a company that only by threat of lawsuit by the Center for Biological Diversity agreed to stop incinerating endangered sea turtles alive.

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Erika Blumenfeld is an internationally exhibiting artist and Guggenheim fellow with a BFA in photography from Parsons School of Design. She is known for her Light Recordings series and her ambitious work The Polar Project, a series of environment-focused artworks that document the environment of Antarctica and the Arctic. Blumenfeld’s installations have been exhibited widely in galleries and museums in the US and abroad and have been featured in Art In America, ARTnews and more than half a dozen books. She is posting her photographs of the Gulf Coast on her blog.

See News in Brief: Gulf Awash in Abandoned Oil and Gas Wells, and More …, Truthout, July 7, 2010, by James Russell.

See Gulf awash in 27,000 abandoned wells — and no one at all is checking to see if they are leaking, The Associated Press on The Raw Story, by Jeff Donn and Mitch Weiss.

See British climate scientists cleared of dishonesty, Agence France Presse on The Raw Story, July 7, 2010, excerpt quoted verbatim:

LONDON — Scientists at a top British research unit embroiled in a row over climate research were cleared of dishonesty on Wednesday but their lack of openness was criticised.

Climate change sceptics claimed hacked emails showed the scientists had manipulated and suppressed key data to support a theory of man-made climate change.

The row was sparked when hundreds of emails were hacked from the servers of the University of East Anglia (UEA) in eastern England and posted online.

But the concerns were largely dismissed by the report.

The Independent Climate Change Email Review found nothing in the emails to undermine reports from the United Nations’ climate change panel.

See Whistleblower: Relief payments get slashed if fishermen refuse to work for BP, The Raw Story, July 6, 2010, by Stephen C. Webster, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Any relief payment plan established in the wake of the worst environmental accident ever was bound to have its flaws, but this goes to a whole new level of wrong.

According to Gulf resident Kindra Arnesen, who turned whistleblower and full-time activist when she saw how many people were put out of work by the spill, BP will deduct money from individual payments on claims for lost income if the claimant refuses to work in assisting the spill response.

Reading from a letter she’d received from BP, Arnesen quoted the company’s line:

“BP will continue its efforts to pay legitimate claims for losses incurred due to the Deepwater Horizon incident. However, federal law clearly provides for adjustments for all income resulting from the incident, all income from alternative employment or businesses undertaken [...] and potential income from alternative employment or businesses not undertaken but reasonably available.”

In other words, if you are a fisherman who was put out of work by BP and you do not elect to work in their employ, but you still file a claim for losses over the Deepwater Horizon disaster, that claim could be significantly less than the actual damages incurred.

From Sierra Club: Protect Communities from Toxic Coal Ash‏ – You’ve sent in your stories, attended rallies, written letters to the editor, and sent messages to the EPA, the White House, and the Office of Management and Budget — and now it’s all paying off. The EPA heard our call and is holding a 90 day comment period on new regulations that will protect communities from toxic coal ash.

Help give the EPA the support it needs to take on the coal industry by sending a public comment today.

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AP Impact: Gulf Awash in 27,000 Abandoned Wells


 

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Video: CNN: Feds Suspend First Amendment Rights in Gulf Oil Spill Region

Evans Liberal Politics
July 4, 2010

 

CNN: Feds Suspend First Amendment Rights
in Gulf Oil Spill Region

 

Whistle blower to testify on oil spill worst fear: BP deliberately sinks oil with Corexit as cover up

Evans Liberal Politics
July 1, 2010

 

Whistle blower to testify on oil spill worst fear:
BP deliberately sinks oil with Corexit as cover up

 

Whistle blower to testify on oil spill worst fear: BP deliberately sinks oil with Corexit as cover up, San Francisco Examiner, June 30, 2010, by Maryann Tobin, quoted verbatim in the public interest.

Testimony before a Senate investigative panel this week is expected to reveal what many have suspected about BP all along; they don’t care about the environment, the animals that are dying, and the lives that are being destroyed by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.

burning areas of oil in the Gulf give off thick black toxic smoke while the fires kill sea animals

In a shocking interview with CNN’s Anderson Cooper on June 29th, Allegiance Capitol Corporation V.P. Fred McCallister said that BP is deliberately sinking oil with the toxic chemical disbursant Corexit, to hide the size of the oil spill. By sinking the oil before it can be collected, BP won’t have to pay fines on it.

McCallister said, “Everybody in Europe, where the standard practice is to raise the oil and collect it, is scratching their heads, and quite honestly laughing at what’s happening in the Gulf.” He added, “Everyone is looking at us and wondering why we’re allowing this to happen.”

McCallister is set to appear before a Senate investigative panel on Thursday and testify that BP’s only interests regarding the Deepwater Horizon spill is protectimg their own financial interests. His statements explained why BP has been refusing offers of help from additional foreign skimmers.

BP’s fear is that independent skimmers would be able to count the number of gallons collected, and thus provide the US government with data to assess spill rate financial penalties against BP, according to McCallister.

“BP is in control of this situation and they are doing what’s in the best interests of BP and their shareholders,” McCallister said.

See Oil spill news: US Coast Guard confirms two Gulf oil spill clean up workers have died: Video, San Francisco Examiner, June 23, 2010, by Maryann Tobin.

Video: Hurricane Alex Threatens Gulf

Evans Liberal Politics
June 30, 2010

 

Hurricane Alex Threatens Gulf

 

The Party of BP, And Proud Of It

Evans Liberal Politics
June 23, 2010

 

The Party of BP, And Proud Of It

 

The Party of BP, And Proud Of It, Campaign for America’s Future, June 22, 2010, by Terrance Heath, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

Andrew Reinbach is right. Deservedly or not, the political gods continue to smile on the Democrats, gifting them with an opposition so predictable and caricatured — from punishing the unemployed, to defending Wall Street — as to be right out of central casting. Now, the GOP has morphed into the party of BP. Except that after Rep. Joe Barton’s apology to BP, you’d think they would worry about being cast as “the Party of BP.” Instead, they’re embracing the role.

Rep. Joe Barton Apologizes To BP
For $20 Billion Claims Fund


David Broder says that Barton’s comments only “highlight the GOP’s propensity for gaffes.” That alone may earn Broder a nomination for the Peggy Noonan Award for Sanity in Conservative Commentary. But here’s the thing. Barton just stuck too closely to the script. He only said what114 of his fellow caucus members, and fellow conservatives already believe. In fact, Barton is starting to gain supporters.

Does this remind anybody but me of the time that the vice president shot a guy in the face, only to have the guy apologize for apparently walking in front of the BP’s buckshot? Why didn’t Barton just say, “We are deeply sorry we had that Gulf down there (along with the industries and ecosystems it supports) getting in the way of your oil”?

Basically, as Robert Creamer put it, Barton merely said was (slightly) more sophisticated members of his party know better than to say in public.

The way the Republicans reacted to Congressman Joe Barton’s “apology” to BP at the hearing of the House Energy and Commerce Committee reminds you of what happens when a group of teenagers find out that a member of their “secret club” has revealed the secret handshake to the school principal.

Barton had the audacity to say out loud a secret that everyone else in the Republican fraternity knows very well — that the Republicans are a Party of, by and for Big Oil. From Cheney’s secret oil executive populated “Energy Taskforce” to “drill baby drill” — and for decades before – the oil industry has held the Republican puppet strings.

Except that a In fact, Barton was a day late. The Republican Study Committee beat him to it, issuing a statement that

Republican Study Committee Chairman Tom Price (R-GA) issued the following statement after the White House announced it had reached a deal with BP to require the oil company to place $20 billion into an escrow fund to pay claims filed against the company in the wake of the Gulf oil spill.

“We all agree that BP should be held fully responsible for its complicity in the oil tragedy in the Gulf,” said Chairman Price. “In fact, BP has already begun paying claims. Any attempt by the company to sidestep that responsibility should be met with the strongest legal recourses available. However, in an administration that appears not to respect fundamental American principles, it is important to note that there is no legal authority for the President to compel a private company to set up or contribute to an escrow account.

“BP’s reported willingness to go along with the White House’s new fund suggests that the Obama Administration is hard at work exerting its brand of Chicago-style shakedown politics. These actions are emblematic of a politicization of our economy that has been borne out of this Administration’s drive for greater power and control. It is the same mentality that believes an economic crisis or an environmental disaster is the best opportunity to pursue a failed liberal agenda. The American people know much better.”

The rest of the story is well known. Barton’s remarks set off a firestorm, including calls for his resignation as ranking member on the Energy and Commerce Committee, a demand from House Republicans that Barton apologize for his apology or lose his committee seat, and finally ending with Barton’s apology for his apology.

But here’s the thing: What did Joe Barton say that the Republican Study Committee didn’t say? Or for that matter, what did he say that Michelle Bachman, Rush Limbaugh, Jane Norton, (Colorado Republican Senate candidate), Dave Westlake and Ron Johnson (Wisconsin Republican Senate candidates) didn’t say?

In fact, the rhetoric has only heated up since then. Conservative economist Thomas Sowell has essentially joined the ranks of right-wing extremists who see the Gulf oil disaster as part of a covert government plan to evacuate some 50 million people from the Gulf and house them in FEMA trailer camps. Sowell stops short of some of the specifics of the FEMA plan (which includes alien hybrids masquerading as U.S troops), but does declare that holding BP accountable to the people of the Gulf region is a step on the slippery slope to tyranny.

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Meanwhile commentators and bloggers on the right stand with Joe Wilson, supporting the legal limits of BP’s liability, invoking the rule of law, citing a “kernel of truth” in Barton’s comments, saying that he merely said the right thing at the wrong time, and calling on him to take back the apology for the apology.

Conservative talk-radio host Rush Limbaugh is taking aim at Republican leaders for rushing to demand Texas Rep. Joe Barton retract his controversial apology to BP CEO Tony Hayward during last week’s congressional hearing.

On his radio show Monday, Limbaugh suggested the GOP leadership likely agrees with Barton’s sentiments, but are driven by recent national polls which suggest the majority of Americans support President Barack Obama’s push for BP to set aside $20 billion for future liability claims.

“It was a shakedown pure and simple,” said Limbaugh, echoing the words for which Barton later apologized. “And somebody had the audacity to call it what it was and now everybody’s running for the hills.”

Let’s start by getting our terminology straight. This is not a “spill,” or even an “accident” that just “happened.” The oil seeping into the Gulf isn’t the result of unforeseeable events. It’s not an “act of God.” (Nor for that matter is it the work of “environmental wackos.”) It’s is not a “natural disaster” caused by forces of nature we can’t always accurately predict, let alone control It is a disaster, alright, but one caused by negligence, a lack of oversight, a absence of accountability, and a conservatism that not only enables all three, but would abandon every day Americans to deal with the consequences of a corporation guilty of all the above.

Now, let’s review. BP’s Deepwater Horizon rig in the Gulf of Mexico exploded on April 20, killing 11 workers and spilling oil into the Gulf at a rate of (we’re now told) 35,000 to 60,000 barrels per day. But the April 20th explosion was the last in series of events driven by corporate neglect and conservative failure. Back in May, I blogged about the scandal in the Department of Interior’s Minerals Management Service, reported by the New York Times in September 2008, in a story of an industry literally “in bed” with the industry is was supposed to regulate.

As Congress prepares to debate expansion of drilling in taxpayer-owned coastal waters, the Interior Department agency that collects oil and gas royalties has been caught up in a wide-ranging ethics scandal — including allegations of financial self-dealing, accepting gifts from energy companies, cocaine use and sexual misconduct.

In three reports delivered to Congress on Wednesday, the department’s inspector general, Earl E. Devaney, found wrongdoing by a dozen current and former employees of the Minerals Management Service, which collects about $10 billion in royalties annually and is one of the government’s largest sources of revenue other than taxes.

“A culture of ethical failure” pervades the agency, Mr. Devaney wrote in a cover memo.

The reports portray a dysfunctional organization that has been riddled with conflicts of interest, unprofessional behavior and a free-for-all atmosphere for much of the Bush administration’s watch.

The numerous reports of BP’s corporate irresponsibility are too many to quote here. So, I’ll summarize them in order to include them.

  • ProPublica has covered how MMS was flooded with oil ties, under Dick Cheney’s influence, and agency’s role in the Deepwater Horizon disaster. That role included bending to industry objections over regulation, such as a proposed requirement to use a $500,000 safety device used in other countries, and that might prevented the present disaster.
  • The Wall Street Journal, in May, published a devastating account of Deepwater Horizon, and the events leading up to it. The article suggested that BP ignored multiple warnings about safety procedures on the rig, and failed to run necessary tests that might have revealed potential dangers. (A final test that of the well’s integrity on that day, was run by an engineer whose experience was mostly with land drilling and who was on the rig “to learn about deep water.”)
  • A Congressional investigation identified risky cost-cutting measures by BP that appear to have increased the risk of a blowout, including: making decisions for economic reasons that violated industry guidelines, ignoring warning from its own employers and contractors to deploy a “lockdown sleeve” that would have prevented the blowout.
  • In an April 14th email, BP engineer Brian Morel called Deepwater a “nightmare.”
  • A New York Times article reported last month that BP documents showed serious problems and safety concerns on the rig far earlier than the Company described to Congress. The article said documents showed that the company was struggling with a loss of “well control” in March of this year, and that the company’s engineers had warned 11 months earlier that a metal casing BP wanted to use might collapse under high pressure. (The company went ahead with the casing, seeking its colleagues’ blessings, even though it violated the company’s own safety standards.)

    The same article on at least three occasions, BP records indicate, the blowout preventor was leaking — something the manufacturer said would limit it’s ability to operate properly. Neither the company nor regulators questioned whether drilling should commence. Instead, BP asked to delay a federally mandated test of the blowout preventor, and MMS approved the request, after denying it just a day earlier.

    The blowout preventor device was then tested at a lower pressure of 6,500 pounds per square inch, far less than the 10,000 pounds per square inch it was tested under on the previous day. It tested at the lower pressure until the explosion.

  • A recent BBC report on the $20 billion compensation fund notes that the blowout prevention device failed on that fateful day. Workers noticed a leak and reported it to management weeks before the explosion. To repair the device would have required halting drilling work on a rig that was already well behind schedule and costing BP $500,000 per day to operate.

Since then the stuff has destroyed livelihoods, devastated wildlife and begun lapping at the shores of several states with Republican governors. It has devastated wildlife in the Gulf, and threatens the survival of hundreds of species. The hidden long-term environmental and ecological impact may eventually reveal even greater losses. It has into 65 miles of coastline, and is working its way into the region’s wetlands.

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It has cost some Gulf coast residents their livelihoods, and threatens the livelihoods of millions more. Gulf Coast businesses, state and local economies, already hard hit by the recession, will likely suffer further losses.

It’s in this context, and during Tony Hayward’s abysmal appearance before a congressional subcommittee that Barton delivers his sincerest apologies to BP. It’s in this context that the Republican Study Committee, GOP candidates, right-wing bloggers commentators send a message to the millions of Americans staring this growing disaster in the face: You are on your own.

Basically, Gulf area residents should be abandoned to deal with this disaster as best they can. Government can and should do little to help them.

The rhetoric on the right has made reasoned discussion of what should be done about the problem next to impossible, by appealing to the most extreme factions, relying on simplistic slogans, and employing lies and paranoia to keep a raised pitch. The tactic is an effective way to cloud the issue the way that the rising plumes of oil cloud the water in the Gulf, so that conservatives’ complicity and conservatism’s fingerprints can’t be seen all over this disaster.

It also effectively clouds the “kernel of truth” in conservatism’s message. Put plainly, the GOP is siding with BP over the people of the Gulf region whose lives and livelihoods are awash in oil.

Certainly conservatives are likely to say that aggrieved Gulf residents can and should “sue the bastards,” and take BP to court for damages. That’s why they cite the “rule of law” and defend BP’s limited liability. Of course, all but the most naive understand that it would be difficult for the average person to take on a company the size of BP, with pockets as deep as BP’s, in court, let alone people who awoke on April 20th, to find that they had no more livelihoods, and no way of supporting themselves, let alone mounting a legal case.

Gary Gross, blogging at Let Freedom Ring, in his defense of Barton writes:

Let’s be perfectly clear. I’m not proposing to let BP off the hook. It’s quite the opposite. I’m just opposed to letting a political appointee dole out $20,000,000,000 based on anything other than established law.

Men are corruptible. The courts aren’t

But, it is incredibly easy for a company with BP’s deep pockets to keep a case out of court, or keep a case from going to trial with a series of legal motions and maneuvers, while waiting for a plaintiff to finally be too “tapped out” to afford further legal fees, or finally worn down settling for far less than being made whole. Ask Brian O’Neill and his clients, the 2,600 fishermen and others affected by the Exxon Valdez spill.

After the Exxon Valdez oil tanker crashed in Prince William Sound in 1989, O’Neill headed straight to Alaska.

The Minnesota-based attorney had an interest in environmental issues and wanted to help because, as he put it, “there were an awful lot of hurt people.”

He soon represented 2,600 fishermen and others affected by the spill. What he thought would be a two- or three-year “adventure” is still the biggest thing on his plate, one-third of his life later.

O’Neill successfully argued the 1994 trial after which a jury ordered Exxon to pay $5.3 billion in punitive damages to O’Neill’s clients and others affected by the spill.

Exxon appealed almost two dozen times and O’Neill was there through it all.

In 2008, the case reached the U.S. Supreme Court, where a 5-3 majority finally set punitive damages at $500 million.

It was a significant blow to O’Neill and his clients.

BP is already maneuvering to have all Gulf-related lawsuits against the company heard in the courtroom of a judge with strong ties to the oil industry. Naturally the company would want the cases heard by a judge well-versed in the industry and its issues. While it’s not certain that the judge in question would base his rulings on anything other than the law, some lawyers were surprised that BP is seeking to select its own judge in both state and federal courts, where cases are usually assigned to judges randomly. Meanwhile, it’s unlikely that Gulf area residents would have an equal opportunity to select a judge who is well versed in how the disaster impacts their families and communities.

It’s unlikely that Gulf area residents would even have the ability to decide when and where they will seek justice, let alone who would preside.

But this is one of those things government can do, and should do, that people can’t do for themselves: Get the justice they deserve from a corporate entity that can buy all the justice it can afford, which is far more than many Gulf residents can afford.

That’s the difference between progressives and conservatives.

Conservatives would rather see the people of the Gulf coast go through what the people affected by the Exxon Valdez went through; a long wait, for far less than a just result.

Don’t take my word for it. Conservatives themselves have said as much.

And they aren’t the least bit sorry.

Terrance Heath is the Online Producer at Campaign for America’s Future. Prior to his current position he worked as a Blogging and Social Media Consultant for a number of organizations and agencies, as an outgrowth of his work as Blogmaster for EchoDitto, Inc. He stumbled into blogging and social media after starting his own blog, The Republic of T., but cut his teeth as an activist working on LGBT equality and HIV/AIDS issues. In that capacity he worked for the Human Rights Campaign and the National Minority AIDS Council. Terrance has kindly allowed Evans Liberal Politics to publish his works on an ongoing basis. He sums himself up: Black. Gay. Father. Vegetarian. Buddhist. Liberal.