BP chief executive Bob Dudley has accused some politicians and the media of being too hasty to pin all the blame on his company for the devastating Gulf of Mexico spill — and emphasized the need for deep-water drilling.
In his first major public speech since taking the top job, Dudley also said on Monday that BP would not pull out of the US — and that the US needs a company with BP’s resources to meet its vast energy needs.
Dudley delivered a speech whose mood hovered between firm and penitent, seeking to make clear that BP was learning every lesson -possible from the disaster. He stressed that he also has met with experts from other hazardous industries, including the nuclear and chemical industries, as part of the company’s focus on improving safety.
“We were certainly not perfect in our response, but we have tried to do the right thing,” Dudley added.
Before becoming the first American to lead the British oil company on Oct. 1, Dudley was in charge of BP’s spill response efforts in the Gulf.
US lawmakers have widely blamed BP for the disaster.
On Monday, Dudley said many parties, including the media and rival oil companies, were guilty of “a great rush to judgment” before all the facts were known.
“I watched graphic projections of oil swirling around the Gulf, around Florida, across and around Bermuda to England — these appeared authoritative and inevitable. The public fear was everywhere,” he said.
The company’s own investigation shared the blame between BP, rig owner Transocean and contractor Halliburton.
However, former administrator of the US Environmental Protection Agency William Reilly, co-chair of an independent oil spill commission investigating the rig explosion, suggested on Monday that BP fed the fear and mistrust by initially minimizing the impact of the spill.
In an interview in New Orleans, Reilly said the company shouldn’t downplay the significance of “what occurred and what happened on their watch and what was their responsibility to prevent.”
The US government could fine BP up to US$21 billion for the spill, on top of a US$20 billion disaster fund that the company has committed itself to. A bill that passed in the US House of Representatives would prevent companies like BP that have a poor safety record from getting new offshore permits. A Senate bill that was eventually tabled didn’t contain a similar provision.
Speaking at an annual conference of Britain’s leading business lobby group, Dudley stressed BP’s commitment to the US despite the ongoing political and public fallout and talked up the company’s ability to withstand the expected financial hit from the spill.
Earlier on Monday, BP announced it has sold its stake in four mature oil and gas fields in the Gulf of Mexico to Marubeni Oil and Gas for US$650 million. The fields were part of a recent acquisition of Gulf assets from Devon Energy and were considered nonessential. BP is hoping to raise US$30 billion from selling assets and already has raked in almost US$9 billion from the sale of properties in Egypt, Canada, the US and Colombia.
Dudley argued that deep-water drilling is necessary despite the dangers. He cited predictions that the world could be consuming 40 percent more energy than today by 2030. Deep-water drilling is projected to grow to account for 9 percent of total oil supplies in 2020, from 7 percent currently.
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