Community | May 30, 2010 | 3 comments

U.S. Should Shut BP Atlantis Platform, Lawmaker Says

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EthicalVegan
May 22nd, 2010 2:58 PM
U.S. Should Shut BP Atlantis Platform, Lawmaker Says


By Jim Polson / Bloomberg

The U.S. Interior Department should shut BP Plc’s Atlantis platform in the Gulf of Mexico pending the completion of a safety investigation which began in March, Representative Raul Grijalva said.

Grijalva asked other Congressmen to sign a letter to Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, according to an e-mail from his office today. The Minerals Management Service, part of the Interior Department, agreed March 26 to look into the safety of the platform at the request of Grijalva and 18 other members of Congress. The agency said it would issue a report by the end of this month.

Atlantis can produce 200,000 barrels of crude daily, according to BP. That’s equivalent to about 3.6 percent of U.S. production, according to the Energy Department in Washington. The platform is about 100 miles (161 kilometers) south of where the BP-leased Deepwater Horizon drilling rig caught fire April 20 and sank, leading to a continuing oil spill.

“To avoid a catastrophe of huge proportions, huger than the one we’re having now, it’s the prudent way to go,” Grijalva said today in an interview. “There’s lingering doubt about Atlantis and it has to be dealt with.”

Grijalva, an Arizona Democrat and chairman of the House Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests and Public Lands, and the other lawmakers asked for the MMS investigation Feb. 24, saying the Atlantis platform had been operating for several years without safety documents that “are essentially an operator’s guide.”

Those claims are “without substance,” BP said in a May 17 statement on its website. Sheila Williams, a BP spokeswoman in London, declined to comment. Kendra Barkoff, an Interior Department spokeswoman, didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Grijalva said he’s concerned that the MMS hasn’t yet interviewed a whistleblower who reported the alleged lapses or a BP ombudsman who confirmed some problems.

‘Giant’ Fields

Atlantis taps one of BP’s three “giant” fields in the Gulf of Mexico, Andy Inglis, chief executive officer of exploration and production, said at a March 2 investor conference. The others are Thunder Horse and Mad Dog, he said.

Food & Water Watch, an environmental group with offices worldwide, filed a lawsuit May 17. The group asked a U.S. judge to force the MMS, which oversees offshore oil and gas production, to shut London-based BP’s Atlantis platform until the company can prove the system, one of the Gulf’s largest, was built according to engineer-certified designs and is operating safely.

At least 109,000 barrels (4.58 million gallons) of oil have leaked from the Macondo well since the Deepwater Horizon’s explosion, based on estimated daily flow rates provided by BP, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administation and the U.S. Coast Guard.

--With assistance from Jim Efstathiou Jr. in New York. Editors: Kim Jordan, Charles Siler.
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3 comments // U.S. Should Shut BP Atlantis Platform, Lawmaker Says

  • EthicalVegan
    • 0
      EthicalVegan  
    • CNN Breaking News - 06-01-10 - 3:35PM PT:

      A strand of oil came ashore on Petit Bois Island off the Mississippi coast, Gov. Haley Barbour's office says.

    • 1 year ago
  • EthicalVegan
    • 0
      EthicalVegan  
    • The Atlantis rig is 7,070 feet down!!!

      http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2010/05/shut_bp_atlantis_oil_rig_consu.html

      Shut BP Atlantis Oil Rig, Consumer Group Asks Court

      By Frank James

      A consumer advocacy group asked a federal court to order the shutdown of a BP offshore oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico because of reported irregularities in the engineering documents the company is required to maintain for the rig.

      The rig, the BP Atlantis, is about 150 miles south of New Orleans and it is operating in even deeper water -- 7,070 feet --- than the Deepwater Horizon, which was working in about 5,000 feet of water.

      Food and Water Watch is suing Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and the Mineral Management Service's regional director Michael Saucier.

      Incidentally, FWW has a useful interactive BP Atlantis timeline.

      The group that filed the lawsuit, Food and Water Watch, said a blowout like that which occurred on the destroyed Deepwater Horizon, could cause an even greater oil spill than the current one.

      An excerpt from the Food and Water Watch press release:

      The agency, along with a former BP document controls subcontractor, maintains the Department of the Interior has allowed BP Atlantis to operate without documented, approved final engineering drawings considered critical to safe operation.

      The organization also kicked off a related advertising campaign today to put public pressure on the Obama Administration to shut down BP Atlantis until proven safe. The television ad is featured at www.SpilltheTruth.org.

      Oil gushing from Horizon has already surpassed the 10.8 million gallon Exxon Valdez spill, according to news reports. A worst-case scenario oil spill from Atlantis would be many times larger than the spill from the Horizon explosion and exceed the Exxon Valdez spill within just two days, according to Wenonah Hauter, executive director of Food & Water Watch.

      "BP Atlantis is a ticking time bomb," Hauter said. "As clean-up continues in the Gulf, we need to act to prevent a larger disaster looming. Given that we have repeatedly asked regulators to act to solve the Atlantis safety crisis, it's outrageous that nothing has been done yet."

      As has been reported, whistleblowers have alleged that BP failed to maintain up to date engineering documents of the Atlantis rig.

      The group alleges that the alleged lack of the required documentation makes it more likely that an accident will happen since operators on the rig don't have the best information about the equipment they're working with.

      Also, in case of an accident, a response could be hampered because of the lack of what amounts to an up-to-date owners manual for the rig.

    • 1 year ago
  • EthicalVegan
    • 0
      EthicalVegan  
    • Image
    • EthicalVegan:

      http://www.spillthetruth.org/facts/

      Facts on Atlantis, BP and the Administration
      Monday, May 17th, 2010

      BP’s Atlantis: Another Catastrophic Accident Waiting to Happen?

      The Gulf of Mexico is currently reeling from the human and environmental tragedy unfolding after the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon, an offshore oil platform. The Horizon, operated by BP, exploded on April 20, 2010, killing 11 workers, injuring many others and spilling millions of gallons of oil into the ocean.

      While the cause of the Horizon explosion is being investigated, it is important to note that BP has a devastating history of accidents and evading government oversight. Worse yet, an even bigger tragedy in the Gulf could be looming. An internal BP email admits that a “catastrophic” accident is possible at another one of its platforms, the BP Atlantis. An accident at this platform could result in a spill that is many times larger than the one currently unfolding from the Deepwater Horizon.

      BP Atlantis poses a serious, immediate and potentially irreparable threat to the Gulf of Mexico’s marine environment, oil workers and communities. BP’s Atlantis platform became active during the Bush administration in October of 2007. Located in “Hurricane Alley,” more than 150 miles from New Orleans at a water depth of more than 7,000 feet, it is one of the deepest moored semisubmersible oil and gas platforms in the world. In August of 2008, a BP contractor made a startling discovery about Atlantis: The company was operating the massive Atlantis platform without proper up-to-date and engineer-approved documentation. Some of the problems included:

      * More than 6,000 critical documents — including those for pipelines, flowlines, wellheads and other important systems — did not have the required engineering documentation.
      * Over 85 percent of the project’s subsea piping and instrument diagrams, critical documents for operating the platform, were not approved by engineers.
      * Many of its safety shutdown system logic diagrams were not up to date.
      * Over 95 percent of its subsea welding documents had no final engineering approval, calling into question the safety of the welds.

      Workers clean oil from the Horizon spill from a beach in South Pass, Louisiana. Photo by the U.S. Coast Guard.

      Atlantis is no small threat. An internal BP email characterized the situation as having the potential for “catastrophic operator errors.” Worse yet, Atlantis is operating in deeper water than the Deepwater Horizon. A worst-case scenario oil spill from Atlantis would exceed the Exxon Valdez spill in only two days, and be many times larger than the spill from the Horizon explosion.

      BP’s Big Oil Profits
      The BP group is the largest oil and gas producer and one of the largest gasoline retailers in the United States, and in 2008 was the fourth-biggest company in the world. In 2009, BP was the largest producer in the Gulf of Mexico and had pre-tax profits of $25.1 billion.

      BP Evades Compliance and the Federal Government Fails to Take Action
      Despite questions from Food & Water Watch and Members of Congress, BP has chosen to deny the problems at Atlantis. The company went so far as to send a letter to Congress saying that it only learned of the allegations recently and claimed they were unsubstantiated. However, BP’s own documents show that BP has known about these problems for years.

      Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of Interior’s Minerals Management Service (MMS), the primary federal agency responsible for ensuring that all aspects of oil, gas, leasing, exploration, development and production activities are conducted safely, hasn’t been doing its job. The agency did almost nothing when the whistleblower and Food & Water Watch first reported the problems at BP Atlantis and alerted members of Congress.

      An aerial view of the progress of the Horizon oil spill off the coast of Louisiana as of May 9, 2010. Photo by NASA.

      It was only after 19 members of Congress requested an investigation that MMS said it would conduct an investigation starting in March 2010. By May 2010, however, according to an agency response to a Food & Water Watch Freedom of Information Act request, the agency admitted that it had not and would not take any steps to investigate.

      Take Action to Shut Down BP Atlantis
      Tell President Obama to shut down Atlantis. Given the seriousness of the situation, production at the Atlantis platform must be immediately suspended until it can be proven safe.

      In addition, President Obama needs to order a review of all deepwater platforms in operation and overhaul offshore drilling regulations to reflect public interests, not private profits. Take action today by going to spillthetruth.org.

      Visit www.foodandwaterwatch.org/press/atlantis for more information. Read more
      Monday, May 17th, 2010
      Food & Water Watch Sues Feds for Ignoring Problems at Operating BP Platform
      Launches “Spill the Truth” Campaign, Puts MMS Under Scrutiny to Close BP Atlantis Platform Amid Safety Concerns
      “Catastrophic Operator Errors” Could Be Next Gulf Disaster

      New Orleans, La.—National consumer advocacy group Food & Water Watch filed suit today in a Houston federal court seeking a temporary injunction to halt operations of BP’s massive Atlantis oil drilling platform until critical safety documents are produced.

      The agency, along with a former BP document controls subcontractor, maintains the Department of the Interior has allowed BP Atlantis to operate without documented, approved final engineering drawings considered critical to safe operation. Read more
      Monday, May 17th, 2010
      Timeline of Food & Water Watch’s Campaign to Shut Down Atlantis

      There is the potential for an oil spill many times the size of the current Gulf disaster. It is from a BP oil platform known as Atlantis. Find out how Food & Water Watch has been working to protect the gulf from a worse crisis and shut down BP Atlantis until it’s proven safe.

      Monday, May 17th, 2010
      Adding Toxicity to the Gulf

      To mitigate the disastrous BP oil spill off the coast of Louisiana, both BP and the government are employing the use of COREXIT 9500A, a type of chemical referred to as a “dispersant” that was originally developed by Exxon and is now manufactured by Nalco Holding Company. As of May 10, 2010, 250,000 gallons of this dispersant have been applied at the spill site. Many experts are concerned about this use, which adds additional toxins to the ocean and may lead to longer-term ecological problems. Within the category of dispersants, there are chemicals that are less toxic and more effective than COREXIT 9500A.

    • 1 year ago
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