BP and the Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill
Table of Contents
Oil Spill Incident
Key Players
History of BP
Green Campaign
Safety Record
Drilling Operations
Timeline
Causes of the Spill
Communications Effort
Communications Problems
The Explosion
This incident is regarded as one of the most serious ecological disasters in history
On April 20, 2010, the oil rig, Deepwater Horizon, explodes in the Gulf of Mexico.
11 people are missing and 17 people are injured.
The majority of individuals aboard the rig are Transocean, BP, and Halliburton employees at the time of the explosion.
Table of Contents
Oil Spill Incident
Key Players
History of BP
Green Campaign
Safety Record
Drilling Operations
Timeline
Causes of the Spill
Communications Effort
Communications Problems
British Petroleum
- “BP operates at the frontiers of the energy industry. We use world-class assets, technology, capability and know-how to meet energy needs and deliver long- term value.”
- Market Capitalization: $181 billion
Halliburton- Founded in 1919, one of the largest players in the oil and gas industry.- Composed of over 55,000 employees.- Contracted to cement the oil pipe to the ocean floor.
Transocean- World’s largest offshore drilling contractor.- 139 mobile offshore drilling units, plus an additional eight new rigs.- Owners of the rig, the Deepwater Horizon.
Key Players
Federal Government
Mineral Management Service (MMS)
− Federal agency responsible for overseeing the well’s drilling and operations.
− Created in 1982 to generate revenues from oil well royalties for the federal government.
− Also created to oversee the oil industry to ensure safe practices.
− Lack of oil expertise because of the increasingly complicated drilling industry.
− Conflict of interests and lack of oversight.
Table of Contents
Oil Spill Incident
Key Players
History of BP
Green Campaign
Safety Record
Drilling Operations
Timeline
Causes of the Spill
Communications Effort
Communications Problems
The History of British Petroleum
William Knox D’Arcy, 1901.
Anglo-Persian Oil Company.
Renamed Anglo-Iranian (AIOC) in 1935.
World’s largest refinery at Abadan.
200,000 workers in scorching conditions
Continued to supply Allied fleet during World War II.
“When the rains subsided, clouds of nipping, small-winged flies rose from the stagnant waters to fill the nostrils, collecting in black mounds along the rims of cooking pots and jamming the fans at the refinery with an unctuous glue.”
- Manucher Farmanfarmaian, describing winter working conditions, 1949
The History of British Petroleum
Dr. Mohammed Mossadegh, 1951.
Nationalizes AIOC’s holdings.World crisis ensues, US and UK boycott, block
any other European technicians from replacing the British ones that were fired.
Rebrands itself as British Petroleum in 1954.
BP’s controversial image plays large part in political rhetoric, gives way to 1979 revolution and the Islamic Republic.
The History of British Petroleum
Nationalization schemes of Arab states forces BP to look outside region for alternate sources of oil.
Begins pumping oil out of Prudhoe Bay, Alaska in 1977.
− One of the largest infrastructure projects in North America.
BP is now the second largest oil company, operates in 100 countries and can produce 3.5 billion barrels a year.
Record in North America is tainted with a recent series of severe safety violations that contradicts their “green” image.
Table of Contents
Oil Spill Incident
Key Players
History of BP
Green Campaign
Safety Record
Drilling Operations
Timeline
Causes of the Spill
Communications Effort
Communications Problems
Green Campaign
“I believe the American people expect a company like BP . . . to offer answers and not excuses.''
- Lord John Browne, BP CEO, March 2002
Green Campaign
Spends $200M in 2000 to rebrand itself as “Beyond Petroleum.”
Redesigns the 70 year-old BP shield into the BP “Helios.”
New York is specifically targeted, advertisements appear in Times Square.
Lord John Browne acknowledges climate change:
− Pushes BP to confront climate issues
− Candidly acknowledges company’s mistakes
− Enters dialogue with environmental groups.
Campaign is designed to address skepticism consumers have toward Big Oil.
Table of Contents
Oil Spill Incident
Key Players
History of BP
Green Campaign
Safety Record
Drilling Operations
Timeline
Causes of the Spill
Communications Effort
Communications Problems
Safety Record
Texas City, Texas 2005:
− 15 people killed, injured 180
− “improperly released vapor and liquid”
Alaska, 2007:
− 200,000 gallons of crude oil spill into the wilderness due to corrosion along the pipeline
− Pays $16M in criminal fines
Occupational Safety and Health Administration reports that BP ran up 760 “egregious, willful” safety violations in a three-year span:
− Accounts for 97% of total number of industry safety violations
− Pays $373M to avoid federal prosecution
Table of Contents
Oil Spill Incident
Key Players
History of BP
Green Campaign
Safety Record
Drilling Operations
Timeline
Causes of the Spill
Communications Effort
Communications Problems
How Does Drilling Work?
• The Deepwater Horizon is the oil rig that prepares the well for drilling.
• It is essential to pump mud and seawater down the casing string in order to ensure pressure equilibrium.
• If too much pressure is exerted, the rockbed can be damaged and result in collapse.
Long String Casing and Centralizers
Table of Contents
Oil Spill Incident
Key Players
History of BP
Green Campaign
Safety Record
Drilling Operations
Timeline
Causes of the Spill
Communications Effort
Communications Problems
Timeline: April
20 April•Explosion and fire on the BP-licensed Transocean drilling rig Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf of Mexico.•Eleven people are reported missing and approximately 17 injured.
25 April•US coast guard remote underwater cameras report the well is leaking 1,000 barrels of crude oil per day (bpd).
26 April•BP's shares fall 2% amid fears that the cost of cleanup and legal claims will hit the London-based company hard.
APRIL MAY JUNE JULY AUGUST SEPTEMBER
Timeline: April
APRIL MAY JUNE JULY AUGUST
28 April•The coast guard says the flow of oil is 5,000 bpd, five times greater than first estimated, after a third leak is discovered.•BP's attempts to repair a hydraulic leak on the blowout preventer valve are unsuccessful.
29 April•President Obama pledges "every single available resource," including the US military, to contain the spreading spill, and also says BP is responsible for the cleanup..
SEPTEMBER
30 April•An Obama aide says no drilling will be allowed in new areas until the cause of the Deepwater Horizon accident is established•US bans new drilling in Gulf of Mexico.
Timeline: June
APRIL MAY JUNE JULY AUGUST
3 June•BP faces political flack over its decision to pay out more than $10bn (£6.8bn) in dividends to shareholders, despite the deepening crisis.
15 June•Fitch ratings agency cuts BP's credit rating as the cost of the spill continues to escalate.
16 June•BP agrees to a $20bn (£13.5bn) down payment toward compensation for victims of the oil spill.
SEPTEMBER
Timeline: July
26 July•The BP chief executive, Tony Hayward, is to leave the company, to be replaced by Bob Dudley, a BP veteran overseeing the clean-up.
27 July•Greenpeace activists close 46 BP garages in central London in a move to force the company to become greener.•Safety switches at the pumps were stolen.
APRIL MAY JUNE JULY AUGUST
Timeline: August / September
BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2008
APRIL MAY JUNE JULY AUGUST
25 August•BP's poor reputation, following the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, forces it to pull out of a bid to drill in the Arctic.
8 September•BP releases its own report that blame must be shared between all entities involved.
16 September•BP falls out of a major marketing consultancy's list of the top 100 brands.•BP falls off Interbrand's index for the first time in 11 years.
19 September•The leak is finally closed.•Costs estimated to $40 billion.
SEPTEMBER
Table of Contents
Oil Spill Incident
Key Players
History of BP
Green Campaign
Safety Record
Drilling Operations
Timeline
Causes of the Spill
Communications Effort
Communications Problems
What Caused the Disaster?
The National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil
Spill and Offshore Drilling concludes:
•There is not one single cause of the disaster.
•BP, Transocean, and Halliburton all are responsible for the disaster.
•The primary cause is blamed on the cementing process of the oil pipe to the well and the inherent risks of drilling to extreme depths.
•Blame placed on the MMS for lack of expertise and conflict of interest.
What Caused the Disaster?
The National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling concludes in the report to the President of the United
States:
“…the Macondo blowout was the product of several individual missteps and oversights by BP, Halliburton, and Transocean, which government regulatorslacked the authority, the necessary resources, and the technical expertise to prevent.”
“The immediate cause of the Macondo blowout was a failure to contain hydrocarbon pressures in the well. Three things could have contained those pressures: the cement at the bottom of the well, the mud in the well and in the riser, and the blowout preventer.”
•Long string casing•Additional need for centralizers•Unstable cement•Poor immediate action training
Table of Contents
Oil Spill Incident
Key Players
History of BP
Green Campaign
Safety Record
Drilling Operations
Timeline
Causes of the Spill
Communications Effort
Communications Problems
Initial Communication
• “Our concern and thoughts are with the rig personnel and their families. We are also very focused on providing every possible assistance in the effort to deal with the consequences of the incident.” – Tony Hayward, BP CEO (April 21, 2010)
• “BP assumes full responsibility for the oil spill”
–Tony Hayward, BP CEO (April 23, 2010)
• “It’s not our spill.”
– Tony Hayward, BP CEO (May 3, 2010)
Inconsistency Confusion Contradictory
Key Communications Figures
Executive Involvement
• President Obama delivers a special address to the nation
• Mentions BP six times by name
• Does not mention Halliburton or Transocean one time• President appoints Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen as National Incident Commander• Authority on disaster recovery (Hurricane Katrina)• Became face and voice of recovery effort
Social Media Focus
April 27: BP Begins daily “tweets” outlining containment and support efforts
May 6: Daily use of BP website for photo, video, map and written updates
May 2: BP connects with Facebook fans who “like” the BP recovery effort with daily posts
June 3: “We will make this right” video airs on YouTube for the first time
Paid Media Effort
“We Will Make This Right” campaign airs in June 2010
$50,000,000 price tag draws widespread criticism
Designed to appeal to a national audience
Spillcam
Viewed daily on more than 3,000 websites worldwide
24 hour live-feed of oil flow
Began as a response to pressure from Congress
Created to present a more open, transparent stance
Table of Contents
Oil Spill Incident
Key Players
History of BP
Green Campaign
Safety Record
Drilling Operations
Timeline
Causes of the Spill
Communications Effort
Communications Problems
Addressing Severity
Self-Inflicted Wounds
“No one wants this to be over more than me. I want my life back.” –Tony Hayward
“We care about the little people.”
– Carl Henric Svanberg
“I’m sure we can all understand that [Tony Hayward]
wants to spend some time with his family.”3
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