I'm pissed. Why the hell should I have to pay more for gas due to their negligence? I can tell you I will not get gas at a BP station (yes, I realize they sell oil to others as well, but boycotting BP stations is all I can do...)
BP Faces Scrutiny for Pipeline Shutdown By H. JOSEF HEBERT, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Shutting its North Slope operations is only the latest problem for oil giant BP, which already is the target of a federal grand jury, the Environmental Protection Agency and congressional investigators for letting its Alaska pipeline crumble.
The Justice Department is pursuing possible criminal charges in connection with the oil spill in March on one leg of BP's feeder system in its Prudhoe Bay field.
A federal grand jury is taking evidence in that case in Anchorage. The Justice Department is demanding BP Alaska cut a 12-foot section of pipe where the leak occurred and send it to investigators.
At the same time, members of Congress are pressing for hearings, possibly in September, into BP's maintenance of its pipeline system as the company prepares to complete the shutdown of its North Slope operation to make repairs _ at a loss of 400,000 barrels of oil a day.
"The U.S. Congress has an obligation to hold hearings to determine what broke down here," said Rep. John Dingell of Michigan, the ranking Democrat on the House Energy and Commerce Committee.
Meanwhile, the pipeline repairs _ and loss of more than half of Alaska's crude oil _ are likely to take months, curtailing Alaskan production into next year, according to the Energy Department.
"It will take months to fix so we must deal with the issue at hand," Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman said Tuesday.
"There seems to be a belief that a complete shutdown of the Prudhoe Bay system may not be necessary," Bodman said after talking with BP executives. Bodman said BP was looking at possible ways to allow continued production from half the oil field while repairs are made.
Trying to calm the markets, Bodman said there are adequate supplies of crude oil in inventory and available from other producers to make up for the losses from Alaska. Alaska's oil primarily goes to West Coast refineries.
"Substitutions for Alaska crude oil, we believe, are available," Bodman told reporters. Oil prices retreated slightly Tuesday after Bodman's upbeat assessment.
Even before the spill in March dumped 270,000 gallons of oil onto the tundra, BP's maintenance of its pipelines had come into question.
Company whistleblowers reportedly raised concerns about how the company dealt with pipe corrosion as early as 2004, eventually leading to an inquiry into possible violations of the federal Clean Water Act by the Environmental Protection Agency's office in Seattle _ an investigation that intensified after the March spill.
The EPA, following standard policy, declined on Tuesday to confirm or deny such an investigation.
Charles Hamel, 76, a retired management consultant, said Tuesday that technicians within BP Alaska's pipeline maintenance division contacted him in 2004, complaining of inadequate attention to pipe corrosion.
He produced a letter he said he sent that year to a member of BP's board of directors, Walter Massey, asking that the whistleblower's complaints be investigated, but Hamel said he was rebuffed. Instead, the company dispatched two lawyers from Washington to the North Slope who asked questions about employee discontent, he maintained.
Massey, president of Morehouse College, did not return a message left at his office, and a receptionist referred calls to BP. A BP Alaska spokesman did not return telephone and e-mail requests for comment.
In a letter in June to the Transportation Department agency that regulates pipeline safety, BP Alaska cited the grand jury probe as one reason it had not been able to comply with agency demands to conduct required corrosion tests on the western half of its feeder pipeline system.
A grand jury subpoena demanded the 12-foot section of pipe where the March spill occurred be cut away and provided to investigators. This could take six months, the company said, preventing the necessary corrosion tests.
But in a letter to PB Alaska last month, the department's Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration demanded the company move more quickly and expressed concern about the condition of the pipes.
It noted that BP believed that the "enhanced corrosion" in a three-mile section of pipe, where the March spill occurred, was caused by the development of bacteria in the pipe as a result of too low a dose of corrosion inhibitors being used.
The agency said it also was concerned that months after the spill, some 17,000 barrels of oil had yet to be drained from that section of pipe.
"The stagnant environment ... in combination with other risk factors, including the presence of water in the pipeline, poses an ongoing leak threat," the agency said in its July 20 letter to BP Alaska. If conditions are not corrected, the agency continued, there could be a risk of "serious harm to life, property or the environment."
Thomas J. Barrett, the federal pipeline agency's administrator, acknowledged in an interview with AP Radio on Tuesday that before the spill in March, the agency viewed the BP feeder lines as a low priority.
He said they were low-pressure, in a rural area and had no history of spills. Still, he said, BP should have provided a higher standard of care, and the agency is now paying closer attention to such pipelines.
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"Fashion can be bought. Style one must possess." ~ Edna Woolman Chase
i already avoid BP stations and this gives me another reason too!
the reason I already avoided them is because when i bought my MINI, the BMW service team instructed me NOT to buy gas at BP. They told me that the additves that they put in their fuel can jack up a BMW or MINI...
I hadn't heard about the oil spill in Alaska yet but I do know BP has a horrible safety record and are constantly having explosions in one of their texas plants. Luckily they are not one of our clients because I think I would refuse doing an inventory observation for them.
Aurora wrote: I hadn't heard about the oil spill in Alaska yet but I do know BP has a horrible safety record and are constantly having explosions in one of their texas plants. Luckily they are not one of our clients because I think I would refuse doing an inventory observation for them.
Yep. BP has had a really bad rep for a few years now, at least from a safety point of view. I don't think I'll boycott personally (I already boycott Exxon-Mobil) but I can't remember the last time I bought gas from BP and I don't see that changing.