BP's $4.5bn plea deal approved
2013-01-30 15:27
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Chicago - A US judge on Tuesday approved a $4.5bn deal in
which BP pleaded guilty to criminal charges from the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil
spill - but the British energy giant's legal woes are far from over.
BP is set to return to the Louisiana courthouse on 25 February
for a mammoth trial consolidating scores of remaining lawsuits stemming from
the worst environmental disaster to strike the US.
It must also still resolve a civil case on environmental
fines that could amount to as much as $18bn if gross negligence is found.
It also remains on the hook for billions in economic
damages, including the cost of environmental rehabilitation.
The blowout on the BP-leased Deepwater Horizon drilling
rig on 20 April 2010 killed 11 people and unleashed some 4.9 million barrels of
oil into the Gulf, blackening beaches in five states and crippling the region's
tourism and fishing industries.
BP America vice president Luke Keller apologised to the
families of the deceased and other victims at the hearing in New Orleans.
"Our guilty plea makes clear, BP understands and
acknowledges its role in that tragedy, and we apologise - BP apologises - to
all those injured and especially to the families of the lost loved ones,"
Keller said according to a statement provided by BP.
"BP is also sorry for the harm to the environment
that resulted from the spill, and we apologise to the individuals and
communities who were injured."
It took 87 days to cap BP's runaway well located 1 500m
below the ocean surface and about 65km off the coast of Louisiana.
BP pleaded guilty in November to 11 counts of
manslaughter, one count of felony obstruction of Congress and two environmental
violations.
The guilty plea led the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
to temporarily bar the British energy giant from entering into any new
government contracts, from supplying oil to the military to obtaining the right
to explore new tracts of land and ocean.
"While BP's discussions with the EPA have been taking
place in parallel to the court proceedings on the criminal plea, the company's
work toward reaching an administrative agreement with the EPA is a separate
process, and it may take some time to resolve issues relating to such an
agreement," BP said.
BP has signalled it will continue to aggressively pursue
damages from rig operator Transocean and well operations subcontractor
Halliburton, which BP blames for faulty work leading up to the blowout.
Government probes
Judge Carl Barbier - an expert in maritime law charged
with overseeing the bulk of the cases - has left the door open to some shared
liability in key pre-trial rulings.
Several government probes have already castigated BP,
Transocean and Halliburton - which was responsible for the well's faulty cement
job - for cutting corners and missing crucial warning signs.
Transocean agreed last month to pay a $1.4bn fine and
plead guilty to violating the Clean Water Act, but it argues that, as operator,
BP must accept full liability for the disaster.
BP has spent more than $14bn on the spill response and
cleanup, set up a $20bn trust fund to cover claims for damages and committed $1bn
to early restoration projects.
It has already paid out more than $9bn to individuals,
businesses and government entities impacted by the spill.
Barbier approved a $7.8bn settlement last year that will
cover the bulk of the outstanding private claims for economic loss, property
damage and medical problems.
He must still determine how to resolve lawsuits filed by
shareholders or others seeking compensation because of a drilling moratorium
imposed after the spill, among other outstanding issues.
Meanwhile, three former BP employees have pleaded not
guilty to criminal charges related to the disaster.
Two supervisors on the rig at the time rejected
manslaughter charges, saying they were being treated as scapegoats, and a
senior BP executive at the time denied he obstructed justice by lying about the
volume of oil leaking from the runaway well.
- SAPA