BP chief executive Bob Dudley said the company is able to fight a
lengthy court battle over the 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
Dudley, who took control of BP in October 2012 after former chief
executive Tony Hayward resigned amid criticism over the way he had
handled the oil spill, told the Sunday Telegraph that BP can continue to
function even if the court case that begins in New Orleans today
continues for years.
"We have to remember we are a business that invests in decade-long cycles," he said.
"For the vast majority of people now at BP, the company is back on its feet and it is starting to move forward," he said.
BP has set aside US$40 billion to deal with fines and associated costs
of the April 20, 2010 blowout of BP's deepwater Macondo well which
killed 11 workers and injured 17. The burning drilling rig Deepwater
Horizon toppled and sank to the Gulf floor, where it sits today.
It took engineers 85 days to permanently cap the well.
By then, more than 750 million litres of oil leaked from the well and
had covered much of the northern half of the Gulf of Mexico endangering
fisheries, killing marine life and shutting down offshore oil drilling
operations.
President Barack Obama called the BP spill "the worst environmental disaster the nation has ever faced."
Dudley said BP had improved safety standards on its rigs, five of which
are working again in the Gulf of Mexico, and that the company was still
committed to deepwater drilling.
"We had a choice whether or not to back away from the offshore industry
and the deep water industry but we have a lot of great strengths in this
area and so, rather than move away, we have gone in with even more
commitment, more time and more people, more expertise," he said.
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
British arms-to-Iran suspect faces Texas court
A retired British businessman is to appear in a federal court in El Paso
after being extradited last week on charges that he tried to sell
missile batteries to Iran in 2006.
Christopher Tappin turned himself in Friday after fighting extradition from the United Kingdom for two years. Two other men were sentenced in 2007 to 20 and 24 months in federal prison for their roles in the scheme.
The 65-year-old Tappin was denied a final appeal of his extradition last month and delivered to El Paso by federal marshals. His deportation sparked a debate in the U.K. over whether British and American citizens are treated equally under the two countries' extradition treaty.
Don Cogdell, Tappin's attorney in Texas, said he plans to aggressively push to have Tappin granted bail.
Christopher Tappin turned himself in Friday after fighting extradition from the United Kingdom for two years. Two other men were sentenced in 2007 to 20 and 24 months in federal prison for their roles in the scheme.
The 65-year-old Tappin was denied a final appeal of his extradition last month and delivered to El Paso by federal marshals. His deportation sparked a debate in the U.K. over whether British and American citizens are treated equally under the two countries' extradition treaty.
Don Cogdell, Tappin's attorney in Texas, said he plans to aggressively push to have Tappin granted bail.
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