Monday, April 22, 2013

BP Still Uncertain Over Spill Cost at Third Anniversary

BP Plc (BP/) faces the third anniversary of the 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico today with no sure knowledge of how much more it will have to pay government and private plaintiffs over the disaster.


Last year BP agreed to pay an estimated $8.5 billion to settle lawsuits by most plaintiffs as well as $4 billion to the U.S. government in criminal penalties.

The company is also facing claims from plaintiffs who weren’t covered by last year’s settlement and as much as $17 billion in fines over violations of the U.S. Clean Water Act.

The company has been hit with a flurry of new suits filed this month, including hundreds this week, by individuals, businesses and governments attempting to meet the three-year statute of limitations deadline.

Mississippi Attorney

General Jim Hood filed two separate suits against BP this week in federal and state courts. Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi filed today, on the anniversary of the explosion. Alabama and Louisiana had sued previously.

What the company still may owe will hinge greatly on decisions by U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier, who is overseeing litigation spurred by the April 20, 2010, blowout of BP’s Macondo well and the subsequent explosion that sent 4 million barrels of oil into the Gulf.

Trial Ends Barbier will decide fault for the incident and whether BP or its contractors were grossly negligent, which could trigger higher damages or fines.

As BP presented its last witness April 17 at the nonjury trial over liability for the accident, Barbier said he wouldn’t issue an immediate decision.

The judge said he would probably give lawyers for BP, its co-defendants, private party plaintiffs and the U.S. 60 days to submit their arguments and proposed findings to him. He said he would also provide 20 days for replies.

Nothing will happen before the filings and the decision may linger beyond this summer. Barbier has said that he may not issue a judgment on fault and gross negligence before a scheduled second phase of the trial set for Sept. 16.

That phase will concern the size of the spill and the efforts to contain it. Barbier said he’s considering a third phase to determine penalties. Damages trials would follow.

Pushing Resolutions

Barbier may issue the decision on liability and gross negligence before the second phase as a means of forcing further settlements, said John Levy, an attorney specializing in complex litigation, including maritime and environmental law.

Part of the reason trials are split into separate phases is to push such resolutions, Levy said. “They help the parties see the light that is coming at the end of the tunnel,” he said.

“His decision will help to simplify and narrow the case going forward,” said Levy, of Montgomery McCracken in Cherry Hill, New Jersey.

“Certain parties may settle out. Certain issues may settle out.” The blast aboard the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig killed 11 workers and set off the largest offshore oil spill in U.S. history.

The accident sparked hundreds of lawsuits against well owner BP; Vernier, Switzerland-based Transocean Ltd. (RIG), owner of the Deepwater Horizon; and Houston-based Halliburton Co. (HAL), which provided cementing services for the project.

Cameron, M-I Swaco

The plaintiffs also sued Cameron International Corp. (CAM), which made blowout-prevention equipment used on the rig, and M-I Swaco, a Schlumberger Ltd. (SLB) unit that provided the rig’s drilling fluids.

Barbier dismissed both companies from the lawsuits during the liability trial that began Feb. 25. A key issue for the remaining defendants is whether Barbier finds they acted with willful or wanton misconduct or reckless indifference -- the legal requirement for establishing gross negligence.

For London-based BP, a finding of gross negligence would mean the company might be liable to the U.S. for more than $17 billion in Clean Water Act fines, as well as unspecified punitive damages to claimants who weren’t part of the $8.5 billion settlement the company reached with most private-party plaintiffs last year.

Transocean and Halliburton could be held liable for punitive damages for all plaintiffs if the companies are found to have handled their duties on the rig in a grossly negligent manner.

The companies aren’t facing compensatory damages, based on a ruling by Barbier last year that the project contract required BP to indemnify them such costs.

Well Unstable

Lawyers for the U.S. and oil-spill victims contended in the nonjury trial that BP was over budget and behind schedule on the deep-water Macondo well off the Louisiana coast, prompting the oil company to cut corners and ignore safety tests showing the well was unstable.

They also alleged Halliburton’s cement job was defective and Transocean employees made a series of missteps on the rig, including disabling safety systems, failing to properly maintain the installation and not providing adequate training for its crew.

BP claimed during the trial that Transocean failed to maintain the drilling rig and Halliburton provided defective cementing services. Transocean and Halliburton pointed fingers back at BP.

Any decision by Barbier will be subject to appeal, which would further delay determination of costs, Levy said. “An appeal may have to wait until after additional phases,” he said.

As attorneys prepare the post-trial legal arguments, new lawsuits over the spill have been pouring into the federal courts for several weeks, primarily by plaintiffs who were excluded from last year’s settlement.

Casinos, States

The $8.5 billion agreement didn’t cover claims of financial institutions, casinos, private plaintiffs in parts of Florida and Texas, and residents and businesses claiming harm from the deep-water drilling moratorium.

It excluded federal government claims and those of Gulf Coast states Louisiana and Alabama, and lawsuits against other defendants. Some of the new claims are substantial, including a lawsuit brought in New Orleans federal court this month by Vantage Drilling Co. (VTG), which alleged that it incurred a $265.5 million increase in financing costs for a drilling rig as a result of the spill.

‘Considerable’ Losses

Florida officials filed suit today seeking to recover the state’s damages suffered as a result of the spill. The lawsuit covers cover only the state’s economic losses, and not any injuries to natural resources or claims by individuals, businesses or local governments, the state attorney general said in an e-mailed statement yesterday before filing.

“The State of Florida suffered considerable economic losses as a result of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, and BP and Halliburton must be held accountable,” Bondi said in the statement. Florida sued only BP and Halliburton.

Florida reserves the right to add other parties, such as Transocean, the state’s lawyers said in the complaint. Mississippi filed one claim in state court and another in federal court in Gulfport against BP, Transocean, Halliburton and Anadarko Petroleum Corp. (APC), which owned a 25 percent stake in the well.

Mississippi was forced to sue because BP wouldn’t negotiate a “reasonable settlement,” said Hood, the state’s attorney general.

“BP would not even agree to waive the statute of limitations while we negotiated, which could have prevented the state from having to file suit and saved both them and the taxpayers a lot of money paying lawyers and fighting in the courts,” he said in a statement yesterday.

Cities, Counties

Other new lawsuits include one brought by the city of Marathon, Florida, over environmental damage and lost tax revenue, and similar claims by several coastal counties in southeast Texas, including Jefferson County and Chambers County, which lie between Houston and the Louisiana border.

The city of St. Pete Beach, Florida, filed yesterday against BP, Halliburton and Transocean. “Texas will bring its claim against those responsible for the Deepwater Horizon disaster at the appropriate time,” said Lauren Bean, a spokeswoman for Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott.

“Texas, along with the other Gulf Coast States and the DOJ, have been engaged in settlement talks for quite some time.”

Fresh Wave

Beyond government claims, a fresh wave of suits has been filed by others excluded from the settlement, ranging from Florida casino workers whose tips declined to real estate developers who said they lost financing to build multimillion- dollar oceanfront resorts.

Texas longshoremen, coastal insurance agencies, small-town lenders, and several employment agencies are also suing. In each of these cases, the victims say they presented their damages to BP as required by law, and the company either rejected their claims or failed to timely respond.

Mississippi’s Charter Bank filed a complaint in federal court in Gulfport yesterday against BP, Halliburton and Transocean, seeking reimbursement for losses related to the spill. Following the incident, “banking activity and new loan origination ground to a halt,” the bank said in its complaint.

Claims by excluded plaintiffs, if they’re not also settled, would be considered in any damages trials. BP and Transocean, which were both sued by the U.S. under the Oil Pollution Act, also face unspecified costs from claims by the federal government and the Gulf Coast states for natural resource damages.

Under the law, the owner of the oil spilled is responsible for paying to put natural resources back to pre- incident conditions.

Guilty Plea

When Transocean pleaded guilty in January to a misdemeanor Clean Water Act violation and agreed to pay $1.4 billion, including $400 million in criminal penalties, it didn’t resolve the natural-resource damages claims.

Transocean has said that its liability for such damages is limited because the oil spilled belonged to BP and its well partners, Anadarko and Mitsui & Co. (8031)’s MOEX Offshore 2007, which had a 10 percent share. MOEX settled government claims for $90 million last year, while Anadarko still has U.S. Clean Water Act claims pending against it.

Anadarko wasn’t part of the liability trial. Barbier said the company couldn’t be sued under maritime law because it didn’t have control of the operation.

Government trustees for these natural resources have been assessing the potential costs since the first weeks after the spill. The assessments haven’t been completed and, while BP has made interim payments, the final claims by these governments remain unknown.

bloomberg.com

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