Interesting. Like it was said before, don't let a good catastrophe go to waste.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/06/15/administration-oil-spill-damage-claims-white-house-says/Obama No Longer Trusting BP's Word on Its Offshore Oil Drilling, White House SaysPresident Obama will no longer trust the word of BP in determining whether its deep-water oil drilling is safe in other parts of the Gulf of Mexico, the White House said Tuesday.
"I don't think the president wants to take BP's word for it that everything is OK," Gibbs said in an interview with Fox News. "
I don't think we can risk going forward on taking a company's word for it anymore." The U.S. government extended a moratorium on deep-water drilling in May by six months following an April 20 explosion at the Deepwater Horizon rig that killed 11 workers and unleashed millions of gallons of crude oil into the Gulf. BP currently has four other offshore oil drilling permits that were put on hold by Obama.
"We don't know what caused this accident," Gibbs said, adding, "I don't think the people of the Gulf, even those dependent upon those jobs, or the people of this country, believe that we ought to be letting BP go forward with the drilling process when we're still cleaning up the mess of the last time they tried to drill at a deep-water depth in the Gulf."
Obama will address the nation Tuesday night in his first televised speech from the Oval Office. Gibbs said his address on the "nation's worst environmental crisis" will lay out a strategy for containing the oil that's leaking and "cleaning up the beaches and the environment."
Obama also will lay out a framework "to make sure this type of accident never happens again" and explain "how we make the people of the Gulf whole again through the economic claims process," he added.
Gibbs said on Tuesday that the administration is ready to take over the handling of oil spill damage claims from BP if the British company doesn't set up an "independent entity" to do it.
Gibbs told CBS's "The Early Show" that the oil giant's claims processing work has been unsatisfactory. He noted that Obama "has the legal authority" to make the claims process independent. Gibbs also said "the best way to prevail upon BP is to take the claims process away from BP."
Gibbs pledged "that will happen. ... The president will either legally compel them or come to an agreement with BP to get out of the claims process, give that to an independent entity."
The news of the administration taking over the claims from BP comes as the company has been given permission to burn oil and gas. Authorities late yesterday gave the company approval to use a new technique, which involves pumping oil from the busted wellhead to a special ship on the surface. There, it will be burned off, rather than collected.
Gibbs said Obama also will outline steps to reduce U.S. dependence on foreign oil in his address Tuesday, including increased use of fuel-efficient cars and wind and solar technology.
"We have to continue to take those steps so that this president doesn't follow a long line of presidents that talk about breaking our dependance on foreign oil only to find that the amount of our dependence increases throughout their term," he told Fox News.
Meanwhile, the head of BP in America is telling Congress that despite the catastrophic oil spill, the U.S. cannot do without oil from the Gulf.
BP America chairman and president Lamar McKay told a House panel in prepared testimony Tuesday that America's economy, security and standard of living "significantly depend upon domestic oil and gas production." He said that companies have operated in the Gulf safely and reliably.
McKay warned that reducing energy production without consumption would shift jobs offshore -- and put millions of additional barrels onto tanker ships that travel across oceans.
Executives from other major oil companies also appeared before the House Energy and Commerce Committee Tuesday to defend their own drilling practices as Congress considers new government regulations.
Rex Tillerson, chief executive of Exxon Mobil Corp., told the panel that the Gulf oil spill wouldn't have happened if BP had properly designed its deep-water well, followed procedures, trained its employees and conducted adequate tests.
Still, some lawmakers, like Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich., said BP is only one of several companies poorly equipped to handle a major oil spill.
"It could be said that BP is the one bad apple in the bunch," Stupak said in prepared testimony obtained by FoxNews.com. "But unfortunately, they appear to have plenty of company. Exxon and the other oil companies are just as unprepared to respond to a major oil spill in the Gulf as BP."
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I especially like this comment: "He noted that Obama "has the legal authority" to make the claims process independent." Doesn't BP have the authority to tell him to pound sand, heres' your 75 mill and throw the limits of liability clause approved by congress right back at him? Or, am I mistaken?
Under the law that established the reserve, called the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund, the operators of the offshore rig face no more than $75 million in liability for the damages that might be claimed by individuals, companies or the government, although they are responsible for the cost of containing and cleaning up the spill.
The fund was set up by Congress in 1986 but not financed until after the Exxon Valdez ran aground in Alaska in 1989. In exchange for the limits on liability, the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 imposed a tax on oil companies, currently 8 cents for every barrel they produce in this country or import.