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Focus of Gulf oil disaster shifts to finding the culprit

BP ups asset sale target after massive oil spill: report
London (AFP) Sept 5, 2010 - Oil giant BP has increased to 40 billion dollars the amount it wants to raise from an asset sale programme in the wake of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, the Sunday Times newspaper reported. The 40 billion (31 billion euro) figure is an increase from the previous goal of 30 billion dollars. The target figure reportedly includes the planned sale of its 20 billion dollar, 26 percent stake in North America's largest oil field, Prudhoe Bay in Alaska, which is on the market. "They're being very clear. For the right price, they'll sell," an unidentified source told the Sunday Times. The paper also said BP was in talks to dispose of up to 10 billion dollars of international assets to TNK-BP, its Russian joint venture. BP has spent eight billion dollars battling the huge Gulf of Mexico spill which followed an explosion on an oil rig off the Louisiana coast in April. The British-based group has forecast that the environmental disaster will cost it a total of about 32.2 billion dollars.
by Staff Writers
New Orleans, Louisiana (AFP) Sept 5, 2010
With a key piece of evidence raised from the depths of the Gulf of Mexico and BP's Macondo well ruled a threat no longer, the focus shifts to what went wrong and who is to blame.

Had it functioned properly, the blowout preventer would have sealed off the well after the explosion that ripped through it in April and the biggest maritime oil spill in history would never have happened.

The giant safety valve, which is being transferred to a NASA facility near New Orleans after being raised from the ocean on Saturday, could incriminate BP or one of the other firms involved in drilling the well.

The valve will stay under Justice Department custody, but other entities, including a US government-appointed investigative panel and congressional committees, are likely to seek access to examine it.

An assessment on Saturday from the US official overseeing the spill response that the Macondo well "does not constitute a threat" anymore will bring relief to a region that watched with despair and frustration as an estimated 4.9 million barrels of crude leaked into the ocean.

The leak began with an April 20 explosion that tore through the BP-leased Deepwater Horizon rig, killing 11 workers. The platform sank two days later, and by April 24, the Coast Guard confirmed crude was leaking into the sea.

The extent of the disaster would not be understood for months, when estimates of the leak's size were finally raised from initial figures of 1,000-5,000 barrels a day to between 35,000 and 60,000 barrels.

The flow rate is among the aspects of the disaster now being examined in public hearings, court cases, congressional inquiries and the Justice Department's criminal probe.

BP is a prime target for the investigations, which are also examining the roles of other firms, including Halliburton, which cemented the well; Transocean, which leased the rig to BP; and Cameron International, which supplied the blowout preventer.

A joint investigation board appointed by the US Homeland Security and Interior Departments is expected to hold a fifth public hearing October 4-8 examining the device and the equipment used to drill the well.

The panel is to produce a final report in January 2011. It cannot charge individuals or firms, but can refer any allegations of criminal conduct to the Justice Department.

Attorney General Eric Holder said the department's inquiry would examine "a wide range of things from false statements to the way certain entities have conducted themselves."

It will also look into potential violations of multiple environmental regulations, including the Clean Water Act and the Migratory Bird Treaty Act.

The spill washed up in all five Gulf states -- Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida. Louisiana was particularly hard-hit, with thick crude clogging its fragile wetland ecosystems.

It has prompted a flood a lawsuits, including from environmental groups, the state of Alabama and hundreds of individuals who suffered financial losses.

Some 77 cases have been consolidated for consideration by a judge in Louisiana, and over 200 more could be added.

The firms involved in the spill also face congressional scrutiny, with an array of Senate and House of Representatives committees examining the disaster.

At the forefront of their efforts is Representative Ed Markey, who has pushed BP to accept government estimates of the amount of oil that leaked from the well each day.

Those estimates will help determine how large a fine BP will pay over the spill, with Markey saying they could be assessed between 1,100 to 4,300 dollars per barrel spilled.



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