Greetings! [ Log in ] [ Register ] [ Intranet ] [ Manage Mailing Lists Subscriptions ]
The Consortium for Ocean Leadership - Washington D.C. - (202) 232-3900
  • Home
  • About
    • From the President’s Office
    • Mission
    • History
    • Staff Directory
    • Board of Trustees
      • Scoping the Future
    • Membership
    • Employment, Internships and Opportunities
    • Visiting
    • Travel Policy
  • News & Resources
    • Events Calendar
    • Press Releases
    • News Archive
    • Newsletters & Program Updates
    • Social Media
    • Requests for Proposals
    • Glossary of Acronyms
    • Ocean Leadership Logos and Style Guide
  • Programs & Partnerships
    • Census of Marine Life
    • Deep Earth Academy
    • Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative
    • The Interagency Ocean Observation Committee
    • National Oceanographic Partnership Program
    • National Ocean Sciences Bowl
    • Ocean Observatories Initiative
    • SCAMPI
    • Scientific Ocean Drilling
    • U.S. Science Support Program
  • Education
    • Deep Earth Academy
    • Diversity
    • Marine Geoscience Leadership Symposium
    • National Ocean Sciences Bowl
    • Ocean Sciences Educators Retreat
      • Mentoring
  • Ocean Policy & Legislation
    • Ocean Leadership Policy Priorities
    • Ocean Leadership Policy Documents
    • Recent News and Upcoming Events
    • Science Funding
    • Legislative Activities
      • Current Legislation
      • Congressional Hearings
    • Federal Activities
    • Ocean Leadership Events on the Hill
      • 2012 – Public Policy Forum
      • 2012 – Sea Grant Knauss Welcome Reception
    • Policy 101
    • About Ocean Leadership Advocacy
  • Gulf Oil Spill
  • Ocean Science Experts

Report Slams Administration for Underestimating Gulf Spill

Posted by Will Ramos on Thursday, October 7th, 2010 at 10:02 am
Filed under: Action,Gulf Oil Spill,News & Resources,Policy
Share

(Click to enlarge) A cleanup worker on June 4, picking up an absorbent snare filled with oil on Queen Bess Island in Plaquemines Parish, La. (Credit: Gerald Herbert/Associated Press)

The Obama administration failed to act upon or fully inform the public of its own worst-case estimates of the amount of oil gushing from the blown-out BP well, slowing response efforts and keeping the American people in the dark for weeks about the size of the disaster, according to preliminary reports from the presidential commission investigating the accident.

(From The New York Times / by John M.  Broder) – The government repeatedly underestimated how much oil was flowing into the Gulf of Mexico and how much was left after the well was capped in July, leading to a loss of faith in the government’s ability to handle the spill and a continuing breach between the federal authorities and state and local officials, the commission staff members found in a series of four reports issued Wednesday.

“By initially underestimating the amount of oil flow and then, at the end of the summer, appearing to underestimate the amount of oil remaining in the gulf,” one of the reports stated, “the federal government created the impression that it was either not fully competent to handle the spill or not fully candid with the American people about the scope of the problem.”

The reports also say that about two weeks after the BP rig exploded, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration asked the White House for permission to make public its worst-case models for the accident. The White House Office of Management and Budget initially denied the request, according to government officials interviewed by the commission’s staff members.

The White House responded vigorously to the assertions on Wednesday, saying it never concealed its most dire estimates of the spill and quickly threw everything the government had at the problem. As for the NOAA report, White House officials said that it was a flawed and incomplete study and that they sent it back to the agency for more analysis. It was eventually released in early July.

The four reports, from the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling, make clear that the president-appointed panel does not intend to spare the administration as it prepares a final report on the accident to be delivered to the White House early next year.

It has not yet completed its work on the causes of the well explosion or the efforts to contain the oil, but the tenor of Wednesday’s reports indicates that the White House, cabinet officers, Coast Guard commanders and senior government scientists will shoulder a fair amount of blame for the response to the accident.

The government stuck to its public flow rate estimate of 5,000 barrels a day for more than a month, even though BP officials and government scientists acknowledged that the rate could be as high as 110,000 barrels a day.

Ultimately, government and independent scientists established that the uncontrolled flow was roughly 60,000 barrels a day for much of the spill, discharging nearly five million barrels of oil into the gulf. The 18,000-foot-deep well was capped on July 15 and declared dead in late September, when a cement plug was fixed to the bottom.

Government officials have acknowledged that they miscalculated the amount of oil pouring into the gulf and, at least early on, relied on data from BP. But they said they based their response not on those figures but on worst-case estimates, including the figure of 162,000 barrels a day that BP used in its 2009 drilling permit application.

The government deployed thousands of vessels to try to collect and contain the oil and used nearly two million gallons of dispersants to break it into small droplets to speed its degradation.

In August, top administration officials said that 75 percent of the oil had evaporated, dissolved or been collected, implying that their efforts had been largely successful and that ecological damage had been limited. Carol Browner, the White House coordinator for energy and climate change, declared on Aug. 4: “I think it’s also important to note that our scientists have done an initial assessment and more than three-quarters of the oil is gone. The vast majority of the oil is gone.”

But the commission staff members said the government’s own data did not support such sweeping conclusions, which were later scaled back. A number of respected independent researchers have concluded that as much as half of the spilled oil remains suspended in the water or buried on the seafloor and in coastal sludge. And it will be some time before scientists can paint an accurate picture of the ecological damage.


Related Posts:

  • ‘Frothy Gunk’ From Deepwater Horizon Spill Harming Corals
  • What’s Going On At The Bottom Of The Gulf
  • Final Implementation Strategy for Sub-Sea and Sub-Surface Oil and Dispersant Detection, Sampling, and Monitoring
  • Govt’s Handling of Science on Oil Spill Questioned
  • Federal & Academic Scientists Return from Deep-sea Research Cruise in Gulf of Mexico

Comments are closed.

« Home | « Previous Page

Discovery »

ONW: Week of May 14, 2012 – Number 164

ONW: Week of May 14, 2012 – Number 164

The staff here at Ocean Leadership works hard to make certain that each week we provide you with the most useful and timely information regarding our efforts, activities of the community, news from Capitol Hill, and all opportunities, jobs and internships that we feel you might find beneficial.

More articles »

Understanding »

Program Update: National Ocean Sciences Bowl – April 2012

Program Update: National Ocean Sciences Bowl – April 2012

The 15th Annual National Ocean Sciences Bowl (NOSB®) Final was held April 19-22, 2012 at the Sheraton City Center Hotel in Baltimore, Maryland. Returning champions Marshfield High School from Marshfield, Wisconsin took home first place.

More articles »

Action »

Program Update: Advocacy – April 2012

Program Update: Advocacy – April 2012

Congressional appropriators got off to an early start this spring with both the House and Senate Appropriations Committees approving FY 2013 Commerce-Justice-Science spending bills in April with House and Senate floor consideration expected this month.

More articles »

Be an Ocean Leader

Subscribe via Twitter
5713 Followers
Subscribe via Facebook
1179 Fans
Subscribe via RSS
418 Readers
Subscribe via Email
Subscribe

Upcoming Events

  • May 21, 2012:
    • Global Conference on Oceans, Climate and Security (GCOCS) (all day)
  • June 3, 2012:
    • 50th ECSA Conference: Today's Science for Tomorrow's Management (all day)
    • The Coastal Society's 23rd International Conference (all day)
  • June 6, 2012:
    • DEBI RCN Ocean Crust Processes and Consequences for Life Meeting (all day)
  • June 8, 2012:
    • World Oceans Day to the 2012 (all day)
  • June 19, 2012:
    • EnergyOcean International 2012 (all day)
  • June 24, 2012:
    • 2012 National Marine Educators Association Conference (all day)
  • July 8, 2012:
    • ASLO Summer Meeting (all day)
  • July 9, 2012:
    • 12th International Coral Reef Symposium (all day)
  • August 13, 2012:
    • AOGS - AGU (WPGM) Joint Assembly in 2012 and The AOGS Geosciences World Community Exhibition (all day)

What's Hot This Month

  • ONW: Week of May 14, 2012 – Number 164ONW: Week of May 14, 2012 – Number 164: The staff here at Ocean Leadership works hard to make certain that each week we provide you with the most useful and tim...
  • Program Update: Interagency Working Group on Ocean Observations – February 2010Program Update: Interagency Working Group on Ocean Observations – February 2010: The Interagency Working Group on Ocean Observations (IWGOO) submitted a draft charter to the Joint Subcommittee on Ocea...
  • ONW: Week of May 7, 2012 – Number 163ONW: Week of May 7, 2012 – Number 163: The staff here at Ocean Leadership works hard to make certain that each week we provide you with the most useful and tim...
  • More IODP Expedition 320 Whale SharkMore IODP Expedition 320 Whale Shark: IODP Expedition 320: Video of a whale shark....
  • Frank M. Cushing Science Policy FellowshipFrank M. Cushing Science Policy Fellowship: A fellowship for marine science postdoctoral scholars and doctoral candidates interested in bridging the gap between sci...
  • Simulation Tracks Ocean’s Missing HeatSimulation Tracks Ocean’s Missing Heat: Oceanographers may have solved one of the biggest sea mysteries in years: why the upper ocean didn’t warm between 2003 a...
  • NOAA, BOEM: Historic, 19th Century Shipwreck Discovered in Northern Gulf of MexicoNOAA, BOEM: Historic, 19th Century Shipwreck Discovered in Northern Gulf of Mexico: During a recent Gulf of Mexico expedition, NOAA, BOEM and partners discovered an historic wooden-hulled vessel which is ...
  • Bipartisan Group of Senators Announce Formation of Oceans CaucusBipartisan Group of Senators Announce Formation of Oceans Caucus: With our oceans and coastal resources, and the economies and jobs they support, facing constant and increasingly direct ...
  • Opportunity: Master Scheduler,  Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI)Opportunity: Master Scheduler, Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI): The Consortium for Ocean Leadership is pleased to announce the search for a Master Scheduler for the Ocean Observatories...
  • Sea Lions Fuel Ocean LifeSea Lions Fuel Ocean Life: Like whales, sea lions are contributing to marine ecosystems in the most fundamental way possible, research by a Flinder...

Comments

Archives

Visitors Online

19 Users Online

Recent Posts

  • ONW: Week of May 14, 2012 – Number 164
  • From the President’s Office – 5/17/2012
  • NOAA, BOEM: Historic, 19th Century Shipwreck Discovered in Northern Gulf of Mexico
  • First Satellite Tag Study for Manta Rays Reveals Habits and Hidden Journeys of Ocean Giants
  • Antarctic Octopus Study Shows West Antarctic Ice Sheet May Have Collapsed 200,000 Years Ago

RSS JOIDES Resolution Blog

  • Kia Ora
  • The "What's" and "Why's" of Expedition 342
  • More for our NOSB core sampling friends!
  • Shoutout and Google Earth info for NOSB Teams
  • Expedition 340 Completed: Thank you and fare thee well

RSS ScienceDaily

  • Cloak of invisibility: Engineers use plasmonics to create an invisible photodetector
  • Soldiers who desecrate the dead see themselves as hunters
  • Brain injuries from blasts similar to football impacts
  • Good news for nanomedicine: Quantum dots appear safe in pioneering study on primates
  • First, do no harm: Danger in standard treatment for a serious lung disease
QR Code Business Card Web design by Will Ramos | © Copyright Consortium for Ocean Leadership 2007-2011. All Rights Reserved. | 23 queries in 0.774 seconds.