Author Topic: White House Blocked Worst-Case Estimate Of Oil Spill Disaster (Lied & Concealed)  (Read 661 times)

Soul Crusher

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BOMBSHELL: White House Blocked Worst-Case Estimate Of Oil Spill Disaster
Gus Lubin | Oct. 6, 2010, 11:47 AM | 385 |  14


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Back in April, the White House blocked the worst case scenario estimate of the oil spill, according to the federal oil spill commission.

The White House kept NOAA from announcing a spill rate higher than the 5,000 bbl (originally 1,000 bbl) figure that came from BP.

Keeping a much higher figure out of the press may have slowed national response to the disaster, the commission said.

More details from Times Picayune:

In four separate draft working papers, the commission staff suggests that "over optimism" about the size of the spill during the first 10 days after the Macondo well exploded April 20 slowed the response.

"While it is not clear that this misplaced optimism affected any individual response effort, it may have affected the scale and speed with which national resources were brought to bear,"one of the staff reports said. "Most responders thought that their initial approach was too slow and unfocused."

No response yet from the White House as to why they reportedly downplayed the disaster.

Now read the 30 offers of international help Obama threw out the window >


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/white-house-blocked-worst-case-scenario-estimate-of-oil-spill-disaster-2010-10#ixzz11ayyXxFr


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oh boy.  


Fury

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Re: White House Blocked Worst-Case Estimate Of Oil Spill Disaster
« Reply #1 on: October 06, 2010, 09:13:39 AM »
Well, it's not that bad. Obama did a good handling the spill.  :-X

Soul Crusher

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Re: White House Blocked Worst-Case Estimate Of Oil Spill Disaster
« Reply #2 on: October 06, 2010, 01:28:12 PM »
POLITICS
OCTOBER 6, 2010, 3:40 P.M. ET.
Spill Panel Faults Obama Response Effort
By STEPHEN POWER And TENNILLE TRACY
www.wsj.com


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.WASHINGTON—The Obama administration's response to the BP PLC oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico was affected by "a sense of over optimism" about the disaster that "may have affected the scale and speed with which national resources were brought to bear," the staff of a special commission investigating the disaster found.

In four papers issued Wednesday by the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling, commission investigators fault the administration for making inaccurate public statements about a report on the fate of oil spilled by a BP well in the Gulf of Mexico.

The commission papers also are critical of the administration for initially underestimating how much petroleum was flowing into the Gulf. Together, the inaccurate statements created the impression the government "was either not fully competent to handle the spill or not fully candid" about the accident.

Spanish Oil Firm to Drill Off Cuba. Access thousands of business sources not available on the free web. Learn More .The papers fault the administration for taking "an overly casual approach" in calculating, during the spill's second week, that between 1,000 and 5,000 barrels of oil were flowing into the Gulf.

That estimate—which the government later revised to between 35,000 and 60,000 barrels a day—was based on a one-page document prepared by a government scientist within six days of the April 20 explosion of the Deepwater Horizon rig, according to one commission staff paper.

The scientist's estimate was based partly on an imprecise estimate of the speed with which the oil was leaking and didn't account for a leak from a kink in the riser above the rig's blowout preventer, according to the spill commission investigators.

"Despite the acknowledged inaccuracies of the [government] scientist's estimate and despite the existence of other and potentially better methodologies for visually assessing flow rate…5,000 bbls/day was to remain the government's official flow-rate estimate for a full month until May 27, 2010," the staff paper says.

The paper adds that it is "possible that inaccurate flow-rate figures may have hindered the subsea efforts to stop and to contain the flow of oil at the wellhead."

A White House spokesman didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

The working paper is one of several released by the commission that examines various aspects of the federal response to the Gulf spill. Another paper released Wednesday suggests the administration was in some ways slow to respond to the accident and then misdirected resources when it realized the American public viewed its response as being inadequate.

While Coast Guard personnel told the commission in interviews that they had enough equipment by the end of May, the president announced around that same time that he would triple the federal manpower responding to the spill. The paper calls this "the arguable overreaction to the public perception of a slow response."

The tripling effort resulted in resources being thrown at the problem in an inefficient way.

For example, the commission paper says, the National Incident Command staffers thought they needed to buy every skimmer they could find, even though they were hearing that responders had enough skimmers.

The commission staff also takes the administration to task for having characterized a federal report on the fate of oil in the Gulf as having been subjected to "peer review" by independent scientists.

In fact, the commission staff paper says, it is unclear whether any independent scientists actually reviewed the paper prior to its release in August.

The paper said that about three-quarters of the oil spilled by the well had broken down or been cleaned up. Those estimates have been challenged as overly rosy by some independent scientists.

Write to Stephen Power at stephen.power@wsj.com and Tennille Tracy at tennille.tracy@dowjones.com


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The commission papers also are critical of the administration for initially underestimating how much petroleum was flowing into the Gulf. Together, the inaccurate statements created the impression the government "was either not fully competent to handle the spill or not fully candid" about the accident.





Lets see the jerkoff on this board spin this. 

kcballer

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Not surprised.  Trying to protect BP's share price while also trashing them in the public.  Weak sauce.
Abandon every hope...

Soul Crusher

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Obama's Interference Slowed The Oil Spill Response, Say Inspectors
Gus Lubin | Oct. 6, 2010, 3:24 PM | 318 |  5

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New findings by the oil spill commission make the White House look worse and worse.

Now the report accuses Obama of hindering response efforts at a time when his poll numbers were flagging (via TWI):

The government did not take any major steps to respond to this perception until the end of May, when President Obama announced that he would triple the federal manpower and resources responding to the spill. 37 Coast Guard responders believed they were already throwing every resource they had at fighting the spill, but they dutifully tripled personnel and tracked their progress, at least for the state of Louisiana, in a regular report titled “Status on Tripling.”

Tripling resources just got in the way:

Responders noted that “tripling” taxed the Coast Guard’s ability to respond and to conduct its other missions and may not have been the most effective use of a thin-spread force in a lengthy campaign. Tripling, or at least the arguable overreaction to the public perception of a slow response, resulted in resources being thrown at the spill in general rather than being targeted in an efficient way.

An earlier bad headline from the report accused the White House of censoring NOAA's worst-case estimate for the spill rate -- and once again hindering the response.

Check out awesome photos of people surfing in the oil spill >
Tags: Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill, Oil | Get Alerts for these topics »

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/oil-spill-commission-obamas-interference-actually-slowed-the-oil-spill-response-2010-10#ixzz11c4LEqC5


Soul Crusher

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Soul Crusher

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tough, but I'll give it a shot. 

Trying to protect BP's share price while also trashing them in the public.

Great point dude.  He shows compassion by relating to Americans' anger with BP - but at the same time he's staying out of their corporate way so they can stay viable, and pay the $20 billion for cleanup and lost jobs.  Bravo for making americans feel better while not getting in the way of the private sector.  Capitalism is alive and well.





 ;D
(cue personal attacks from morons who think i really feel this way hahahahah)

Kazan

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Not surprised.  Trying to protect BP's share price while also trashing them in the public.  Weak sauce.

I would concur accept for the fact for the moratorium/ban on drilling in the gulf
ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ

Soul Crusher

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Its all part of the plan.