BP, the oil giant that, along with Halliburton and Transocean, was responsible for the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion and oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico, is crying foul in the claims process of settlements for the victims of the spill.ย The company has launched a massive public relations offensive to paint themselves as the victims in thisย situation.
According to The Hill, BP CEO Bob Dudley said recently that the entire claims process has been โabsurd,โ and that his company has been more than generous with their payments. ย BP spokesperson Geoff Morrell said:ย โWhile we remain committed to paying legitimate claims, we did not agree to pay for fictitious losses, or for claims that are based on fraud or tainted byย corruption.โ
While the overall PR war may appear to be aimed at the victims along the Gulf Coast, the real targets of BPโs campaign are trial lawyers.ย They have even enlisted the help of the largest business lobby and strongest advocates for โtort reformโ, the U.S. Chamber ofย Commerce.
The Hill reports that a recent ad placed by BP in The Washington Post quoted National Association of Manufacturers CEO Jay Timmons, saying, โToo often these days, the tort system is nothing more than a trial-lawyer bonanza, and thatโs not fair to individuals seeking redress and no way to encourage investment in manufacturing to create tomorrowโs high-payingย jobs.โ
The reason that the company is trying to paint the claims process as plagued with fraud is that they had underestimated the amount of claims that they would have to pay out, and their settlement fund is quickly running dry.ย This means that subsequent payments will have to come directly out of the companyโs profits, a move that is not sitting well with shareholders who were promised that the price tag would not exceed $8 billion.ย
BP CEO Bob Dudley has already been castigated by the judge overseeing the settlement process for attempting to try his case in the media, with Judge Carl Barbier saying that the language Dudley has been using in the national media is โcrossing the line.โย For the last month, BP has been running newspaper ads like the one mentioned above, as well as doing interviews with media figures to paint themselves in a more positive light while demonizing the victims along theย coast.
Recently, I filled in as guest host for the Ring of Fire TV program on Free Speech TV, where I spoke with investigative journalist Rick Outzen about BPโs PR tactics, and the two segments can be viewedย below:
BP would love for the American public to forget the fact that they have already had to plead guilty to obstruction of justice for misleading the federal government about the amount of oil that was spewing from their broken well-head on the floor of the Gulf of Mexico.ย
They would also like the public to forget about their past history of intentionally endangering workers because it was cheaper to pay off the families of workers who are killed than it is to pay for mechanisms to make the workplace safer.ย And then there are also the federal investigations into the companyโs practice of price gouging in both the United States and Europe that they hoped to sweep under theย rug.
There are plenty of victims along the Gulf Coast, but BP is not one of them.ย As a lifelong resident of this area, I find it both offensive and absolutely appalling that BP is telling the world that they deserve the publicโs sympathy in thisย case.
Subscribe to our newsletter
Stay up to date with DeSmog news and alerts