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"Tort Reform" For BP Oil Spill Damage In Gulf Of Mexico?

May 4, 2010 at 8:03 pm by Walt Wood | Profile

After the Exxon Valdez oil spill created long-term ecological and economic damage to the Prince William Sound area of Alaska in 1989, the oil industry persuaded the U.S. Congress to give it a $75 million liability cap for damages for future oil spills.  You can read an overview of this private industry perk here.  Today, as the BP offshore oil rig disaster continues to wreak havoc on the Gulf of Mexico and the communities that depend on it, BP may be shielded from fully compensating the people, industries and ecosystems it has harmed even though the damages will surely reach billions.

 

This is tort reform on a grand scale, and shows how unfair and unwise it is to give private industry blanket protections from responsibility for future negligence or recklessness.   In the quest for profit, why should BP or any other oil company invest more in safety when they have such big protection from being held accountable for their actions? Although the 1990 Oil Pollution Act's $75 million limit on liability does have an exception for cases of "gross negligence" or "recklessness," the possibility of BP using the damages cap as a way to avoid fully paying for the mess it has created is offensive.  We applaud the Senators who are working to raise that damages cap to $10 billion.

 

Just as the human body can be irreparably damaged, so can our environment.  It is simply unfair to grant people and industries damages caps even if the harm they cause exceed the damages.  If BP avoids fully paying for this catastrophe, that leaves the tax payers -- us -- to bail out BP.  That's privatizing BP's profits, but socializing BP's losses and risks.


Comments


 randal martin May 6, 2010 10:17 AM
The effects of the Exxon oil spill are still recognizable today in Alaska. As I understand, Exxon was able to successfully pass along all costs of the cleanup to consumers as part of their legal \"business expenses\". Let\'s hope this latest oil disaster leads to compulsory adherence to strict safety and environmental practices.

  

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