A conservation group that downplayed the effects of the continuing Gulf oil spill in a New York Times article has strong ties to offshore drilling, ProPublica reports. “The sky is not falling,” Quenton R. Dokken, executive director of the Gulf of Mexico Foundation, told the Times. “We’ve certainly stepped in the hole and we’re going to have to work ourselves out of it, but it isn’t the end of the Gulf of Mexico.”
ProPublica found that at least half of the 19 members of the group’s board of directors have interests in offshore drilling. One is an executive at Transocean, the company that owns the rig that exploded last month and caused the spill. Seven other board members are currently employed at oil companies or industry suppliers, including Shell, Conoco Phillips, LLOG Exploration Company, Devon Energy, Anadarko Petroleum Company and Oceaneering International. And the foundation’s president is a retired senior vice president of offshore drilling contractor, Rowan Companies Inc.
While acknowledging the industry ties, Dokken told ProPublica that industry has “never tried to dictate the direction of the Foundation or change the mission of the Foundation.”
In other news about the spill, a BP spokesman announced Wednesday that one of the three leaks from the damaged oil rig had been shut off. Nevertheless, a senior BP executive told Congress on Tuesday that the spill could release 10 times the amount of oil currently estimated to be flowing into the Gulf.
Related: After Minimizing Danger of Oil Spill, BP Under Pressure to Stop Leak

