Interior Hires Company That Gave Doomed Gulf Oil Rig Safety Thumbs-Up

The Interior Department has hired a Norwegian risk-management firm to study the failure of a key component of BP’s doomed Gulf oil well, sparking conflict-of-interest charges because of the firm’s past approval of safety procedures at the site.

The Washington Post reports that Det Norske Veritas will be paid $1.3 million to do an autopsy of the 380-ton blowout preventer that was supposed to prevent the April 20 explosion that claimed the lives of 11 workers and spewed millions of gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico.

In 2007, DNV inspected and recertified safety procedures on board the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig, which sank as a result of the explosion. In 2009, DNV conducted a study of the reliability of blowout preventers for the owner of the rig, Transocean. DNV also named a Transocean executive to a rig owners’ committee that advises the organization’s rule-making process, according to the Post.

Critics say it all adds up to a giant conflict of interest.

“It’s of particular concern that DNV has done a specific analysis of the rig back in 2007″, and “has opined separately on the reliability of” blowout preventers, said Rafael Moure-Eraso, chairman of the U.S. Chemical Safety Board. “We think those positions are a conflict that should have been reviewed early.”

DNV denies that there is any conflict of interest. Government officials say the contract was awarded by competitive bid and met applicable regulations.

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One comment to “Interior Hires Company That Gave Doomed Gulf Oil Rig Safety Thumbs-Up”

  1. Noel Griese

    Is the author of this article, Patrick Corcoran, the same Patrick Corcoran who headed the Association of Oil PIpelines?

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