The White House changed a drilling safety report to make it appear that scientists and other experts backed the Obama administration’s six-month moratorium on new deep-water drilling, according to a report by the Department of the Interior’s inspector general.
Outside scientists did review new safety measures for offshore drilling, but the Inspector General said editing changes inaccurately suggested they had also supported the moratorium, the Associated Press reports.
For its part, the White House said the report was handled properly. ”Following a review that included interviews with peer review experts, the Inspector General found no intentional misrepresentation of their views,” White House deputy press secretary Bill Burton said in a statement.
It’s not the first time the Obama administration has been accused of distorting scientific opinion in the wake of the April BP oil well blast that killed 11 workers and spewed 200 million gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico. In October, staff members of a presidential panel complained that the White House budget office delayed a report that forecast how much oil could hit the shores along the Gulf.
President Obama’s energy adviser Carol Browner declared on TV that the report showed that most of the oil was gone, though the document actually said the oil could still be there.
A spokeswoman for Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said “there was no intent to mislead the public.”


