“Robust Recovery” Spurs BP to Seek End of Payments for Oil Spill Damages

Wednesday, July 13, 2011
BP says there’s no longer any need to spend the remainder of the $20 billion fund it established after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, claiming the Gulf of Mexico region has recovered from the disaster and is doing just fine.
 
In documentation filed with the Gulf Coast Claims Facility, the oil giant insists the Gulf economy “experienced a robust recovery” last fall after an offshore oil platform exploded and sank months earlier, polluting the ocean with an estimated 200 million gallons of crude oil.
 
To date, less than $5 billion of the fund has been distributed to about 195,000 claimants affected by the spill, which impacted local industries such as fishing and tourism. More than half a million claims have been filed. Payments were disbursed not only to cover actual losses but also future ones.
 
The Mississippi Attorney General sued Gulf Coast Claims Facility administrator Ken Feinberg on Tuesday for access to its claims documents. The attorney general said he wants to see if complaints are being handled in accordance with the Mississippi Consumer Protection Act.  
 
In terms of future expenses related to the accident, a report published in the New England Journal of Medicine states the actual health toll of the spill may never be known. The reason: A study being conducted by the U.S. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences wasn’t started until six months after the April 2010 incident.
-Noel Brinkerhoff
 
Mississippi AG Sues Feinberg Over Claims Documents (by Dan Murtaugh, Mobile Press-Register)

Comments

THEPINUPPATRIOT 12 years ago
what about all the oil out there in the marsh??? i live in new orleans & on hot days, you can still smell oil in some places... i hate bp.... i really do. ****if you go out there & stir up the water, oil comes to the top.****

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