Transocean to pay $1.4 billion for role in 2010 Gulf oil spill

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

The next major legal dispute that needs to be resolved is the scope of the civil penalties against BP. A trial is set for February but the charges could be settled before then. It is estimated that the Macondo blowout spilled about 4.9 million barrels of crude oil into the gulf.

The Justice Department is weighing penalties per barrel for 4.1 million barrels that remained in the gulf. The remaining 800,000 barrels were captured in containment efforts. BP has argued that the real amount was less.

The civil penalty could range between $4.55 billion to more than $17 billion, depending on whether the government finds BP acted with gross negligence, Uhlmann said. In levying the fine, the Justice Department is required to take into account, however, the billions the company has already paid for clean-up, economic damage and legal penalties.

Said Audubon Society President David Yarnold: “The truly big move is the next one. The DOJ is representing all of us in the civil case against BP. That’s where fairness will be found – or lost.”

||2|Next Page

Comments

Blogs

» Extra! Extra! - A blog by Chris Heimerman
Extra! Extra! - A blog by Chris Heimerman

Knowledge is power, right?

Bryan Frederick is a Lifestyle Medicine Instructor at CGH Medical Center, and he's got me thinking and re-thinking my approach to weight loss.
» Out Here
Out Here

Why the need for middleman?

The other day, we ran a story about the Dixon Tourism Board's website, which is hard to navigate and missing key information, particularly about the Petunia Festival. Are we wasting our time examining local tourism websites?

Reader Poll

Have you ever gone boating on the Rock River?

Yes
No