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BP plays its final card to stop leak: sludge

David Usborne reports from the Houston command centre masterminding efforts to prevent an ecological catastrophe

Wednesday 26 May 2010 19:00 EDT
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(AP)

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If there was near silence from BP's command centre on a low floor of a grey office building near Houston last night there were reasons for it. The stakes were too astronomic for anyone to speculate how the latest bid to tame the company's rogue well in the Gulf of Mexico was going until they really knew.

"It is one interesting day here," admits Bob Dudley, BP's Managing Director and board member, who ducks out for more than an hour to speak with The Independent. "Stephen Chu's in there," he notes. He means the US Energy Secretary. So is CEO Anthony Hayward. The company is about three hours into the long-awaited 'top kill', a bold effort to blast mud – more of a dense gel - into the well to clog it shut.

"So far we are proceeding to plan," is all Mr Hayward will venture when he also surfaces for a few moments, just in time for the main nightly news broadcasts on the American networks.

We may know more today. Or not. "It was always going to be between half a day and two days," before the result of top kill is known, says Dudley. That will be the moment when things suddenly seem a lot better for his image-tattered company and for the Gulf of Mexico or a lot worse. When I am taken to the command centre floor I am told to expect doors to be taped shut. Such is the sensitivity of the operation.

No one knows better than Dudley how grave this has become for BP, Britain's largest company. He and his colleagues are tackling the beast with "urgency but no emotion," he says. "To us this has to be very systematic." But President Barack Obama flies to Louisiana tomorrow and politics are all emotion. He is under pressure to take BP off the job completely, even if to do so might make very little sense.

This is why Dudley is speaking to a lone reporter even at so grave an hour. BP is defending itself against an array of charges that have become almost vicious: that its succession of gizmos to halt the gusher have seemed near-comical, that it has hidden from the public the true amounts of oil leaching into the ocean, that it has tried to shift blame and that it has underplayed the environmental threat.

"The idea that we have been making this up as we have gone along I think is not accurate," Dudley protests, armed with a sheaf of illustrations showing the armada of support ships, tankers, drilling rigs and robotic submersibles that have been deployed around the leak for weeks already. "I think we have been incredibly open about the operation and about everything we have been considering."

Maybe it's his way, but Dudley is calm and methodical in explaining the unfairness of the assaults on his company. As for the notion that a failure to stop the leak now might lead to its disintegration, he simply begs to differ, even if he knows the question might be considered legitimate by some. "It's a very strong financial company that has a strong cash flow," he says. BP, in other words, is still stinking rich.

That is a happy thing. BP has said it will pay all "legitimate claims" against it. Litigation will surely last a decade. So far it has spent $760 million responding to the crisis.

As for the issue of flow from the broken pipe, Dudley says that even now BP cannot put a certain figure on it. He talks of what happened in terms of "opening a soda can". As well as liquid, fizz comes out. Separating the gas from the oil in those plume pictures we see remains an imperfect science, he contends.

On the question of likely environmental damage, he knows to be careful because Hayward has been vilified for suggesting the damage might turn out to be "modest". But he does venture that it will be limited to Louisiana. "I think it's unlikely the oil will reach the coast of Florida," he offers, before adding hastily, "not that I mean to minimise it".

Minimising is on the minds of no one here. Everybody knows the top kill must work and hopefully be shown to do so before Mr Obama rides back into town. If he doesn't tell BP to get out of Dodge entirely – stop even trying to cap the well – he could chase them off the clean-up job and give it to the military. But one less burden for BP might not be so bad.

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