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BP chief plans trip to Russia to offer reassurances: report

White House mocks BP CEO's yacht race, defends Obama golf
Washington (AFP) June 21, 2010 - A White House spokesman mocked BP's chief executive Monday for attending a luxury yacht race despite the oil spill disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, but then defended President Barack Obama's own weekend golf game. Tony Hayward, the British energy giant's embattled chief, drew fire from the White House over the weekend for having gone to the yacht race Saturday off the Isle of Wight. White House spokesman Bill Burton took him to task again on Monday, suggesting that Hayward take part in the cleanup operations in the Gulf of Mexico with the 300,000 euro yacht he co-owns. "You know, look, if Tony Hayward wants to put a skimmer on that yacht and bring it down to the Gulf, we'd be happy to have his help," Burton said to laughter in the White House briefing room.

"But what's important isn't what Tony Hayward's doing in his free time; it's what BP is doing to take... responsibility for the mess that they've made," he said. His comments echoed those of White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel who called Hawyard's decision to go to the yacht race "part of a long line of PR gaffes and mistakes." But when asked about Obama's day Saturday, in particular his four hour golf game at a course near Washington, Burton said the president had the right to decompress a bit after a hard week. "I don't think that there's a person in this country that doesn't think that their president ought to have a little time to clear his mind," Burton said. "I think that a little time to himself on Father's Day weekend probably does us all good as American citizens," he said.
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) June 21, 2010
BP chief executive Tony Hayward is planning a trip to Russia to reassure President Dmitry Medvedev the oil giant is not on the verge of collapse, the Financial Times reported Monday.

Hayward will meet with Medvedev and tell him that BP can meet the cost of the liabilities from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, said the paper, without citing a source. The timing of the trip has not been finalised, it added.

The company last week announced a 20-billion-dollar compensation fund to deal with claims arising from the spill.

BP is present in Russia through TNK-BP, the third largest oil producer in the country, accounting for roughly a quarter of BP's global production.

Hayward's decision to visit Russia came after Medvedev expressed concern last week over the future of the company, in a newspaper interview.

"What I know is that BP will have to pay a lot of money this year," the president was quoted Thursday as telling the Wall Street Journal.

"Whether the company can digest those expenditures, whether they will lead to the annihilation of the company or its breakup into pieces is a matter of expediency."

As well as being saddled with the huge clean up and compensation costs, the oil firm's credit worthiness has been slashed and its shares have slumped on the stock market in the wake of the spill.

The environmental disaster began on April 20, when a explosion ripped through the Deepwater Horizon rig, killing 11 workers.

Hayward's recent efforts to pacify American anger have proved disastrous, and the oil chief was under fire again Sunday when US politicians blasted him for attending a yacht race.

Media reports that he went to the race off the Isle of Wight, the day after he was removed from management of the oil leak disaster, drew fierce criticism from the US administration.

earlier related report
US lashes out at BP as Gulf oil spill reaches two-month mark
New Orleans, Louisiana (AFP) June 20, 2010 - US outrage mounted against BP Sunday as the oil spill reached its two-month mark and an internal BP document showed as many as 100,000 barrels of oil could be gushing daily into the Gulf of Mexico.

The document showed the energy giant's own worst-case scenario of the amount of leaking oil at possibly 20 times more than its early public estimates.

The latest round of recriminations came after a week of White House arm-twisting prodded BP to agree to a 20-billion-dollar fund to pay claims and a stepped up oil recovery effort in the Gulf.

Media reports of CEO Tony Hayward attending a yacht race off the Isle of Wight, the day after he stepped down from managing the oil leak on a daily basis, set off one of the sharpest expressions yet of administration anger with BP.

"Well, to quote Tony Hayward, he's got his life back, as he would say," White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel said, referencing the BP boss's now-notorious slip.

"And I think we can all conclude that Tony Hayward is not going to have a second career in PR (public relations) consulting," he told ABC's "This Week."

"This has just been part of a long line of PR gaffes and mistakes."

Emanuel then assailed BP for its response to the worst oil spill in US history, saying it had to be forced to do more, faster at every step since the April 20 explosion that ripped through the Deepwater Horizon rig it had leased, killing 11 workers.

Over the past week, the British energy giant has called in more ships and equipment to the area, announced it was ahead of schedule in drilling the relief wells -- seen as the best chance at killing the well -- and said it would significantly boost the amount of oil captured from its busted well.

But a key US congressman Ed Markey, a vocal critic of BP and its handling of the disaster, lit out at the firm after releasing an internal BP document that showed the energy giant's own worst-case, saying the firm was "either lying or grossly incompetent."

"First they said it was only 1,000 barrels, then they said it was 5,000 barrels, now we're up to 100,000 barrels," he told NBC's "Meet the Press."

US government estimates now put the leak at 30,000 to 65,000 barrels a day.

BP rejected Markey's charge, noting that the conditions it had stated for the worst-case scenario to develop were not in place then, and are not in place now.

"It's completely misrepresenting what we're saying," BP spokesman Robert Wine told AFP. "We were saying that if two conditions were met simultaneously -- one that we got the modeling restrictions wrong and if the blowout preventer were removed -- then we could have 100,000 barrels of oil."

He said the estimate "has nothing with the amount of oil that's actually escaping at the moment."

BP also raced to defend Hayward's vacation outing with his son in Britain, which a spokesman called his "first non-working day since this started."

"Still, no matter where he is, he is always in touch with what is happening within BP," another company spokesman John Curry said.

Asked about Hayward's yacht outing, Senate Republican Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said "all of these guys could use a better PR advisor, but the point is we need to get the oil leak stopped and keep as much as the oil off the shore as we can."

"Clearly, not enough is being done. All the local officials on the Gulf are frustrated as they can be," he told "Fox News Sunday."

Republican Senator Richard Shelby of Alabama, one of the four Gulf Coast states sullied by brownish tides of oily mixture thick as cake batter, called Hayward's appearance at the yacht race "the height of arrogance."

The controversy capped a nightmare week for BP, whose public image is in tatters after its shares slumped on the stock market, its credit worthiness was slashed and its top executives were hauled to the White House.

BP said it captured about 21,040 barrels of oil on Friday, slightly lower than in previous day after its main oil-collecting vessel had to be temporarily shut down to clean a flame arrester and wait out a lighting storm. Its current collection system can collect or burn up to about 25,000 barrels a day.

The spill has impacted 59 miles (95 kilometers) of Gulf Coast shoreline, mainly in Louisiana but also in Mississippi, Alabama and Florida. More than one-third of federal waters in the Gulf are closed to fishing because of the spill.



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