Several billion dollars in potential fines were avoided on Thursday
when U.S. District Court Judge Carl Barbier put the size of the
spill at 3.19 million barrels. That was well below the government's
estimate of 4.09 million barrels, which could have led to $17.6
billion in fines for the worst offshore disaster in U.S. history.
The Clean Water Act penalties would come on top of more than $42
billion the oil major has set aside for cleanup, compensation and
fines. About 810,000 barrels were collected during cleanup.
Clean Water Act rules say when assigning penalties the court must
take into account BP’s ability to pay, history of past violations,
and steps it took to clean up the spill.
The U.S. government named as the defendant in the case BP's
exploration and production unit, known as BPXP, which could
conceivably limit the size of the fine.
“We believe that ... BPXP should be subject to a Clean Water Act
penalty at the lower end of the statutory range,” Andrew Langan, a
lawyer for BP, said in a statement.
Environmental groups say it could take decades for the Gulf
ecosystem to recover. They disagree with BP's assertions that the
Gulf has recovered better than expected.
"The court has the opportunity and responsibility ... to hold BP
fully accountable for the damage done to the Gulf and to assign the
maximum penalty," the National Wildlife Federation said in a joint
statement with other groups.
The first two phases of the trial, over the degree of negligence and
the spill's size, have concluded.
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Under a "gross negligence" ruling Barbier issued in September, BP
could be fined a statutory limit of $4,300 for each barrel spilled,
though he has authority to set lower penalties.
BP has also filed motions saying the maximum fine per barrel is in
fact just $3,000 because Congress never passed laws to adjust it for
inflation.
A simple "negligence" ruling, which BP sought, caps the maximum fine
at $1,100 per barrel.
After the Clean Water Act fines are set, BP may face other bills
from a Natural Resources Damage Assessment - which could require BP
to fund environmental restoration work - and other claims.
(Writing by Terry Wade; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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