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BP lands in more trouble on Caspian pipeline

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  • BP lands in more trouble on Caspian pipeline

    BP lands in more trouble on Caspian pipeline
    By Terry Macalister

    The Guardian
    February 15, 2007

    A US government lending agency has been told by its own internal
    accountability watchdog that it must monitor more closely the safety of BP's
    vital pipeline in central Asia, amid allegations that the company failed to
    report immediately cracks and leaks in its coating.

    The warning to BP comes after pipeline spills in Alaska and as an internal
    report into the accident-hit Texas City refinery has called for the sacking
    of four senior executives. They include Mike Hoffman, who recently stepped
    down as group vice-president for refining and marketing.

    A report from the office of accountability at the Overseas Private
    Investment Corporation - the US equivalent of Britain's Export Credit
    Guarantee Department - concludes that OPIC did not fully meet its own
    guidelines on environmental monitoring of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline
    from Azerbaijan to Turkey.

    The office of accountability recommended "OPIC renew its focus on
    environmental monitoring of the project in the medium to long term". It said
    there should be "specific attention to implementation of the additional
    monitoring for field joint coating cracks or leakage".

    OPIC agreed to provide more than $140m (£71m) to cover political risk on the
    pipeline on February 3 2004, only days before a newspaper reported that BP
    had discovered coating cracks back in November 2003.

    BP said yesterday it would work closely with OPIC to clarify any actions
    required by the company on the 1,094-mile BTC link.

    "We are confident that our extensive ongoing monitoring and assurance
    programme for BTC addresses the recommendations made to BP during the
    construction process," said a spokesman.

    The report followed a complaint by Manana Kochladze, a Georgian
    environmental activist, that the BP-led pipeline group had failed to
    disclose material information about cracking on the pipeline until after the
    contract with OPIC was signed. The activist charged OPIC with failing to
    carry out proper monitoring.

    BP also admitted an internal study undertaken by its group vice-president
    Wilhelm Bonse-Geuking into management accountability after the explosion and
    fire at the Texas City refinery had found "shortcomings in the management
    performance of some members of the refining management team", although it
    said there was no evidence that anyone acted in bad faith.

    BP said it would not comment further but it is understood that Mr Hoffman,
    the US refining vice-president, Pat Gower, the refinery manager, Don Parus,
    and his expected successor, Willie Willis, have all been recommended for
    dismissal.

    http://business.guardian.co.uk/story/ 0,,2013302,00.html
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