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NPRPanel Blasts Government On Gulf Oil Spill Response

A preliminary report released Wednesday by the federal commission investigating the BP oil spill blames the Obama administration for misrepresenting "the amount and fate of the oil" in the Gulf of Mexico.

"By initially underestimating the amount of oil flow and then, at the end of the summer, appearing to underestimate the amount of oil remaining in the Gulf," the report says, "the federal government created the impression that it was either not fully competent to handle the spill or not fully candid with the American people about the scope of the problem."

When the Deepwater Horizon oil well exploded and sank last April, the government first estimated that 1,000 barrels a day were coming out of the leaking well. Then the number jumped fivefold.

The administration deserves to be criticized for how it dealt with the spill estimates.
–Joseph Romm, Center for American Progress

Source Of The Figure

This report by the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling reveals for the first time where that 5,000 barrel-a-day figure came from. A government scientist devised that figure, and it became the administration's operating estimate for a month -- even though, according to the report, "there is no indication that the scientist had expertise in estimating deep-sea flow velocity from video data or that he used an established or peer-reviewed methodology."

The commission traces many such instances during the spill where the Obama administration ignored or obscured existing scientific methods and evidence, ultimately giving the public inaccurate information and damaging the government's credibility.

I would say, to be diplomatic, the communications process was not ideal for ensuring public confidence in the government response. But the scientific process proceeded at the rate that we were able to do it.
–Ira Leifer, a UC-Santa Barbara researcher who was on the administration's "flow rate team" during the crisis

In May, BP released a short video clip of the gusher. Independent scientists who had experience measuring oil flow used that video to obtain much higher oil-flow measurements.

On NPR's Morning Edition, professor Steven Wereley of Purdue University revealed his measurement to be "70,000 barrels a day," with a 20 percent margin of error.

'An Extra Responsibility'

This report says Wereley's measurement and others "proved to be significantly more accurate than the official estimates." Still, government officials pushed back hard against the higher estimates.

"The administration deserves to be criticized for how it dealt with the spill estimates," said Joseph Romm, who writes the blog Climateprogress.org for the liberal Center for American Progress think tank.

He points out that BP always knew lower measurements of oil in the water could mean the company would have to pay less in damages.

"That meant the administration had an extra responsibility to do its own objective analysis," Romm said. "It was a big deal, and it should have been pursued more systematically."

In late May, the government assembled a "flow rate team" to reach a more accurate measurement. Ira Leifer, a researcher at the University of California, Santa Barbara, was part of that team.

Failure To Communicate

Leifer says he believes the science behind the scenes worked the way it was supposed to, but there was a problem communicating with the public.

"I would say, to be diplomatic, the communications process was not ideal for ensuring public confidence in the government response," Leifer said in a phone interview. "But the scientific process proceeded at the rate that we were able to do it."

The White House insists that spill measurements had no impact on the response. It has always said that the response was scaled to a worst-case scenario.

The authors of this draft report are less certain.

"Commission staff is still gathering information with which to evaluate" those assertions, the report says.

End Of The Crisis

Regardless, the commission staffers argue that "loss of the public's trust during a disaster is not an incidental public relations problem." The absence of trust "can cause major harm," they say, citing as an example the possibility that the public won't trust government assurances that beaches, or seafood, are safe once officials' credibility has been damaged.

This report also looks at the end of the crisis, when the White House examined the fate of the oil in the Gulf of Mexico.

By August the oil well was plugged, and government officials trumpeted a scientific analysis that showed good news. White House energy adviser Carol Browner was on all of the morning network talk shows, including NBC's Today show, where she said: "Our scientists have done an initial assessment, and more than three-quarters of the oil is gone."

According to the report, the administration once again made the science look exact when it was not. Later, when independent scientists came up with evidence that the outlook was gloomier and more oil remains in the Gulf, the Obama administration revised its public statements once again.

Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

RENEE MONTAGNE, host:

This is MORNING EDITION from NPR News. I'm Renee Montagne.

STEVE INSKEEP, host:

And I'm Steve Inskeep.

A report on the BP oil spill critiques the Obama administration for what it told the public. A federal commission focused on government claims that 5,000 barrels of oil were flowing into the Gulf of Mexico each day. Now we know the number was more than ten times higher. NPR White House correspondent Ari Shapiro reports on how they got it so wrong.�

ARI SHAPIRO: When the Deepwater Horizon oil well exploded and sank last April, the government first estimated that a thousand barrels a day were coming out of the leaking well.�Then the number jumped fivefold.�

Now for the first time, we know where that 5,000 barrel a day figure came from.�A preliminary report by the commission investigating the BP spill says a government scientist came up with that figure. And, quote, "There is no indication that the scientist had expertise in estimating deep-sea flow velocity from video data or that he used an established or peer-reviewed methodology."

This report traces many such instances during the spill, where the Obama administration ignored or obscured existing scientific methods and evidence, ultimately giving the public inaccurate information and damaging the government's credibility, according to the report.

In May, BP released a short video clip of the gusher. Independent scientists who had experience measuring oil flow used that video to obtain much higher measurements.�Professor Steven Werely of Purdue University revealed his measurement to NPR science correspondent Richard Harris on this program.

Professor STEVEN WERELY (Purdue University): 70,000 barrels a day.

RICHARD HARRIS: Plus or minus how much?

Prof. WERELY: Oh, about 20 percent.

SHAPIRO: The White House pushed back hard on those measurements, even though this report says they were far more accurate than the government's figures.�

Dr. JOSEPH ROMM (Climateprogress.org): The administration deserves to be criticized for how it dealt with the spill rate estimates.

SHAPIRO: Dr. Joseph Romm writes the blog Climateprogress.org for the liberal Center for American Progress.�He points out that BP always knew the lower the measurement of oil in the water, the less the company might be required to pay in damages.�

Dr. ROMM: That meant the administration I think had an extra responsibility to do its own objective analysis.

SHAPIRO: And it sounds like they failed at that responsibility.

Dr. ROMM: Yes, I think that's a fair judgment.�It was a big deal, and I think it should have been pursued more systematically.

SHAPIRO: In late May, the government assembled a flow rate team to reach a more accurate measurement.�Dr. Ira Leifer of the University of California Santa Barbara was part of that team.�He believes the science behind the scenes worked the way it was supposed to, but there was a problem communicating with the public.��

Dr. IRA LEIFER (University of California): I would say to be diplomatic the communication process was not ideal for ensuring public confidence in the government response. But the scientific process proceeded at the rate that we were able to do it.

SHAPIRO: The White House insists that spill measurements had no impact on the response.�They always said they were responding to a worst-case scenario.�The authors of this draft report are not so sure.�Commission staffers are still gathering evidence.�

Regardless, this report says, loss of the public's trust during a disaster fuels public fears, which can cause major harm.�For example, the public might not trust government assurances that beaches or seafood are safe.

This report also looks at the end of the crisis, when the White House examined the fate of the oil in the gulf. By August the well was plugged, and government officials trumpeted a scientific analysis that showed good news. White House energy advisor Carol Browner was on all the network talk shows, including NBC's Today show.

Ms. CAROL BROWNER (Energy advisor, White House): Our scientists have done an initial assessment, and more than three quarters of the oil is gone.

SHAPIRO: This new report says, once again, the administration made the science look exact, when it wasn't.�Later, when independent scientists came up with evidence that the outlook was gloomier and more oil remains in the gulf, the Obama administration revised its public statements once again.��

Ari Shapiro, NPR News, Washington. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright National Public Radio.

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