Initial reports were that 1,000 barrels a day was spilling into the Gulf. During the second week of the spill, the flow estimate was increased to 5,000 barrels a day, and the last estimate, after the flow of oil had stopped, was 52,700 to 62,200 barrels a day.
The commission said that in late April or early May the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration wanted to release some of the worst-case scenarios for the amount of oil spilling into the gulf.
But it said the White House Office of Management and Budget denied NOAA's request, according to NOAA staff interviewed by the commission.
While the Obama administration said the lower flow rates did not affect the administration's response to the spill, the commission staff said the hugely understated estimates resulted in less public confidence in the pronouncements about the disaster from both the federal government and BP.
It said that the Obama administration was misleading in suggesting that its report in August that as much as 75 percent of the oil had been removed had been peer reviewed by scientists. Independent scientists provided recommendations on "analysis methods" and contributed field data, but it is unclear "whether any of the independent scientists actually reviewed the final report prior to its release," the commission report said.
Wednesday, October 06, 2010
White washing
There are several points of incompetence to pick through according to the early reporting on these Oil Spill Commission reports but the biggest thing that jumps out at you is the outright lying and covering-up of the size of the problem by the White House (humorously euphamized in the report as "over optimism" regarding the size of the spill).
Labels:
Barack Obama,
BP,
Gulf of Mexico,
oil
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