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by Daniel J. Graeber Washington (UPI) Mar 17, 2015
Statements made by BP about the state of the U.S. Gulf Coast environment after the Deepwater Horizon incident are off the mark, the federal government said. "The state and federal trustees, including our scientific colleagues at universities and institutions around the Gulf [of Mexico], are engaged in a rigorous, scientific process of injury assessment and are still analyzing the data, conducting studies, and evaluating what happened," a statement emailed to UPI by the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration late Monday read. A cascading series of events tied to the Deepwater Horizon rig, which BP leased from Transocean, led to a spill of more than 3 million barrels of oil, about 10 times the size of the Exxon Valdez incident off the Alaskan coast in 1989. The Deepwater Horizon event left 11 rig workers dead. BP in a report released Monday said the environment along the southern U.S. coast was "returning to its baseline condition." Most of the damage to the regional environment occurred during the spring and summer following the event, the assessment adds. Carl Barbier, the judge overseeing the case in the U.S. District Court of the Eastern District of Louisiana, ruled in January the company released 3.2 million barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, about 1 million barrels less than the government estimated. BP said it based its findings on a wide range of federal, academic and industry studies conducted in coordination with the spill response. Laura Folse, BP's vice president of environmental restoration, said doomsday environmental predictions never emerged. "The gulf is showing strong signs of environmental recovery, primarily due to its natural resilience and the unprecedented response and cleanup efforts," she said in a statement. NOAA countered that BP "misinterprets and misapplies" data and findings about the extent of the damage to the regional environment. "From decades of experience with oil spills, we know that the environmental effects of this spill are likely to last for generations," the administration said.
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