BP pushed for Arctic drilling rights after Trump's election
Despite PR damage over earlier spills, documents show oil firm pressed for reduced regulation
BP stepped up its campaign to be allowed to drill for oil in the Arctic sea and an Alaskan wildlife refuge after Donald Trump was elected president, according to documents that detail the British firms lobbying efforts.
Documents written by BP and oil industry groups show how the oil supermajor seized on the opportunity presented by Trumps 2016 election victory to expand its offshore business, just seven years after the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.
Areas it targeted include the Arctic sea, where experts have warned an oil spill could be an ecological disaster, as well as the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), not far from where BP spilled 222,000 gallons of oil at Prudhoe Bay in 2006.
Despite the reputational damage it had suffered after successive spills, BP played a key role in lobbying the government to loosen restrictions on oil drilling, according to documents obtained by Greenpeaces investigative unit, Unearthed and shared with the Guardian.
Within a year of taking office, the president sought to overturn drilling bans introduced under the Obama administration in the wake of the 2010 spill, in which millions of gallons of oil spewed into the sea off the US south coast.
In February 2017, a month after Trumps inauguration, the American Petroleum Institute (API), of which BP is a member, wrote to the Department of the Interior calling for the reversal of an executive order by Barack Obama in 2014 banning oil drilling in large areas of the Atlantic and Arctic.
Much more:
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2019/may/19/bp-pushed-for-arctic-drilling-rights-after-trump-election
Dead porgy fish stuck in oil near Port Sulphur, Louisiana. The 2010 BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico was one of the largest environmental disasters in American history. Photograph: Sean Gardner/Reuters