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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

BP ends cleanup in 3 Gulf states

Company says impact outweighs benefit

Matt Pearce Los Angeles Times

Three years after a cataclysmic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, oil producer BP announced Monday that active oil cleanup had ended in three states hit by the disaster.

The Gulf, the company said, is getting back to normal, a claim contested by environmental advocacy groups.

In 2010, after an explosion and fire on the company’s Deepwater Horizon oil rig, a torrent of oil from an underwater leak covered coastlines in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida.

On Monday, BP declared its regular cleanup work done in each state except Louisiana, with the recovery reaching a tipping point in which the company says dredging for remaining traces of oil would cause more harm than good.

“We’ve reached a point in some areas where the impact to the environmentally sensitive land outweighs the minimal amounts of oil being collected,” Laura Folse, BP’s executive vice president for response and environmental restoration, said in a statement.

The company will adopt a more reactive stance on cleanup by taking direction from the U.S. Coast Guard as needed, which will investigate further reports of oil spillage.

The company, adding to its hefty bill of fines and legal losses, has spent $14 billion on cleaning up the oil, which hit about 1,100 miles of shoreline, including marshes and beaches where the oil submerged itself beneath the sand.

BP said “patrolling and maintenance activities” continued along 84 miles of Louisiana’s coast, which was hit hardest by the deluge, with 20 more miles still being evaluated for wrap-up.

“Due to the extensive cleanup effort, early restoration projects and natural recovery processes, the Gulf is returning to its baseline condition, which is the condition it would be in if the accident had not occurred,” the company said in a release.

A report from the National Wildlife Federation two months ago reached the opposite conclusion.

“Despite the public relations blitz by BP, this spill is not over,” David Muth, director of National Wildlife Federation’s Mississippi River Delta Restoration Program, said at the release of the federation’s report, which detailed the lingering damage to fish, turtles and coral life.

“Three years after the initial explosion, the impacts of the disaster continue to unfold,” Doug Inkley, senior scientist for the National Wildlife Federation and lead report author, added in an April statement. “Dolphins are still dying in high numbers in the areas affected by oil. These ongoing deaths – particularly in an apex predator like the dolphin – are a strong indication that there is something amiss with the Gulf ecosystem.”