British energy giant BP is suing the US government
for banning it from federal contracts after the deadly 2010 Deepwater
Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, documents showed.
The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) last year barred BP from
competing for new federal contracts following the catastrophic accident
three years ago, which left 11 people dead and sent millions of barrels
of oil churning into the Gulf.
The EPA decision, citing BP's "lack of business integrity," came
after BP agreed to pay a record $4.5bn last November to settle criminal
charges arising from the case.
The lawsuit filed this week by BP in federal court in Texas has
challenged the EPA ban, arguing it surpassed the agency's authority and
constituted an abuse of power.
"EPA's decision to suspend did not address the overwhelming evidence
and record of BP's present responsibility as a government contractor and
leaseholder," the lawsuit documents stated.
It "did not attempt to explain how or why immediate suspension was
necessary to protect the public interest, as federal law requires".
BP argued that the company has already been punished for the oil spill and faces "irreparable harm" if the bans are not lifted.
'Abuse of EPA's discretion'
The British energy giant has paid several billion dollars in various settlements since the disaster.
It labelled the EPA's action "punitive, arbitrary, capricious, and an abuse of EPA's discretion".
Around 4.9 million barrels of oil gushed into the Gulf over a
three-month period following the April 2010 explosion aboard the
offshore rig, devastating the region's environment and economy.
BP has resolved thousands of lawsuits linked to the disaster out of
court, including the record $4.5bn deal with the US government to settle
criminal charges, and a $7.8bn settlement with people and businesses
affected by the spill.
BP spent more than $14bn on the response and cleanup and paid another
$10bn to businesses, individuals and local governments that did not
join the class action lawsuit.
It remains on the hook for billions in additional damages, including the cost of environmental rehabilitation.
A civil trial which got under way in Louisiana earlier this year
could result in BP having to pay billions of dollars in environmental
fines if the Justice Department proves that gross negligence led to the
accident. |
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