The Star Early Edition

BP’s case ends in $18.7bn US deal

- Reuters

BP HAS reached a comprehens­ive $18.7 billion (R227.9bn) settlement with the US government and five states, in a landmark deal that effectivel­y ends years of litigation over environmen­tal damage and human casualties caused by the 2010 Gulf of Mexico spill.

It could be the largest settlement with a single entity in US history, the US Justice Department said.

The April 20, 2010, rig explosion killed 11 workers and spewed millions of barrels of oil for nearly three months onto the shorelines of several states.

The deal covers US Clean Water Act fines and natural resources damages, along with claims by Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississipp­i, Texas and 400 local government entities.

BP’s London-listed shares rose as much as 5.3 percent as the extent of the company’s liabilitie­s became clear for investors, even as it increased its cumulative pretax charge for the disaster by about $10bn to $53.8bn. BP’s New York-traded shares rose 5 percent to $41.20.

“This is a realistic outcome which provides clarity and certainty for all parties,” BP chief executive Bob Dudley said in a statement. “For BP, this agreement will resolve the largest liabilitie­s remaining from the tragic accident.”

The settlement was slightly more than the $17.6bn that investors had feared BP would be fined under the Clean Water Act for gross negligence.

The maximum possible Clean Water Act fine was later trimmed to $13.7bn after US District Court Judge Carl Barbier found that 3.19 million barrels had spilled, less than the US government had claimed.

Barbier was expected to rule on that issue later this year, but even after that, BP would have still faced years of lawsuits to address claims by states and the federal government under a natural resources damage assessment.

The settlement closes off the remaining liabilitie­s and will more than $6.8bn to states.

“This agreement will not only restore the damage inflicted on our coastal resources by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, it will also allow Louisiana to continue aggressive­ly fighting coastal erosion,” Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal said.

 ?? FILE PHOTO: EPA ?? BP has reached a settlement with the US government, five states and hundreds of local government entities for fines and damages from its Gulf of Mexico oil spill in April 2010, the worst oil spill in US history.
FILE PHOTO: EPA BP has reached a settlement with the US government, five states and hundreds of local government entities for fines and damages from its Gulf of Mexico oil spill in April 2010, the worst oil spill in US history.

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