BP's recent experience -(like the ENRON and CLIMATEGATE exposure before them)- is merely the latest example of it.
So far, it looks as if AL Gore, with that huge carbon-footprint 9 million dollar mansion he just bought along the COAST of California, is the only one who is profiting from the AGW scam. He's laughing all the way to the bank.
(As an aside, one way we know that he doesn't really believe his own "boob-bait-for-the-bubbas" propaganda that the seas will rise 20 feet, is that he bought along the coast. That about 1/2 of the population still swallows his BS is proof that he is right in his estimation of the cognitive abilities of the average 'RAT voter).
Blame BP [Chris Horner]
I hope to elaborate later ... but it seems to me the issue with the recent oil-platform explosion and subsequent leak issue is BP, not offshore drilling.
Offshore drilling has a very good track record in the past few decades and especially recently; BP has a terrible one.
The Deepwater Horizon incident is consistent with only one of those track records.
Like Enron and indeed, in close cooperation with Enron on the global warming rent-seeking BP got distracted from its core businesses and spent its energies getting into solar ventures and carbon-trading schemes, and otherwise losing the plot of an energy company. The absurd re-branding to Beyond Petroleum (really? your balance sheet doesnt quite agree) speaks volumes.
They thereby also lost focus on these operations and implicitly told their best people that the future did not lie there.
And for a decade we have seen BP facilities blowing up with human and environmental consequences all over the place.
The newsiness of this spill is testimony to its aberrant nature.
The issue today isnt offshore drilling so much as it is the company that, in violation of all laws of probability, continues to be involved in a preponderance of its various industries high-profile workplace tragedies. 05/02 11:00 AM