Trying to do the Right Thing?

Tony Hayward

Tony Hayward, BP’s CEO, is driving down BP’s goodwill even further.

On Saturday, he was in Britain’s Isle of Wight Saturday taking in a yacht race.

Raymond Canevari, 59, of Pensacola, Fla., an artist says he is insulted by Hayward’s attendance at the race.

“I think everyone has the right do what they want in their free time, but he doesn’t have the right to have free time at all,” says Canevari. “Not until this crisis is resolved…”

Sources: Telegraph.co.uk  npr.org  Svd

Is this the guy who promised that he will “make things right“? And wasn’t this fooling around with boat races mr. Svanberg’s thing?

 
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Whiny Americans Should Take a Hike

Carl-Henric Svanberg

Columnist Matthew Lynn argues that BP should tell whiny Americans to take a hike.

He gives three reasons why BP’s current tactics will never work, and why they should just pack up and go somewhere else.

First, the U.S. is guilty of crazy double standards. Who refused to do anything about climate change, or even to put sensible taxes on gas? If US insist on being addicted to cheap oil, the country has to recognize there are risks attached. So grow up, and stop acting like children!

Second, BP likely is finished in the U.S. There is no form of apology that will make any difference. The average American consumer now hates BP. So, BP should fight every lawsuit. Refuse every claim above the bare minimum.

Lynn urge BP not to waste a lot of money on an army of advertising agencies and PR consultants trying to restore company image. It’s not going to work, so there is no point even trying.

Third, Lynn says, BP’s job is to look after the owners of the company, not make itself acceptable to a country that doesn’t want it anymore.

Fortunately, BP has a very weak chairman in the Swedish Carl-Henric Svanberg.

Svanberg is the former CEO of Ericsson, a Swedish telecom company, where he was only noted for playing around with sailboats. He knew little, if anything at all, about the telecom business. And he, of course, thought that his smooth ride in life would continue that way. Right now, he probably doesn’t even know what hit him, and he doesn’t know how to act. In Britain he is now called “the invisible man”.

He will not be able to take the tough decisions that would help BP as a company. Meaning, he will drag BP shareholders down with him. Until he is replaced. Which must happen sooner or later.

Then, I have no doubt, the will do just what Lynn says they should do. Just pack up and leave.

Swedish media: DN  Expressen

British Media: The Indipendent  The Guardian

Lynn’s Column in Dallas News

 
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Will They Make This Right?

Cleaning the Beaches

Today, June 12, it is somewhere between 40 million and 110 million gallons of oil that have gushed into the Mexican Gulf since April 20. 11 workers were killed and it the accident triggered the worst oil spill in U.S. history. Now hitting the Alabama beaches hard.

Officials from BP say the only way to permanently stop the well is drilling a relief well. That cannot be finished before August.

U.S. President Barack Obama has escalated his criticism of BP. The company’s chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg is called for a meeting with the president on Wednesday. And the US coast guard has now given the company 48 hours to come up more effective measures to collect the gushing oil.

Obama has also discussed the issue with British Prime Minister Cameron.

In addition to the potential for many billions in fines, BP is responsible for paying all cleanup costs and maybe $75 million for economic damages. The BP share is going downhill. And the anger against the company is growing everywhere.

Still you see those ads everywhere: “We will get this done. We will make this right”.

But the question is: Will they?

Swedish Newspers: SVD  Expressen

US Media: Dallas News  Al.com  Miami Herald

British Media: The Guardian

 
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A brown pelican is mired in heavy oil along the Louisiana coast. Photo: Charlie Riedel

Source: Big Picture

 
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“Where I was wrong,” said President Obama at his press conference on Thursday, “was in my belief that the oil companies had their act together when it came to worst-case scenarios.”

Source: New York Times

Weren’t we all.

 
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Oil Spill, photo by Gerald Herber

After a month of seawater covered with thick black oil, BP executive Tony Hayward thinks that the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico is going to only have a “modest” impact on our environment.

BP apparently don’t want us to know the truth.

Image source: bigpicture.

 
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