Food and Water Watch lawsuit On 17 May 2010, consumer group
Food & Water Watch, with former BP contractor Kenneth Abbott, filed a complaint in the
United States district court, seeking to stop production on the platform
Atlantis PQ until safety documents are produced. The suit was dropped by the plaintiff and re-file naming
BP as a defendant, as required once BP became involved. According to Food & Water Watch, BP failed to supplement its document production with new information regarding Atlantis's suspension the second quarter of 2012, which caused much of the company's $3.7 billion loss in profits that quarter.
US government scrutiny The
Deepwater Horizon drilling rig explosion has given new impetus to a number of Congressional Representatives to pressure the
Minerals Management Service (MMS) to investigate safety practices on BP's
Atlantis PQ offshore platform in the Atlantis Oil Field. A whistleblower report to the MMS in March 2009 stated, "over 85 percent of the Atlantis Project's Piping and Instrument drawings lacked final engineer-approval," as legally required. The report further stated, "the project be immediately shut down until those documents could be accounted for and independently verified." BP and other oil industry groups wrote letters objecting to a proposed MMS rule last year that would have required stricter safety measures. The MMS changed rules in April 2008 to exempt certain projects in the central Gulf region, allowing BP to operate in the Macondo Prospect without filing a blowout plan. == References ==