There’s a way it’s supposed to be done… and then there’s the way it really gets done

Blowout preventers are used on gas wells too.


CORPORATE CRIME REPORTER
May 6, 2010

http://www.corporatecrimereporter.com/nabors050610.htm

Former Oil Rig Worker Says Cheating on Blowout Preventer Tests Widespread
24 Corporate Crime Reporter 19, May 6, 2010

BP will not be happy with Mike Mason.

Mason is a 27 year oil industry veteran who worked on oil rigs at BP facilities on the North Slope of Alaska.

He knows the ins and outs of blowout preventers.

And he says that cheating on tests for blowout preventers is widespread in the industry.

He says he’s witnessed BP cheating on such tests in the North Slope.

On January 21, 2005, Corporate Crime Reporter ran an article detailing Mason’s allegations of BP’s cheating on blowout preventer tests.

At the time, Mason was working for Nabors Alaska Drilling Inc.  a BP contractor on the North Slope.

Mason witnessed two blowouts of BP wells on the North Slope in 2003  one on July 3 and one on December 6.

At the time, Mason was feeding information to oil industry critic Charles Hamel.

Hamel wrote to then Senator Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), asking for an investigation.

“BP and Nabors Alaska Drilling are reported to be falsifying drilling records and critical AOGCC (Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission) required Blow Out Prevention tests as well as concealing from AOGCC and ADEC (Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation) at least two reportable blow-out/spills,” Hamel wrote.

The Wall Street Journal followed up with a story on February 5, 2005.

As a result of the Corporate Crime Reporter and Wall Street Journal articles, investigations were launched.

In June 2005, the Alaska Oil & Gas Conservation Commission (AOGCC) ruled that a Nabors’ employee had falsified blowout preventer tests.

How?

Chart spinning.

What is chart spinning?

Well, to test a blowout preventer, you build up the pressure for five minutes.

And you record the pressure test on a chart.

The Commission found that the Nabors employee cheated.

They built up the pressure for only one minute.

Or two minutes.

And then manually moved the chart to show that it had been pressurized for the required five minutes.

Nabors also investigated the situation and agreed with the Commission’s findings.

The Commission ordered Nabors to pay $10,000 in costs.

And according to Mason, Nabors fired the responsible manager.

But Mason says that that was just one instance.

He says that cheating on blow out prevention tests is a way of life in the oil industry.

“They cheat to save money and time,” Mason said.

Mason says he personally witnessed BP managers repeatedly cheating on blowout prevention tests.

But BP was never charged.

Why not?

Mason says that he spoke with the Nabors manager who was fired.

And the Nabors manager who was fired said that he wouldn’t tell investigators who at BP was complicit.

Why did the Nabors manager take the fall for the BP managers?

“That’s just the type of person he was,” Mason says. “He wasn’t the type of person who was going to turn other people in.”

Mason was fired from his job at Nabors on July 16, 2006, four days after he wrote a letter to the editor of the Anchorage Daily News.

Read complete story at Corporate Crime Reporter

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