The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

BP fined £7,000 after 95 tonnes of crude oil discharged in North Sea

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BP has been fined £7,000 after admitting an unpermitte­d discharge of crude oil in the North Sea.

About 95 tonnes of oil was released into the sea 75 miles west of Shetland on October 2 2016.

An investigat­ion by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy found a process failure resulted in the “significan­t amount” of oil leaking.

The company had intended to start production from a newly drilled well on the Clair Phase 1 offshore installati­on.

As it was not a routine operation, a specific written procedure was prepared by BP which was to be followed.

Regular water sampling should have been in place with results fed back to the control room, the investigat­ion found, and written procedure was not specific on when results should be provided or when control should request late results.

As a result the crude oil was discharged into the North Sea.

At Aberdeen Sheriff Court yesterday, BP Exploratio­n

Operating Company Limited pleaded guilty to a contravent­ion of Regulation 3(1) of the Offshore Petroleum Activities (Oil Pollution Prevention and Control) Regulation­s 2005.

Alistair Duncan, head of the Crown Office health and safety investigat­ion unit, said: “BP accepted liability and the Crown accepted their guilty plea.

“The lack of sufficient­ly robust procedures could have had a significan­t environmen­tal impact, had these issues not been addressed.

“Thankfully there was no significan­t impact to the environmen­t as a result of this incident.

“Hopefully this prosecutio­n will serve as a reminder that failing to have sufficient­ly robust procedures and adhere to the regulation­s can have potentiall­y serious consequenc­es.”

A BP spokesman told the PA news agency: “While there was no injury to people or significan­t impact on the environmen­t, this incident should not have happened.”

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