[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
Business Title: How Halliburton Is Profiting From The Gulf Oil Spill Shortly before the Deepwater Horizon blowout, Halliburton bought an oil spill prevention firm. The oil-services industry is consolidating, which is not necessarily good news for quality, experts say. By Matt Rocheleau, Contributor / June 18, 2010 Eleven days prior to the April 20 Deepwater Horizon blowout, Halliburton Co., the contractor in charge of cementing the rig's well, agreed to purchase a little-known company. The firm, Boots and Coots, focuses on oil spill prevention and blowout response. Now, it is assisting with the relief well work under contract to BP to help stop the Gulf oil spill. What appears to conspiracy theorists as more than a coincidence is nothing out of the ordinary, say oil-industry experts. Increasingly, oil-industry titans are buying up smaller companies that provide all manner of services. But this trend is worrying in itself, the experts say. As companies grow and work both to drill wells and potentially clean up their own mistakes, the result can be unintentional, but riskier decisionmaking over time due to a lack of focus particularly in an industry that is poorly regulated. Moreover, there is concern that as the Gulf oil spill shows big bureaucracies are not nimble enough in an emergency. Working on both sides of the fence, is not uncommon in the oil industry, says Robert Gramling, author of Oil on the Edge: Offshore Development, Conflict, Gridlock. But it makes for a very complex decision-making environment that can become problematic, he adds. Creeping complacency The concern is not so much about intentional negligence but creeping complacency. Nobodys going to say, Oh, dont worry, we have a cleanup service, well be alright if theres a spill, says Hugh Gorman, author of Redefining Efficiency: Pollution Control, Regulatory Mechanisms, and Technological Change in the US Petroleum Industry. But reassurance about how diversified the business services are can lead to relaxed decisionmaking over time. This can be exacerbated by the fact that the oil industry is very politically powerful and oil companies do not face the same strict regulatory and safety standards that, for example, airline companies do, says Mr. Gramling a professor at the University of Louisiana, Lafayette. This can allow for big businesses within the industry and the industry as a whole to become too cozy, he adds. Halliburton is among the most diversified oil-industry firms. In their $240 million purchase of Boots and Coots which is still pending regulatory and shareholder approval it sought to buy a company whose services are designed to reduce the number and severity of critical events such as oil and gas well fires, blowouts, or other incidences due to loss of control at the well through both preventative and emergency response services. In recent years, theres a trend toward getting a broader set of offerings from larger companies, says Douglas Sheridan, managing director of EnergyPoint Research, a market research firm in Houston that serves the oil and gas industry. But his companys own customer-satisfaction surveys suggest that bigger is not necessarily better. There is a potential problem with companies becoming so large that they cant provide the focus needed on specific services and on the execution of those services, says Mr. Sheridan. Smaller, more-focused service providers generally rate higher in satisfaction surveys, and a spill of this magnitude which involved major players like BP, Transocean, and Halliburton could lead customers to invest more in companies that have a narrower business approach, Sheridan adds. Halliburton's reputation For its part, Halliburton is known within the industry for maintaining its quality despite its growth. Does Halliburtons satisfaction suffer from it being a large and unwieldy company? Yes. But, theyre doing a better job of providing quality service than some of their competitors, Mr. Sheridan said. Other experts worry more about the impact of size on a companys ability to respond quickly and effectively to disaster. A company of [BPs] size has to become a bureaucracy, and bureaucracies need stable environments. Theyre like cement, says Cathie Currie cognitive social psychologist at Adelphi University in Long Island, N.Y. Though bureaucratically managed companies can work well in some industries where there is little chance of a major unexpected event, they can struggled in high-risk industries such as drilling for oil. Says Ms. Currie: [The business model] doesnt work when you need to be innovative."
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Brian S (#0)
So is Jamie Gorelick as BP's propaganda minister these days....(laughing) Have Disaster, will travel seems to be this woman's motto.
Just 10 days prior to the explosion, the Obama administrations regulators gave the oil rig a pass, and last year the Obama administration granted BP a National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) exemption for its drilling operation.
|
[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
|