Posted - WASHINGTON, DC, May 11 -05/11/2012 - By Nick Snow - OGJ Washington Editor
Repsol SA continues drilling Cuba’s first offshore oil well as some
US government agencies, oil and gas organizations, and environmental
groups press to ease restrictions that would keep US companies from
responding if the well blows out and sets off a spill, experts at a
Center for International Policy seminar said. They reported some
progress as more federal officials become aware of the problem, but
indicated that much more needs to be done.
“No one is predicting a catastrophe,” emphasized William K. Reilly,
co-chairman of the presidential commission that investigated the 2010
Macondo deepwater well incident and oil spill. He said Cuba and Repsol
are moving more slowly than normal to keep matters under control, but
the US still has not taken the final necessary steps to let US companies
respond if the well blows out and begins to leak crude.
“Historically, it’s been appropriate to talk about Cuba only after
the next election,” Reilly observed, adding that the White House was not
happy when he led a delegation to that country after the presidential
commission on the Macondo well spill completed its investigation. US
President Barack Obama does not need congressional approval to modify
sanctions against Cuba so US companies could respond if there was a
spill, he said.
“Contractors in Cuba have had to scour markets worldwide for parts,”
noted Lee Hunt, who recently retired after 22 years as president of the
International Association of Drilling Contractors, during the seminar at
the Carnegie Endowment for Peace. “They haven’t had access to the best
and most recent versions of the equipment they’re using.” Saipem SPA had
to return a new prevention stack to use there when it learned that it
was made in the US, and had to buy one which had been in service
elsewhere, he said.
But a US company that wanted to provide services for the current
Cuban offshore drilling operation recently got a very broad license from
the US Department of Commerce’s Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC)
in 3 days, compared with other firms’ having to wait 6 months for a
restricted license, Hunt said. OFAC now says it would be able to issue
licenses within 24 hr in the event of a spill, he added.
‘State-sponsored chaos’
OFAC also granted a broad license to the US Coast Guard to command
any resources necessary to protect US interests, and USCG is drafting
basic order agreements with US suppliers and contractors, Hunt said. But
an open forum is essential so commercial service providers can put
forward their issues “so we don’t have state-sponsored chaos,” he
maintained.
“If our response to a spill off Cuba is going to be successful, it
will need to harness both the US government’s and the US private
sector’s capabilities,” said Robert L. Muse, a Washington lawyer with
substantial experience in US laws relating to Cuba. The two countries
have worked together on hurricane remediation, but when the US
government offered aid, Cuba rejected it and sought permission to
contract for services with US companies, he said.
He suggested that OFAC needs to create a general license for spill
response companies to work in Cuba. “Why don’t we be very American about
this and let the contractors respond? They know what’s needed, they
have the ability and equipment, and they can mobilize from nearby
ports,” Muse said.
Dan Whittle, who directs the Cuba program of the Environmental
Defense Fund (EDF), said the US trade embargo against Cuba may prevent
full cooperation, but much has been done to forge scientific exchanges.
The Obama administration particularly has issued visas for Cuban
scientists to come to the US and study with experts from EDF, Cornell
University, and other organizations and institutions, he said.
“Much has been done since Bill Reilly led a delegation there with EDF
and IADC experts,” Whittle said. “I credit that trip for lighting some
important policy-reform fires.”
‘Baby fish in Cuba’
This matters because a Cuban offshore oil spill potentially could do
more damage than the Macondo well spill, Reilly warned. Currents off
Cuba more directly threaten US coasts, and marine habitats there support
US fishing, he explained. “Baby fish in Cuba become adult fish in
Florida,” Whittle said. “We need to work with Cubans to better
understand what’s downstream.”
Noting that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
recently developed models showing which US coastal areas would be
damaged by a Cuban offshore oil spill, Whittle said USCG also is leading
multilateral discussions and working with US coastal states, and Cuban
scientists have met with their counterparts from the Bahamas in highly
technical discussion under the International Maritime Organization’s
aegis.
“Accountability rests with Cuba and the foreign oil companies it does
business with,” Whittle said. “But it’s in the US interest to make sure
they get it right.”
With Cuba on the cusp of its first offshore oil production,
opportunities escalate along with the risks, according to Jonathan
Benjamin-Alvarado, a University of Nebraska political science professor
specializing in foreign policy, international development, and security.
The extent to which it develops its own resources will make it less
dependent on Venezuela, and many in the country see potential for it to
become a major refining and transportation center, he indicated.
“Cubans are serious about developing their oil resources,”
Benjamin-Alvarado said. “They want to work with American companies and
use American equipment. That reflects the work Jorge R. Pinon [a former
Amoco official who recently became a research fellow at the University
of Texas at Austin’s Jackson School of Geoscience’s Center for
International Energy and Environmental Policy] and others have done to
lay the foundation.”
Cuba’s goals
The panelists said Repsol’s well could reach total depth in less than
a week, although the operator is moving slowly as it deals with some
routine mechanical issues. Whittle said Repsol expects to complete its
analysis this month and turn the rig over to Petronas, which plans to
move it west. Hunt said the Cubans, with the Chinese, plan to construct a
refinery but probably will have to use floating production, storage,
and offloading vessels to recover the crude.
“There’s a rapid expansion of oil infrastructure across the island,”
Benjamin-Alvarado said. “This isn’t a Cuba-US matter. It’s an
environmental question that transcends borders and politics.”
Reilly said in an instance of routine commonsense, NOAA and USCG
shared information about the Macondo spill response effort with Cuban
officials, who appreciated it. A growing number of people in US agencies
want more relations to improve so US companies could respond to a spill
off Cuba, but some in the White House worry about congressional
objections, he said.
“These issues are important enough that they need to be resolved
without letting politics interfere,” he declared. “It doesn’t mean
having to embrace a system which some people consider repugnant or
restoring full diplomatic relations. I’ve found growing numbers of
Cuban-Americans recognize this, and it’s time for the politicians to
catch up with them.”
That won’t be easy, observed Wayne Smith, a CIP senior fellow and
director of its Cuba project. “Cuba has the safe effect on some
Americans that the full moon used to have on werewolves,” he said. “They
don’t necessarily froth at the mouth, but it still makes them growl.”
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