[quote name='fatherofcaitlyn']Jesus Christ...
Speedracer, what are your thoughts on the government increasing taxes on each barrel of oil from 8 cents to 41 cents?[/QUOTE]
That's the best way to cost an externality. If you used the money to develop viable competitors to oil via a tax on oil (either by investment in technology research, rebates for buyers, or both), that's the best oil risk mitigation strategy. Dramatically reducing demand means the companies wouldn't need to go to the hardest places to get it or to cultivate relationships with our enemies to get it.
Any politician that supported that tax in a swing state would be butchered at the polls and I seriously doubt you could get even a single Republican vote for it. Maybe Collins but I doubt it. They would run 24/7 "Dems raised poor people's taxes" ads.
Business Insider says its the government's fault for not having an open insurance system and allowing BP to "exploit" the situation and insure in-house. Apparently that inefficiency means BP wouldn't properly price the risk. But doesn't rational self-interest mean that managing the risk in-house would cause more caution on the well, not less? The bullshit vortex swirls.
http://www.businessinsider.com/bp-r...tock+(ClusterStock)&utm_content=Google+Reader
Internal BP memos say the spill may be 100,000 barrels a day, up from today's highest estimate of 60,000. If shit goes wrong, 200,000 a day is possible. Surprise or something.
We need to put this guy in charge of something important immediately. Rep. Phil Gingrey (R) of Georgia:
For the life of me, I can't understand why BP couldn't go into the ocean floor, maybe 10 feet lateral to the - around the periphery - drill a few holes and put a little ammonium nitrate, some dynamite, in those holes and detonate that dynamite and seal that leak. And seal it permanently."
BP CEO gets $16 million if he steps down. More if he's shit canned. Clearly the market is doing great work on the issue of executive pay.
On the Obama wanting to shut deep water drilling down until we get a handle on it. For those thinking he's being a mean old librul hurting hard workin Murrkins, a couple of choice points:
Rep. Michael Burgess (R-TX) just asked Hayward if there are any other BP wells that were drilled with various controversial procedures. Turns out most BP wells are drilled like this: "There are many wells that have the same casing design. Many have been drilled with the same cement procedure," Hayward says.
Suddenly regulators are paying more attention to a former BP worker who has been complaining since 2009 that his company did not get approval on engineering plans, according to WaPo. Kenneth Abbott testified at hearings today: "The overwhelming majority of documents and drawings had never received any engineering approval at any phase of development," Kenneth W. Abbott, who was fired in February 2009, says in testimony prepared for delivery Thursday to a House subcommittee.
So the idiots sue and the judge (rightly on the basis of the facts) overturns Obama and puts an injunction on the deep water ban. Thing is, Obama wanted 6 months to do a quickie review on all the crap out there, but it was going to be a "let's all get together and see what we're up to and whether we're ok" session. Now the industry has forced Obama to do it the "right" way, which mean Salazar is going to write the most vicious, expensive, time consuming regulations he can think of. If I was an industry player, I'd

ing fire the dumbass who thought suing on this was a good idea. I'd prolly fire everyone he ever talked to just in case he infected others with the stupid.
Lolquote of the day:
“We have to get the priorities right,” the chief executive of BP said. “And Job 1 is to get to these things that have happened, get them fixed and get them sorted out. We don’t just sort them out on the surface, we get them fixed deeply.”
That quote is 4 years old.
Lolquote #2:
In response to a U.S. senator's questions in a letter, BP said it never follows a federal law requiring it to certify that a blowout preventer device would be able to block a well in case of an emergency. The inquiry stemmed from a hearing in May into the Gulf oil spill from the explosion and fire which sank the Deepwater Horizon rig.
But, at the same time, the British oil giant blamed the federal oversight agency, Minerals Management Service, for not asking it to comply with the law.
[quote name='62t']After this the price of oil is only going to go up. The cost of whatever safety measure is going to pass on to us.[/QUOTE]
Our oil use is subsidized. The price should go up significantly.