The risks of Exxon-Mobil in New Zealand waters
The risks of Exxon-Mobil in New Zealand
waters
By Gordon Campbell
Exxon-Mobil are the elephant in
the room that the Government refuses to confront, as it
throws open the ecologically vulnerable Great South Basin
region to oil exploration and exploitation. Currently, New
Zealand does not have an oceans policy, despite years of
talking about it. There is no RMA equivalent that is
empowered to manage economic activity within our Exclusive
Economic Zone, and no mechanism for weighing the
environmental and economic risks/opportunities involved.
This morning’s RNZ story about ongoing impacts of
the Tui field oil spill off the Taranaki
coast – and the paltry levels of compensation available -
should be setting off warning signals in Wellington. Do the
Government seriously think Exxon-Mobil would be unduly fazed
if an oil spill from their operations happened to wipe out
the Bluff fishing industry, and our bureaucrats came looking
for compensation, armed only with a copy of the Maritime
Transport Act?
It hasn’t been fazed in the past.
Six months after the Tui field spill, blobs of the oil are
still evident on the Taranaki coast. Nineteen years later,
oil seepage is still visible on the Alaska coastline.
Courtesy of the drunken captain of the Exxon-Valdez oil
tanker who, on one dark night in 1989, managed to spill his
tanker’s cargo into the pristine Alaska environment, thus
ruining the local marine environment and fishing industry
that depended on it for its livelihood.
This year,
Alaskans have taken their battle with Exxon-Mobil to the US
Supreme Court. Sometime in June, the Court will hand down
its verdict on whether Exxon-Mobil should cough up $2.5
billion in punitive damages. New Zealanders should be
watching in alarm at how Exxon-Mobil has mounted its defence
– if only to learn more about what sort of creature we
have invited into one of our most ecologically valuable and
vulnerable regions.
In the wake of the Alaskan oil spill, Exxon-Mobil has reportedly paid about $500 million in compensatory damages. This is quite seperate from the original $5 billion punitive damages penalty that it originally faced, and which has been bouncing around the US court system for 14 years ever since. Lower courts reduced the punitive award to $2.5 billion, a figure that currently represents about four weeks of Exxon-Mobil’s current annual profits. Exxon-Mobil are refusing to pay anything at all in punitive damages. Its bottom line offer was meeting the cost of a clean-up, and then moving on.
Communities have been left to bear the enduring cost.
In the days after the spill, as Bloomberg news reported, some 3,000
otters and 250,000 seabirds died, as did unknown numbers of
harbour seals, killer whales and other wildlife. The herring
industry of the town of Cordova was destroyed. So far the
Cordova fishers have received compensation equivalent to
about one year’s salary, for the lifelong loss of their
previous source of income.
Those Exxon- Mobil’s
defence arguments are keenly interesting. For starters, the
company argued ( via a case dating from 1818 ) the special
nature of maritime law – with ships operating far away
from home, in an intrinsically difficult environment –
meant that owners should not be held responsible for the
actions of their faraway sea captains and crew, and thus
should not be subject to punitive awards. Moreover, the
Exxon-Mobil lawyers argued, such employees are so minor in
the company hierarchy that heads of corporations could not
be held responsible for them - especially when their
employees did things that were clearly at variance from best
company policy.
You can see how such arguments might
be recycled if Exxon-Mobil staff ever did stuff in the
stormy seas in faraway New Zealand, against the stern
company instructions to, you know, mind that hose. While the
Supreme Court judges seemed skeptical, the Wall Street
Journal noted their concern at the size of the award being
sought, and the constitutional implications if punitive
damages for maritime accidents could be allowed to have no
upper limit. Generally, punitive damages are assessed on top
of compensatory awards in order to punish the careless, and
to deter lax practices in future. Yet Justice Souter, one
of the more liberal Supreme Court judges, proposed during
the Exxon-Valdez hearings in February that punitive damages
should be capped, at a level that was only double the amount
of any compensatory damages.
Hardly fair. Even if
Exxon-Mobil had to pay the full $2.5 billion punitive award,
this would mean only a $75,000 payout per claimant. Meaning
: in the very hostile weather conditions that routinely
exist in our Great South Basin region, Exxon-Mobil could
expect to be treated quite sympathetically when it came to
the size of any damages for a spillage in such foreign
waters – given the kindly outcome now likely in this
current test case where it was clearly at fault, where it
had shelved several prior warnings about its captain’s
drinking problem, and when US citizens were on the receiving
end.
The Government doesn’t seem much interested in
playing safe. In the House on 19th July 2007, Associate
Minister of Energy Harry Duynhoeven refused to consider a
bond being required to cover any damage done oil companies
active in the Great South Basin. “In terms of a bond, that
is not an issue because the Maritime Safety Act controls
activities in our regions. It very clearly sets out the
damages requirements and the remedial requirements if there
is an oil spill.”
The thought that Exxon-Mobil,
whose national turnover exceeds that of all but a relative
handful of countries, could be brought to heel by an Indiana
Jones from the Maritime Transport division is exciting,
but rather unlikely. As the Tui field case has just
confirmed, the compensation available under section 244 of the
Maritime Transport Act tops out at $200,000. A
ridiculously low amount, in the modern era.
While the
Government is believed to be drafting a Cabinet paper on an
oceans policy, this has not yet been completed. In any
case, such a process seems highly unlikely to see any such
legislation passed before the election – and even if this
could happen, logic suggests the consent process would be
unlikely to give much, if any, weight to environmental
factors. Safe to say, the Government has little appetite for
adopting anything like the RMA’s precautionary principles,
which would necessitate a prior assessment being carried out
on the environmental risks and benefits – no, that
wouldn’t do, not when it comes to speeding up the search
for black gold in the Great South Basin, or anywhere else in
New Zealand waters.
Point of fact, New Zealand is
bending over backwards to attract oil exploration. Back in
November 2005, the industry Gas and Pipeline Journal
reported on what a great deal New Zealand was
offering.
Dave Cadenhead of Canada’s TAG Oil and Gas company told Journal readers that sure, like most countries, New Zealand wanted a fair return on its assets. Even so, Cadenhead pointed out, we had “substantially” reduced our demand for royalties.
Cadenhead gave up
the numbers : “Through December 2009, wellhead royalties
have been reduced to 1 % for natural gas, and 5 % for oil.
Accounting profits have been reduced to 15% on the first
$750 million of gross profits and 15% on the first $250
million of gross profits for onshore discoveries.”
Furthermore, companies could deduct all their exploration
and development costs, before totting up the gross amounts
on which the percentages of New Zealand’s return were to
be calculated.
The good times didn’t stop there.
Compliance wasn’t much of an issue in good old New
Zealand, Cadenhead explained. “Historically, Crown
Minerals have not tightly enforced full compliance with the
work programs outlined in various PEP conditions.”
Moreover, we were willing to give away, as an inducement to
oil and gas exploration companies, the valuable and high
quality seismic data that had been amassed by Government
after spending considerable amounts of taxpayer
money.
In short, Journal readers were told : “New Zealand has a superior fiscal regime with royalties substantially below other possible investment locations with similar (very low) political risk profiles..” That all served to boost up the bottom line. Thanks to our “low operational costs and existing infrastructure access,” Cadenhead concluded, “there was high profit potential, at least twice what would be normally expected in North America.”
So,it seems we are hellbent on cutting
our returns from the energy transnationals here to explore
and exploit one of our most vulnerable and valuable regions.
The Great South Basin happens to be home to several highly
valuable commercial fishing fleets, and to endangered
species such as southern right whales, beaked whales,
Hector’s dolphins, four species of endangered albatross
and many other migratory seabirds and mammals.
We are
also lowering such demands just as the rest of the world is
doing the opposite. On May 1, 2007, the US General
Accounting Office surveyed the oil and gas royalty regimes
that governments have put in place within, and outside,
the United States. Why such a royalties survey ? In order to
make a case for lifting them. As the GAO explains in its
intro, oil companies can afford it. “Amid rising oil
prices and reports of record oil industry profits, ”
governments around the world “have taken steps to
re-evaluate and in some cases increase their revenues they
get from the rights to develop oil and gas on their lands
and waters.”
How did New Zealand fare ? Even based
on the GAO’s use of 2002 figures that pre-date the
subsequent royalty reduction ( not to mention the seismic
data sweeteners we have given away) New Zealand’s overall
government ‘ take “ ( comprising royalties, rentals and
taxes ) was at 37.51 %, already below most other countries
listed by the GAO, and markedly below a large number of
them. No wonder Duynhoeven was able to tell the Otago Daily
Times last year that New Zealand was offering a royalty
regime that was one of the cheapest in the world.
To
combat the risks involved, New Zealand clearly needs an
oceans policy. It needs legislation with teeth sufficient to
protect, and properly value, our marine environment. We
cannot shoulder the bulk of the risks involved in
exploring and exploiting our offshore oil and gas resources,
and simultaneously allow the likes of Exxon-Mobil to abscond
with the bulk of the profits. With oil prices going through
the roof and existing global fields flatlining or in
decline, oil companies are now so hungry for fresh
production they will come – and on our terms.
That
news has not yet sunk in with the current Government and
National is hardly likely to be more demanding. For now,
the Government seems in awe of the attention it is getting
from the big boys. In his 19th July 2007 Parliamentary
response for instance, Duynhoeven bragged about Exxon
–Mobil being in New Zealand waters. Its very presence, he
argued, was clear proof that the Government had got the
trade-off between the royalties and the value of the
resources exactly right. “The proof of the pudding is in
the eating. We have the largest oil exploration company in
the world, which has never been in New Zealand before, here
looking.”
Wonderful. We may have cause to regret
in future, if Exxon-Mobil ever find what they’re looking
for.
ENDS.