11,000 workers tried to cleanup the mess ashore. |
On
March 23, 1989 the Exxon Valdez, a so-called super tanker outward bound from the Valdez, Alaska oil depot filled with Prudhoe Bay crude oil ran aground on a reef spilling about 10.8
million gallons.
The
ship was outside normal shipping lanes due to icebergs in the usual out-bound
route. With Coast Guard permission, it was sailing in the inbound lanes under
auto-pilot. The ship’s radar had been
inoperable since leaving port. Captain
Joseph Hazelwood, who had been drinking, left the bridge shortly before the
accident leaving a junior officer in charge and a seaman at the helm. Both men were working without required rest
when the ship struck the reef just after midnight.
While
there have been several worse oil releases around the world, until the catastrophe
in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010 few,
if any, had the devastating environmental impact of this wreck.
The
prevailing winds and tides drove the thick oil slick into the rocky coves and
shores of Prince William Sound contaminating
one of the world’s richest natural fisheries teaming with marine mammals,
abundant water fowl, and avian raptors.
The remoteness of the location made bringing in booms, skimmers and
other customary equipment to isolate and contain a spill difficult. When equipment finally did arrive it was too
little too late. A coat of tar-like
crude inches thick was born ashore contaminating mile after mile of shore line.
Despite
on shore rescue and clean-up efforts that ultimately involved 11,000 workers
and volunteers, wild life was devastated. Up to a quarter million sea birds, 2000 sea otters,
300 harbor seals, 247 bald eagles, and 22 orca whales were killed. The red
salmon fishery lost most of that season’s eggs, and the population has
remained stunted more than twenty years later.
Litigation
against Exxon and the crew has dragged on for years with Exxon stubbornly
fighting for ever greater reductions in an original $5 billion punitive damage
award—the equivalent of one year of profit for the giant oil company at the
time. An account of the case and its
many appeals is too tedious—and disheartening to report here. Suffice it to say that the Supreme Court ultimately decided that
punitive awards could not exceed the compensatory damages in the suit, calculated
at $507.5 million. Even figuring in
perhaps hundreds of millions of dollars in legal fees fighting the case, Exxon
walked away with a slap on the wrist.
Of
course there were separate civil and criminal findings amounting to a billion
or so and Exxon claims it spent $2 billion on the still incomplete
clean-up.
Today,
the company continues to operate dangerous and vulnerable single hull tankers like the Exxon
Valdez on the Prudhoe Bay run. Congress has not mandated much safer double-hulled ships until 2015. Experts believe an accident as bad or worse
could occur at any time in Prince William Sound.
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