On  May 3, BP  Exploration Alaska, Inc. made an agreement to pay $25  million as a  penalty to Alaska.  This penalty came to BP as a result of  spilling more  than 5,000 barrels of crude oil from its pipelines on  Alaska’s North  Slope in 2006. About $20 million of the fee that BP is  required to pay  will go to Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund, and the  remaining amount will  be put into the US Treasury.
The cause of the spill was corrosion of BP’s pipeline.  The Alaskan   government filed suit against BP in Anchorage federal court in March   2009 for inadequate maintenance.
Representation for BP was given by Randal Buckendorf, chief counsel, as well as outside counsel Carol Dinkins, who is from Vinsen & Elkins Houston office.
According to Ignacia Moreno, assistant attorney general for the  Justice  Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division, “This  penalty  should serve as a wake-up call to all pipeline operators that  they  will be held accountable for the safety of their operations…”
It has already cost BP $200 million to replace the leaky pipelines,  and  according to the settlement yesterday, it is now required to develop  a  program that is system-wide to manage the integrity of its 1,600  miles  of pipeline on the North Slope of Alaska, which will cost about  $60  million more.
Since the spill in 2006, BP also paid a criminal fine of $20 million   after pleading guilty in 2007 to a misdemeanor violation of the Clean   Water Act. 

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