Khross wrote:
Arathain Kelvar wrote:
No, all the evidence does not. There was testimony from other drillers that they did not follow industry standards.
There is particularly convenient testimony from drillers stating they didn't follow standards, but that would require complicity on the part of Haliburton and Schlumberger.
Convenient or not, testimony is evidence. This evidence therefore invalidates your previous statement:
Khross wrote:
And, yet, all the evidence before us indicates those are exactly the things BP was doing.
Clearly, all evidence before us does not indicate what you claim.
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Arathain Kevlar wrote:
I'm willing to accept all evidence as evidence. I have certainly not seen proof of anything. As for analysis, I'll accept some analysis, if done by experts in the field (which has not been completed yet). But unfortunately for your argument, I will not accept any old analysis, no.
And Aizle's article somehow counts as expert analysis? The documents it links to contradict the statements it contains. That should be enough to dispute the claims of Wired Magazine on this matter. More to the point, the documents provided support the notion of due diligence on BP's part.
No, it doesn't count as expert analysis. Please reread my quote, in particular the part where I said it hasn't been completed yet.
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Arathain wrote:
Permits don't tell you how to do things, man. They give you conditions of approval. Specifications and design plans tell you how to do things, for specific items. Industry norms tell you how to do things in the absense of specific instructions to the contrary. For example, every set of plans and specs I put together says something to the effect of "Any statements made herein shall not be construed to alleviate the Contractor from that work which would normally be required to complete the Project based on industry accepted practices."
Except, the permits I'm discussing have specific procedures and technical plans attached to them.
All permits do. Technical plans and specifications are a subset of the information needed to perform a job. There are also typically certifications stating that contractors will be qualified and licensed to perform the work. Licensure has additional requirements, including conforming to industry standards. For example, nowhere in the specs, plans, or permits does it likely say how to operate the drilling equipment. It will lay out the requirements for the equipment, and the requirements for drilling, but actual operation of the equipment is covered by QUALIFICATIONS. There's a lot more that's tied to the profession, not the a particular job. You're looking at a small piece of the pie.
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Indeed, as I quoted earlier in this thread, BP dictated how things were to be done.
Of course. Does "how it is to be done" comply with everything it needs to? Is it specific and clear and unambiguous enough for the contractor to fully understand? How was their oversight? How was their implementation plan?
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If the contractor failed to do them as such, and if both third-party oversight groups were complicit in said failure, how does that become BP's "fault"?
Because BP's required to manage their contractors. The permit wasn't issued to the contractor - part of obtaining the permit is establishing qualifications.
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But, even then, we're getting beyond the most reasonable expectation and into "conspiracy" territory.
No, we really aren't.
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The documents the Senate has made available are very detailed and very technical, including some of BP's engineering standards and guidelines for various components.
Great. Sounds like a good place to
start.
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Arathain Kelvar wrote:
No, you can read just fine. It's your lack of expertise in the subject matter that has made you unaware of what applies but is not specifically written.
So are these unwritten, but applicable standards that somehow super-cede regulatory approval of SPECIFIC procedures and construction plans?
No, they are complementary. In general, you perform to standard practices unless the plans or specs specifically state otherwise. In other words, if it's not written, it still applies, but if the contrary is written, then you must do the contrary.
If I tell a contractor to dig a 6' hole, he must use an excavation box to protect workers in the hole. If I tell a contractor he is to dig a 6' hole and he cannot use an excavation box, he can no longer use an excavation box. It is now
my responsibility to prepare a plan that protects his workers. Of course, he must accept the plan.
So, if I don't say anything at all about protecting his workers, he must still follow standards and do so.