CHICAGO (WMR) -- The Obama administration,
already charged with providing political cover for BP in the Gulf of Mexico
mega-oil disaster, is also charged with allowing BP to renege on agreements
between the firm, the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and
the state of Indiana to prevent pollution of Lake Michigan from the firm's
Whiting, Indiana, refinery near Hammond.
In 2007, the EPA, under the Bush administration, said it was
powerless to stop BP from dumping more toxic waste into Lake Michigan from its
expanded refinery that was processing increased amounts of heavy crude oil from
Canada. However, the EPA did urge BP to mitigate the increased pollution of
solid waste and ammonia by taking other proactive steps to limit environmental
damage, including financing projects for other plants along the Grand
Calumet River and Lake Michigan to reduce their pollution and other clean-up
and run-off water-filtering projects.
Environmental groups opposed the EPA permit to expand its
Lake Michigan refining operations. BP's position was bolstered by federal and
state court decisions that shot down the suits from the environmental groups.
BP also took out newspaper advertisements and paid Internet
bloggers to defend the refinery's expansion. The payment of money to bloggers
by BP is also evident in the number of pro-BP postings on the web concerning
the mega-oil disaster, including comments on many blogs that call WMR's reports
on the Gulf disaster a "conspiracy theory" and "factually
incorrect."
The Obama administration, including EPA Administrator Lisa
Jackson, has permitted BP to violate the promises it made to the state and
federal courts that steps would be taken to mitigate the effects of increased
Lake Michigan pollution.
Informed sources in Chicago have told WMR that what is
occurring in the Gulf of Mexico could very well happen to Lake Michigan when
considering that BP not only continues to pollute the lake at higher rates but
also has a record of safety and environmental infractions at the expanded
Indiana refinery.
Previously
published in the Wayne
Madsen Report.
Copyright � 2010 WayneMadenReport.com
Wayne
Madsen is a Washington, DC-based investigative journalist and
nationally-distributed columnist. He is the editor and publisher of the Wayne Madsen Report
(subscription required).