Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Deepwater Horizon Incident, Economic Damages, and Evaluating Risk

Richard H. Thaler, in his "Economic View" column in Sunday's New York Times Business section, responds to the question: "How to make companies more accountable for their risks?"

Related to economic damages, Thaler comments:

In thinking about governmental reform, one place to start is the 1990 Oil Pollution Act, enacted after the Exxon Valdez accident. The law fines companies $1,000 for every barrel spilled, $3,000 if they were found negligent, and holds them responsible for the costs of cleanup. They are also responsible for economic damages, like those to fisheries, but these costs are capped at $75 million unless there is negligence or a violation of safety rules.

We could raise the cap on damages, as some have suggested, but the uncapped removal costs will typically exceed economic damages, and there is a real concern about whether companies will have the ability to pay. A policy with some appeal might make drilling rights include a mandatory insurance policy with a big deductible, say $100 million, and a cap somewhere in the billions. In an ideal world, this would influence insurance companies to monitor risks closely. (But the recent experience with the American International Group reminds us that we do not live in an ideal world.)

Furthermore, this economic solution assumes that companies make good decisions once they’re given correct incentives. But the financial and oil crises should make us less confident that companies are up to the task. Mr. Hayward has acknowledged that it was “an entirely fair criticism” to say the company had not been fully prepared for a deepwater oil leak. “What is undoubtedly true,” he said, “is that we did not have the tools you would want in your tool kit.”

The spill has reduced BP’s market value by 44 percent, or about $82 billion, so it’s clear that BP had a strong economic incentive to make good contingency plans. How to require sufficient contingency planning should be a high priority in the future, along with ensuring that the Minerals Management Service has the expertise to evaluate those plans. As a Coast Guard inspector said at a Congressional hearing last month, “The pace of technology has definitely outrun the regulations.”

We are left in a difficult place. Neither the private nor the public sector seems up to handling these kinds of problems. And we can’t simply wait for the next disaster, because, as people might say if they had to use G-rated language, stuff happens.

In Tuesday's New York Times, a "News Analysis" by Jad Mouawad and Clifford Krauss reviews the current thinking on the scale of economic damages related to the Deepwater Horizon Incident:

“Our asset base is strong and valuable,” BP said in a statement last week, adding that it had “significant capacity and flexibility in dealing with the cost of responding to the incident, the environmental remediation and the payment of legitimate claims.”

With each passing day, however, the bills keep growing. If the spill were somehow stopped today, the cost to BP could be as little as $9.6 billion, according to Kevin Book, an analyst at Clear View Energy Partners. If the spill were to stop in July, 90 days after the accident, it would cost as much as $29.2 billion, he said.

BP projects that it will not be able to completely stop the spill until August, when it hopes to complete the drilling of a relief well to kill the leaking one.

Fadel Gheit, a senior oil and gas company analyst at Oppenheimer, estimates that BP will eventually face $20 billion in claims and cleanup costs. Punitive damages to the federal and state governments could double that figure. Mr. Gheit said the maximum cost could be as much as $60 billion, paid over many years.

Costs include payments for lost tourism and commercial fishing revenue in the four states most affected by the spill — Alabama, Florida, Louisiana and Mississippi.

Damages related to tourism are potentially enormous if the spill spreads beyond the Florida Panhandle and spoils beaches across that state’s coasts. Nearly 5 percent of Florida’s 19 million residents work in the tourism industry, according to tourism officials, and the nearly 80 million visitors a year bring the state an estimated $60 billion in revenue.

An analysis by the Institute for Economic Competitiveness at the University of Central Florida estimated as a worst case that the spill could cost the state $10.9 billion in lost economic activity and 195,000 jobs. Hotel owners in the beachside city of Pensacola have already projected revenue losses for June of as much as 60 percent.

Finally, in the New York Times "Reuters BreakingViews" section, Christopher Hughes sets forth some reasons why BP might not agree to set setting up and funding an escrow account to cover the increasing claims (including economic damages) related to the Incident.

President Obama may speak to the issues of economic damages during his address from the Oval Office tonight.

Monday, June 7, 2010

Claims on Insurance Companies Related to Deepwater Horizon Incident

In an article in today's Wall Street Journal, losses related to the Deepwater Horizon incident are approximately $611 million to date, with...

Estimates for the total insured loss range from $1.4 billion to $3.5 billion, with Zurich-based Swiss Re so far having taken the hardest hit, estimating the catastrophe will cost it around $200 million.
High as it might be, the total insured loss will probably turn out to be only a fraction of the actual cost of the disaster.

The insurance industry "got lucky," because only around 20% of the losses incurred so far in connection with spill are being carried by the industry, said Stephen Catlin, chief executive of London-based reinsurance company Catlin Group Ltd., speaking at Euroforum's annual reinsurance summit in Zurich recently.

In contrast, billions of dollars in claims will be made in connection with the oil spill. But, as BP PLC, which is operator and majority owner of the project, self-insured much of the risk instead of buying liability insurance, losses for the insurance industry will be capped, credit rater Moody's Investors Service noted in a recent report.

Claims will come from many sources. Among them will be thousands of commercial fishermen and tourist companies whose businesses have been harmed by the oil spill off the Louisiana cost.

"In our view, potential business-interruption claims represent the largest unknown for insurers," Moody's said. But even in a worst-case scenario, they aren't expected to exceed $3.5 billion, the upper range of the estimate of industry losses.


Sunday, June 6, 2010

Deepwater Horizon Incident, human factors, and economic damages.

David Leonhardt, in a column in today's New York Times Magazine, discusses BP's managers' "seeming indifference to safety and environmental issues," especially the proverbial "black swan" event.

Much of this indifference stemmed from an obsession with profits, come what may. But there also appears to have been another factor, one more universally human, at work. The people running BP did a dreadful job of estimating the true chances of events that seemed unlikely — and may even have been unlikely — but that would bring enormous costs.


Leonhardt points out that in the case of the Deepwater Horizon incident, governmental policy "...actually encouraged BP to underestimate the odds of a catastrophe...."

In a little-noticed provision in a 1990 law passed after the Exxon Valdez spill, Congress capped a spiller’s liability over and above cleanup costs at $75 million for a rig spill. Even if the economic damages — to tourism, fishing and the like — stretch into the billions, the responsible party is on the hook for only $75 million. (In this instance, BP has agreed to waive the cap for claims it deems legitimate.) Michael Greenstone, an M.I.T. economist who runs the Hamilton Project in Washington, says the law fundamentally distorts a company’s decision making. Without the cap, executives would have to weigh the possible revenue from a well against the cost of drilling there and the risk of damage. With the cap, they can largely ignore the potential damage beyond cleanup costs. So they end up drilling wells even in places where the damage can be horrific, like close to a shoreline.
Human factors resulted in management underestimating the chance of the incident. Federal law lead them to the underestimating of its costs.


Saturday, June 5, 2010

Deepwater Horizon Incident and Economic Damages

Regarding the economic damages resulting from the Deepwater Horizon incident, in recent days, the process of claim review and subsequent payment has come under examination. For example, see this description (http://www.ag.louisiana.gov/Article.aspx?articleID=411&catID=1) of a state court action filed by the Louisiana Attorney General James D. “Buddy” Caldwell seeking information about the payment and processing of claims.

One can file a claim for damages for the following losses – bodily injury, property damage, loss of income -- using BP’s online claim submission form (https://www.bp.com/secure/iframe.do?categoryId=9033722&contentId=7062138). It appears that ESIS is the third-party administrator on behalf of BP. For further information on ESIS, see this page (http://www2.esis.com/ESISRoot/ESIS/) and this page (http://www2.esis.com/ESISRoot/ESIS/Services/Catastrophe+Management/).

This New York Times article (http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/02/us/02liability.html?scp=1&sq=Rising%20Cleanup%20costs&st=cse) from Wednesday, June 2, 2010, includes several interesting comments:

  • “Because of its considerable profits and size, it does not buy outside insurance for such disasters.” That is, BP is self-insured.

  • “Lawyers are planning lawsuits of every conceivable type in federal and state courts alike, seeking money for personal injury, lost business, damage to the environment and the sharp drop in the companies’ stock prices.” In addition, for lawsuits filed in federal court, the United States Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation will conduct a hearing in July regarding where the cases will be consolidated.