credit: UK Guardian |
Also revealed in testimony was the fact that a Halliburton mud logger missed a "gas kick", or sudden increase in gas pressure in the well, while he took a smoking break. He failed to report the kick to the drilling floor. Regardless of Halliburton's culpability in the disaster, BP was undisputedly in charge as owner of the Macondo well, and Halliburton acted as its independent contractor in the well cementing process. BP supervisors could have halted the cementing at any time. An independent expert called by the government said BP should have called a halt. Asked directly by a government lawyer, "Does this mean to you that BP absolved itself of responsibility for the cement job by relying on Halliburton's services?" "No sir, it did not." replied the expert.
A marine safety expert testified that Transocean and its crew violated numerous federal and international maritime safety regulations and concluded the crew was incompetent and the vessel unseaworthy. He also said the drilling rig's maintenance records clearly show the vessel "was in deplorable condition". Undoubtably his testimony will be contradicted by Transocean's own expert witness on the subject.