BP to pay out $18.7bn over Gulf of Mexico oil spill

Settlement comes on top of at least $28bn spent by company in relation to 2010 incident

A brown pelican coated in heavy oil from the BP spill wallows in the surf on June 4th, 2010 on East Grand Terre Island, Louisiana. Photograph: Getty Images
A brown pelican coated in heavy oil from the BP spill wallows in the surf on June 4th, 2010 on East Grand Terre Island, Louisiana. Photograph: Getty Images

BP will pay a record $18.7 billion (€16.9 billion) to resolve claims by the US and five states along the Gulf of Mexico related to its Deepwater Horizon 2010 oil spill. The payments will be spaced out over as long as 18 years, according to the preliminary agreement.

A record $5.5 billion will cover federal penalties under the Clean Water Act, topping the previous high of $1 billion.

Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida and Texas will also receive payouts for harm done in the worst offshore spill in US history.

"This agreement will resolve the largest liabilities remaining from the tragic accident," BP chief executive Bob Dudley said in a Thursday statement.

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“For the United States and the Gulf in particular, this agreement will deliver a significant income stream over many years for further restoration of natural resources and for losses related to the spill.”

The settlement comes on top of at least $28 billion BP has already spent on response, clean-up and compensation. It also exceeds by almost $3 billion the $43.8 billion the company set aside for fallout from the spill.

Shares gained in London as investors welcomed news that the company had reached an agreement.

A verdict in the Clean Water Act case was pending with a potential fine of as much as $13.7 billion. Under the agreement, BP will pay $5.5 billion over 15 years. The company’s cumulative pretax charge will rise by about $10 billion at the end of the first quarter, BP said.

The three-month catastrophe was the biggest offshore spill in US history. It began with the Macondo well blowout and destruction of the Deepwater Horizon rig. Eleven men died in the explosion. The agreement is the "largest settlement with a single entity in American history," US attorney general Loretta E Lynch said.

Bloomberg