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Article
Three Meta-Lessons Government and Industry Should Learn from the BP Deepwater Horizon Disaster and Why They Will Not
UF Law Faculty Publications
  • Alyson C. Flournoy, University of Florida Levin College of Law
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2011
OCLC FAST subject heading
Environment law
Abstract

There are many law and policy lessons to be learned from the BP Deepwater Horizon disaster and its aftermath. Some are lessons specific to the BP oil well blowout. Regrettably, Congress has failed to enact even these critical reforms, although some important regulatory reforms have been adopted. This Article focuses on three broader lessons that this disaster should also teach, but that are very unlikely to be learned; lessons that could help to reduce the risk of future disasters. These meta-lessons suggest the need to: (1) learn from the next disaster—not the last one; (2) learn from the blueprint of the disaster; and (3) learn from the context of the disaster. However, both the limited scope of the reforms undertaken in the year since the disaster and the blueprint of the disaster highlight why government and industry are unlikely to learn these broader lessons.

Comments

A part of a symposium, Learning from Disaster: Lessons for the Future from the Gulf of Mexico.

Citation Information
Alyson C. Flournoy, Three Meta-Lessons Government and Industry Should Learn from the BP Deepwater Horizon Disaster and Why They Will Not, 38 B.C. Envtl. Aff. L. Rev. 281 (2011).