quinta-feira, 17 de junho de 2010
BBC Blog Network "Has BP damaged Britain's reputation?" Utter non-sense, according to me:
It doesn't take a genius but only rational cool-headed reasoning to put everything in perspective.
Disallowing overblown thoughts and comments from coming into play.
Unhelpful and at the very least distasteful, ultimately irrelevant.
BP will in the short run remain a soft target, from politicians to common folk who wish for some distraction.
They will generally fall wide off the mark in their assessment of the situation.
This accident has been serious enough that attention should focus exclusively on overcoming the direst consequences in the shortest possible timespan.
That is indeed the one and only challenge facing the company - a private concern whose ownership is varied and international - and politicians who must ensure public interests are duly safeguarded throughout.
Media hype and language furore from politicians are only a consequence of the age we live in.
They do not add or detract from the focal point which is to stop the underwater leak using every available technological tool and know-how.
A technical job for a team of technicians to accomplish.
Anglo-American relations will not be affected no matter how ugly this is: a major industrial accident with massive environmental consequences.
If that were to happen one might argue that international relations would permanently remain hostage to every nasty event resulting from the development model we chose to adopt.
That said, it is of course BP's stated obligation to live up to its own house rules, standards and multiple responsibilities towards the general public.
The American Administration has a lot of work to do as well.
BP is only one of many oil companies, contractors and sub-contractors operating in the Gulf of Mexico waters and elsewhere in the US.
The need to review rules and regulations - importantly their enforcement - has been made starkly clear.
If, however, it were determined that the spate of industrial accidents that have plagued BP over the years were the result of unsafe practices then an altogether different approach would be required specifically targeting the company.
Industrial safety track record does matter, not the company's nationality.
Nowadays a multinational by any reckoning.
As for anti-British feeling or Britain's reputation being tarnished by a company originating in that country - well, utter non-sense!
Disallowing overblown thoughts and comments from coming into play.
Unhelpful and at the very least distasteful, ultimately irrelevant.
BP will in the short run remain a soft target, from politicians to common folk who wish for some distraction.
They will generally fall wide off the mark in their assessment of the situation.
This accident has been serious enough that attention should focus exclusively on overcoming the direst consequences in the shortest possible timespan.
That is indeed the one and only challenge facing the company - a private concern whose ownership is varied and international - and politicians who must ensure public interests are duly safeguarded throughout.
Media hype and language furore from politicians are only a consequence of the age we live in.
They do not add or detract from the focal point which is to stop the underwater leak using every available technological tool and know-how.
A technical job for a team of technicians to accomplish.
Anglo-American relations will not be affected no matter how ugly this is: a major industrial accident with massive environmental consequences.
If that were to happen one might argue that international relations would permanently remain hostage to every nasty event resulting from the development model we chose to adopt.
That said, it is of course BP's stated obligation to live up to its own house rules, standards and multiple responsibilities towards the general public.
The American Administration has a lot of work to do as well.
BP is only one of many oil companies, contractors and sub-contractors operating in the Gulf of Mexico waters and elsewhere in the US.
The need to review rules and regulations - importantly their enforcement - has been made starkly clear.
If, however, it were determined that the spate of industrial accidents that have plagued BP over the years were the result of unsafe practices then an altogether different approach would be required specifically targeting the company.
Industrial safety track record does matter, not the company's nationality.
Nowadays a multinational by any reckoning.
As for anti-British feeling or Britain's reputation being tarnished by a company originating in that country - well, utter non-sense!
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