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Judge orders BP to pay US$130m fees to Gulf claims program

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Eleven people died in the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon and the resultant oil spill was the largest in US history. Photo: Reuters

BP must pay US$130 million to a court-appointed administrator overseeing payments to thousands of people who claimed they were hurt by the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill, a federal judge ruled on Wednesday, in a fresh legal setback for the oil company.

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BP had balked at funding the third-quarter operating budget for the administrator, Louisiana lawyer Patrick Juneau, complaining that his bill contained “excessive costs.”

But US Magistrate Judge Sally Shushan in New Orleans ruled that it was “unreasonable” for BP to halt funding.

Fees have topped US$560 million since Juneau’s team started work in June last year, shortly after BP reached an agreement with businesses and residents to compensate them for spill-related injuries.

The fees amount to about 18 cents for each of the US$3.1 billion paid out so far, data from the claims administrator and the settlement show. BP’s finance director projected last week that the fees could eventually top US$1.5 billion.

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BP did not comment on Shushan’s ruling.

It is trying to halt payouts, at least temporarily, complaining that Juneau’s payout formula is too generous, and that it has uncovered evidence of fraud and conflicts of interest in how claims are assessed.

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