The Deepwater Horizon drilling rig that exploded on April 20, causing the massive oil spill currently unfolding in the Gulf of Mexico, sank two days later, on the fortieth anniversary of Earth Day.
Given that a 1969 spill from an oil platform off the coast of Santa Barbara, California spurred the first Earth Day, the rig’s sinking is tragically ironic. As Lisa Margonelli, who has written extensively about crude, observed in The New York Times on Saturday, “The history of American oil spills is the history of the environmental movement.”
Unfortunately, the coverage of Earth Day’s fortieth anniversary, which focused on the “green economy” and “clean energy” business, showed just how much the environmental movement—and coverage of the environment—has gone corporate. Even more unfortunate is the fact that some journalists’ reluctance to question industry’s influence on environmentalism has remained on display since the oil spill in the Gulf began. Nowhere is this more true perhaps, than in a front-page news analysis in the Times on Tuesday.
The analysis, by John Broder and Tom Zeller, Jr., attempted to make the case that the current spill is no “apocalypse.” In order to show, ostensibly, that even environmentalists are not worried about a worst-case scenario, Broder and Zeller quote Quenton R. Dokken, a marine biologist and director of the Gulf of Mexico Foundation, “a conservation group in Corpus Christi, Tex.” saying that the “sky isn’t falling,” and that while the situation might be troublesome, “it isn’t the end of the Gulf of Mexico.”
Perhaps. But here’s a little something about that “conservation group” that the Times didn’t tell readers: one of its board members is Head of Corporate Responsibility & Environment at Transocean, the company that leased and operated the Deepwater Horizon for BP. Transocean also hosted the foundation’s last board of directors meeting, which took place in Houston in January. The foundation’s current president is a retired senior vice president of Rowan Companies, Inc., “a major provider of international and domestic contract drilling services.” Another board member manages oil giant ConocoPhillips’s exploration and production assets in the Gulf of Mexico and Southern Louisiana. Two more work for Shell and Anadarko Petroleum Company.
[Update, 4:00 p.m.: ProPublica, which also criticized the Times for not disclosing the Gulf of Mexico Foundation’s ties to the oil industry, has responses from both Dokken and Zeller.]
Granted, Broder and Zeller quote a number of other sources that corroborate their thesis that the Gulf spill isn’t that bad, including Edward B. Overton, professor emeritus of environmental science at Louisiana State University. But their failure to provide any background whatsoever on the Gulf of Mexico Foundation makes them look like shills for Big Oil. Instead of holding BP, Transocean, and the like to the fire—the proper role for journalists in situations like this—Broder and Zeller start making excuses for them. At one point they even have the gall to argue that “No one, not even the oil industry’s most fervent apologists, is making light of this accident.” Yet that sentence makes light of the situation. After all, just two days before Broder and Zeller’s analysis appeared, the Times’s own editorial board argued that BP was “slow to ask for help” and that the White House “should have intervened much more quickly on its own initiative … the timetable is damning.”
None of this is to say that the Times should be hyping environmental impacts that have not manifested, but the tenor of Broder and Zeller’s article is way off. They point out, for instance, that “the Deepwater Horizon blowout is not unprecedented, nor is it yet among the worst oil accidents in history,” but does it really matter that this doesn’t happen often or that it’s not the biggest disaster ever? A few lines later, Broder and Zeller themselves acknowledge that “no one knows” what the final environmental impact will be—which is true. All the more reason why industry, government, and, yes, journalists, should be operating under the assumption that a worst-case scenario is unfolding. Doing otherwise will help nobody.
An editorial in the New Orleans Times-Picayune had it right: “Coastal residents need President Obama to keep the pressure on BP and to use every resource at his disposal to fight this catastrophe.”
It is time for this country’s “paper of record” to do its part to keep pressure on the White House and industry alike.

Oh very illuminating. Not.
You point out that the NYT commit the heresy of having an article that has a tenor that is "way off" according to your reporter who has done nothing more than read what everyone else has written.
Good for the NYT to report “the Deepwater Horizon blowout is not unprecedented, nor is it yet among the worst oil accidents in history". Of course its relevant and matters, what a ridiculous suggestion that it isn;t. When everyone else is saying it could be the worst environmental disaster in history, there is nothing more important than reporting context.
Your article claims a "gross lack of concern" by the NYT, which is just BS. You simply expect a different line from the NYT and expect it to be pursued in defiance of logic or truth.
I'll just cap my comments off with the most ridiculous statement of all in this so-called piece of analysis:
"All the more reason why industry, government, and, yes, journalists, should be operating under the assumption that a worst-case scenario is unfolding. Doing otherwise will help nobody."
I'd like to invite journalists to follow this advice from CJR and operate under the assumption that the worst-case scenario is operating in everything at present. Nuclear terrorism, emerging infectious diseases, climate change. It is all a disaster. Please journalists yell at the top of your voices. This will definitely help society judge the level of risk and prioritise. Lets just run around like headless chickens screaming at the top our voices...The End is Nigh! The End is Night!
Regards, a reporter reporting on the oil slick
#1 Posted by Catherine Poles, CJR on Tue 4 May 2010 at 07:32 PM
To Be Clear
The New York Times' coverage of the oil industry in general, the relationship between oil and climate change, and the whole ExxonMobil thing, and etc., has been dismal. Period. Aside from the recent spill and BP, The New York Times doesn't lift even a little finger to provide the public with straightforward info and investigative journalism regarding ExxonMobil, who happens to be one of their largest advertisers by far.
I have a background that should provide some credibility to this observation: I was a chemical engineer from Berkeley. I worked in the oil industry for Chevron Research for several years. I've had offers from Exxon and Shell, in addition to Chevron. I've been a consultant with McKinsey. I can read, and I've been reading The New York Times for the last several years -- daily for much of that time, until the last several months, when I gave up on them.
The Times has (and is) dropping the ball, and it's a big one. Anyone who wants to do an analysis of the paper can easily see that.
By the way, the Times' Bill Keller is the son of the late George Keller, who was the Chairman of Chevron when I worked there and throughout most of the 1980s. Bill Keller is just as much from "an oil family" as many of the politicians who are criticized (usually rightly) on that count.
The Times is dropping the ball. I've been saying it here for a couple years now. Nothing has changed. Give me a call if you like.
Cheers,
Jeff
#2 Posted by Jeff Huggins, CJR on Wed 5 May 2010 at 01:46 AM
"Oh very illuminating. Not."
I remember, back when I was in high school, when people thought that was funny.
Do you roll down your windows at intersections and ask the passengers in the adjoining car for some grey poupon? Because that would be totally funny 20 years ago too.
By the by, have you got any reason why we should be treating as trivial an open oil sore at the bottom of the ocean which, based on the precedents of these things, will take two to four months to close?
Quit being such a Heather (Ooo. Another eighties reference. I'm hip too) and do your job.
Like for instance, what are the parallels between the West Atlas Timor Sea oil rig oil disaster, which took place in late August and lasted until November, dumping between 400 to 2000 barrels of oil into the Timor sea, and Deepwater?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montara_oil_spill
Barely anyone covered the Timor disaster and no one I've seen has analyzed the two incidences which were not a year apart.
You combine this with the "500 fires on platforms in the gulf since 2006,"
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/23/us/23offshore.html
recorded by the legendarily corrupt, Bush Minerals Management Service (Interior Department Sex Scandals ring a bell?) and we may be looking at a collapse of global industry standards.
But no Cathy. Looking at all that is work. Let's just be snarky instead while you adjust your makeup for the camera.
And thanks for being part of the problem.
#3 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Wed 5 May 2010 at 02:03 PM
Thanks for letting us know about the conflict of interest. How can we prevent this from ever happening again? There is nobody who seems willing to draw the line and say, "no". It seems as if Cheney and Bush are still there, environment wise.
I have a friend in New Orleans who wrote a few days ago that the hydrogen sulfide smell there was very noticeable.
People have been stocking up on seafood, Ive read.
If the area is fouled by a major spill, thats going to cost a huge number of jobs along the Coast. Lots of people work in fishing and tourism.
Who is going to compensate them? This kind of thing needs to be made SO expensive that companies will become much more careful.
Money is the only language they understand.
#4 Posted by brent, CJR on Mon 10 May 2010 at 11:59 PM
The entire debacle is being under reported and the under response is sickening. Where is the outcry from Obama? Where is the outcry demanding that Obama fight the spill and BEGIN CLEANUP NOW. Why wait to begin cleanup? Is this whole downplay of one of the worst environmental crimes of our generation because liberal newspapers are going easy on a liberal president?!
#5 Posted by princetonz, CJR on Wed 12 May 2010 at 04:14 PM