BP’s corporate reputation is slowly slipping down the toilet. Yet it seems their PR efforts are in complete over-drive. Take a look at the recent PR campaigns from the company (a live cam that shows you the spill and what BP is doing to fix it). Then there is also there public apology in the US (see the reactions to the 60 second commercial). And this might be part of the problem. Whilst BP is demonstrating skills in managing its own PR machine – these skills are not matched when it comes to dealing with the physical dimension of the problem.
The challenge with managing an environmental disaster is that you need to carefully deal with the reality of a crisis (‘crisis management’) as well as dealing with the perception of the situation (‘crisis communications’). To be fair, BP have a whopper of a crisis on their hands (as explained in this video). The sheer scale of what is happening in the gulf mexico is unprecedented – the public’s outrage (and subsequent interventions from the US government) seems entirely justified.
Remembering Brent Spar 1995
The situation unfolding on the Guld of Mexico reminds me of the Brent Spar crisis in 1995 of another oil company shell. Green Peace Germany opposed Shell’s plans to sink of the oil rig.
At the time, Shell thought it was doing the right thing (ie. implementing the solution causing the least environmental impact). As time has shown, they were right as even environmentalist today acknowledge that Shell did have their facts straight. This didn’t seem to matter to the likes of Germany’s Environment Minister (a certain Angela Merkell) who agreed with Green Peace Germany. Nobody, in 1995, agreed with Shell.
Shell failed to deal with the perceptions of a crisis, addressing the reality of removing squatters from the oil rig. BP today are doing the opposite – trying to manage perceptions without dealing with the reality of the oil spill.
Quite a connundrum for BP, the oil industry and the southern states of America. The impacts of this current disaster will be felt (both economic and environmentally) for years to come.
r.g.
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