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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Report to the Honorable Lynn Woolsey, House of Representatives: 

March 2011: 

Federal Oil And Gas: 

Interagency Committee Needs to Better Coordinate Research on Oil 
Pollution Prevention and Response: 

GAO-11-319: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-11-319, a report to the Honorable Lynn Woolsey, 
House of Representatives. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Congress passed the Oil Pollution Act in 1990 (OPA). Among other 
things, OPA established the Interagency Coordinating Committee on Oil 
Pollution Research (interagency committee) to coordinate an oil 
pollution research program among federal agencies, including 
developing a plan, having the National Academy of Sciences review that 
plan, and reporting to Congress on the interagency committee’s efforts 
biennially. The 2010 Deepwater Horizon explosion and fire led to the 
largest oil spill in U.S. history, raising new concerns about the 
effects of oil spills. 

GAO was asked to assess the extent to which the interagency committee 
has facilitated the coordination of federal agencies’ oil pollution 
research. (The Chairman, Subcommittee on Energy and Environment, House 
Committee on Science and Technology, now retired; and Representative 
Woolsey initiated this request.) In part, GAO analyzed committee 
documents and biennial reports and interviewed agency officials and 
nonfederal research entities. 

What GAO Found: 

Federal agencies have conducted at least 144 research projects on oil 
pollution since 2003, but the interagency committee has played a 
limited role in coordinating this research, according to GAO’s 
analysis of interagency committee reports and documents. For example, 
agencies conducted research on identifying the toxicity of 
nonpetroleum oils recovering oil from the sea floor. The interagency 
committee issued a research plan mandated by OPA in 1997 that set 
research priorities. This plan, however, did not fully address the 
recommendations on a draft plan made by the National Research Council, 
the organization through which the National Academy of Sciences 
provides most of its advice. For example, the National Research 
Council noted that the interagency committee should review and 
evaluate past and present oil pollution research to help guide federal 
efforts and to avoid duplication. The interagency committee has 
captured some member agencies’ oil pollution research in its biennial 
reports to Congress, but it has not evaluated whether past research 
has advanced the 1997 research priorities; instead, the reports 
summarized projects. Without such an assessment, Congress may be less 
able to oversee the contributions of federal research to preventing 
and responding to oil spills. In addition, although OPA did not 
require that the interagency committee revise its 1997 plan, the 
National Research Council noted the need to continually reassess a 
comprehensive research plan. However, the interagency committee has 
not done so; consequently, the plan does not reflect changes in the 
oil production and transportation sectors since 1997, such as a 
significant increase in deepwater drilling. In September 2010, the 
interagency committee chair began to inventory completed research and 
categorize research projects according to the 1997 plan’s research 
priorities, and the chair told GAO that the interagency committee will 
begin to update the 1997 plan in 2011. 

OPA also directed the interagency committee to coordinate a 
comprehensive research program of oil pollution research among the 
member agencies, in cooperation with external stakeholders, such as 
industry, research institutions, state governments, and universities. 
An interagency member official told GAO that the committee helped 
foster interagency cooperation between two agencies comparing two 
types of testing to determine the effectiveness of certain chemicals 
in dispersing oil in sea water; However, more generally, the 
interagency committee took limited action to foster communication 
among member agencies between 1997 and 2009, when the chair proposed 
updating the 1997 plan, according to some member agency officials. 
Although the interagency committee’s meetings have occurred once or 
twice annually for the past 2 years, they occurred irregularly before 
then. Additionally, member agencies were not consistently represented 
in the interagency committee. In October 2010, to better communicate 
with interagency committee member agencies, among others, the 
interagency committee launched a Web site, which provides transcripts 
from its past public meetings and biennial reports to Congress. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends, among other things, that the interagency committee 
coordinate efforts to evaluate the contributions of completed research 
and provide, in its 2012 biennial report to Congress, an update of its 
efforts to revise its research plan. The Department of Homeland 
Security concurred with our recommendations. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-319] or key 
components. For more information, contact Frank Rusco at (202) 512-
3841 or ruscof@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

Federal Agencies Have Conducted Oil Pollution Research, but with a 
Limited Coordination Role by the Interagency Committee: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security: 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Interagency Committee Member Agencies' Funding for Oil 
Pollution Research, Both Trust and Agency Funds, Fiscal Years 2000 
through 2010: 

Table 2: Number of Oil Pollution Research Projects Conducted by Member 
Agencies as Reported in the Interagency Committee's Biennial Reports 
to Congress, Fiscal Years 2003 through 2010: 

Abbreviations: 

BOEMRE: Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement: 

EPA: Environmental Protection Agency: 

NASA: National Aeronautics and Space Administration: 

NOAA: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration: 

NRT: National Response Team: 

OPA: Oil Pollution Act of 1990: 

OSRI: Oil Spill Recovery Institute: 

PHMSA: Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

March 25, 2011: 

The Honorable Lynn Woolsey: 
House of Representatives: 

Dear Ms. Woolsey: 

On April 20, 2010, an explosion and fire onboard the Deepwater Horizon 
drilling rig in the Gulf of Mexico led to the largest oil spill in 
U.S. waters. The total cost of cleaning up this massive spill, the 
extent of the damage to the environment, and the potential effect on 
the Gulf Coast states' economies will not be known for some time. 
However, current estimates suggest that spill cleanup and related 
damage claims will cost tens of billions of dollars--far more than the 
more than $2 billion that was spent to clean up the 1989 Exxon Valdez 
spill, which contaminated Alaska's south central coastline, including 
portions of national wildlife refuges, national and state parks, a 
national forest, and a state game sanctuary. 

Following the Exxon Valdez spill, Congress passed the Oil Pollution 
Act of 1990 (OPA). Among other things, OPA addresses liability for the 
costs of cleaning up spills and damages to the environment. OPA also 
established the Interagency Coordinating Committee on Oil Pollution 
Research (the interagency committee) to coordinate a comprehensive 
program of oil pollution research, technology, development, and 
demonstration among federal agencies. OPA, as amended, requires the 
U.S. Coast Guard to chair the 13-member interagency committee. In 
addition, the chair is required to report every 2 years to Congress on 
the committee's past activities and future plans for oil pollution 
research.[Footnote 1] OPA also directed the interagency committee to 
develop a comprehensive research and technology plan to lead federal 
oil pollution research. In response to this directive, the interagency 
committee issued a plan in 1997 to guide research on oil pollution 
prevention and response. Additionally, OPA authorized funds from the 
Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund to, among other things, pay for certain 
oil pollution research. 

In this context, you asked us to review the interagency committee's 
work concerning federal oil pollution research. (This request was 
originally made by the Chairman, Subcommittee on Energy and 
Environment, House Committee on Science and Technology, now retired; 
and Representative Woolsey.) Our objective was to assess the extent to 
which the interagency committee has facilitated the coordination of 
federal agencies' oil pollution research. To address this objective, 
we reviewed OPA to understand the interagency committee's purpose and 
charge. We reviewed the interagency committee's biennial reports to 
Congress for the fiscal years 2000 through 2009 to assess efforts to 
identify and set priorities for research needs. We focused on the 
period since 2000 because of Congress's interest in the interagency 
committee's current and recent activities. We interviewed cognizant 
agency officials on the extent of coordination among interagency 
committee member agencies and, in September 2010, attended a public 
meeting of the interagency committee to observe efforts to coordinate 
oil pollution research. We also obtained the views of stakeholders, 
such as state agencies and a nonprofit research organization. We 
reviewed interagency committee documentation and the National Research 
Council's report on the interagency committee's research plan to 
assess the committee's efforts to evaluate research projects and 
determine progress made toward completing research goals. We reviewed 
committee documentation and interviewed cognizant agency officials 
about any current and emerging oil pollution risks and discussed how 
they were identified. To determine the number of research projects 
conducted by member agencies, we reviewed the interagency committee's 
biennial reports to Congress. We intended to identify the number of 
projects conducted since the completion of the 1997 research plan but 
could not do so for fiscal years 1997 through 2002 because research 
projects were not reported separately during those years. Because of 
concerns about the availability and reliability of data, we were not 
able to identify all research projects completed during those years; 
however, we believe we captured the majority of the projects with our 
methodology. 

We conducted this performance audit from June 2010 to March 2011 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
These standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. A further 
discussion of our scope and methodology is presented in appendix I. 

Background: 

This section provides information on OPA requirements, expenditures 
for oil pollution research conducted by interagency committee member 
agencies, and certain other organizations that conduct or coordinate 
research. 

The Interagency Committee on Oil Pollution Research: 

Through OPA Congress established the interagency committee to 
coordinate a comprehensive oil pollution research program among 
federal agencies and in cooperation with industry, universities, 
research institutions, state governments, and other nations, as 
appropriate. It also designated member agencies, authorized the 
President to designate other federal agencies, and directed that a 
representative of the Coast Guard chair the interagency committee. The 
chairman's duties include reporting biennially to Congress on the 
interagency committee's member agencies' activities related to oil 
pollution research. 

As also directed by OPA, the interagency committee was to develop a 
research plan that: 

* identified member agencies' roles and responsibilities; 

* assessed the current status of knowledge on oil pollution 
prevention, response and mitigation technologies, and effects of oil 
pollution on the environment; 

* identified significant oil pollution research gaps, including an 
assessment of major technological deficiencies in responses to past 
oil discharges; 

* established research priorities and goals for oil pollution 
technology development related to prevention, response, mitigation, 
and environmental effects; 

* estimated the resources needed for federal agencies to conduct the 
oil pollution research and development program and timetables for 
completing research tasks; and: 

* identified, in consultation with the states, regional oil pollution 
research needs and priorities for a coordinated, multidisciplinary 
program of research at the regional level. 

OPA also directed the chair of the interagency committee to contract 
with the National Academy of Sciences to (1) provide advice and 
guidance in the preparation and development of the research plan and 
(2) assess the adequacy of the plan as submitted and submit a report 
to Congress on the conclusions of that assessment.[Footnote 2] The 
interagency committee prepared the original research plan and, in 
1992, submitted it to Congress and the National Research Council--
created under the auspices of the National Academy of Sciences and 
through which the academy provides most of its advice--for their 
review and comment. The second edition of the research plan was 
submitted to Congress on April 1, 1997. 

Interagency Committee Member Agencies' Expenditures for Oil Pollution 
Research: 

According to agency officials, since fiscal year 2000, member agencies 
have spent about $163 million on oil pollution research. Of this 
total, approximately $145 million came from the Oil Spill Liability 
Trust Fund authorized by OPA.[Footnote 3] The largest source of 
revenue for the trust fund has been a tax collected from the oil 
industry on petroleum produced in or imported into the United States. 
The tax, which was $0.05 per barrel when OPA was enacted, expired in 
1994 but was reinstated in 2005 and increased to $0.08 per barrel in 
2008. 

Member agencies spent an additional $18 million on oil pollution. 
Table 1 shows the sources of funding for oil pollution research among 
seven interagency committee member agencies who reported that they 
conducted oil pollution research: the Bureau of Ocean Energy 
Management, Regulation and Enforcement (BOEMRE); the Coast Guard; the 
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA); the National Aeronautics and 
Space Administration (NASA); the U.S. Navy; the National Oceanic and 
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA); and the Pipeline and Hazardous 
Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA).[Footnote 4] 

Table 1: Interagency Committee Member Agencies' Funding for Oil 
Pollution Research, Both Trust and Agency Funds, Fiscal Years 2000 
through 2010: 

Fiscal year 2010 dollars in millions: 

Member agency: BOEMRE[A]; 
Fiscal year: 2000: $7.1 million; 
Fiscal year: 2001: $6.9 million; 
Fiscal year: 2002: $6.8 million; 
Fiscal year: 2003: $6.7 million; 
Fiscal year: 2004: $7.5 million; 
Fiscal year: 2005: $7.9 million; 
Fiscal year: 2006: $7.5 million; 
Fiscal year: 2007: $7.5 million; 
Fiscal year: 2008: $7.1 million; 
Fiscal year: 2009: $6.6 million; 
Fiscal year: 2010: $6.2 million; 
Agency total: $77.8 million. 

Member agency: Coast Guard; 
Fiscal year: 2000: $4.7 million; 
Fiscal year: 2001: $4.8 million; 
Fiscal year: 2002: $4.8 million; 
Fiscal year: 2003: $4.3 million; 
Fiscal year: 2004: $4.1 million; 
Fiscal year: 2005: $2.3 million; 
Fiscal year: 2006: $2.8 million; 
Fiscal year: 2007: $2.1 million; 
Fiscal year: 2008: $2.1 million; 
Fiscal year: 2009: $0.6 million; 
Fiscal year: 2010: $0.7 million; 
Agency total: $33.3 million. 

Member agency: EPA; 
Fiscal year: 2000: $1.1 million; 
Fiscal year: 2001: $1.1 million; 
Fiscal year: 2002: $1.1 million; 
Fiscal year: 2003: $1.1 million; 
Fiscal year: 2004: $1.0 million; 
Fiscal year: 2005: $1.0 million; 
Fiscal year: 2006: $0.9 million; 
Fiscal year: 2007: $0.8 million; 
Fiscal year: 2008: $0.9 million; 
Fiscal year: 2009: $0.7 million; 
Fiscal year: 2010: $0.6 million; 
Agency total: $10.3. 

Member agency: NASA; 
Fiscal year: 2000: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2001: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2002: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2003: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2004: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2005: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2006: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2007: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2008: $0.4 million; 
Fiscal year: 2009: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2010: 0; 
Agency total: $0.4 million. 

Member agency: Navy; 
Fiscal year: 2000: $4.3 million; 
Fiscal year: 2001: $3.5 million; 
Fiscal year: 2002: $1.2 million; 
Fiscal year: 2003: $0.4 million; 
Fiscal year: 2004: $0.3 million; 
Fiscal year: 2005: $0.3 million; 
Fiscal year: 2006: $0.2 million; 
Fiscal year: 2007: $0.3 million; 
Fiscal year: 2008: $0.6 million; 
Fiscal year: 2009: $0.4 million; 
Fiscal year: 2010: $0.6 million; 
Agency total: $12.1 million. 

Member agency: NOAA; 
Fiscal year: 2000: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2001: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2002: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2003: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2004: $2.3 million; 
Fiscal year: 2005: $2.2 million; 
Fiscal year: 2006: $3.3 million; 
Fiscal year: 2007: $3.2 million; 
Fiscal year: 2008: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2009: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2010: 0; 
Agency total: $11.0 million. 

Member agency: PHMSA; 
Fiscal year: 2000: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2001: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2002: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2003: 0; 
Fiscal year: 2004: $3.4 million; 
Fiscal year: 2005: $3.3 million; 
Fiscal year: 2006: $2.1 million; 
Fiscal year: 2007: $2.0 million; 
Fiscal year: 2008: $3.4 million; 
Fiscal year: 2009: $2.2 million; 
Fiscal year: 2010: $2.2 million; 
Agency total: $18.6 million. 

Member agency: Annual total; 
Fiscal year: 2000: $17.2 million; 
Fiscal year: 2001: $16.3 million; 
Fiscal year: 2002: $13.9 million; 
Fiscal year: 2003: $12.5 million; 
Fiscal year: 2004: $18.6 million; 
Fiscal year: 2005: $17.0 million; 
Fiscal year: 2006: $16.8 million; 
Fiscal year: 2007: $15.9 million; 
Fiscal year: 2008: $14.5 million; 
Fiscal year: 2009: $10.5 million; 
Fiscal year: 2010: $10.3 million; 
Agency total: $163.5 million. 

Source: GAO analysis of data provided by interagency committee member 
agencies. 

[A] Expenditures for BOEMRE include about $3 million per year for the 
operation and maintenance of the National Oil Spill Response Research 
and Renewable Energy Test Facility located in Leonardo, New Jersey. 
This facility is used for both full scale equipment testing and 
responder training. 

[End of table] 

Other Organizations that Conduct or Coordinate Oil Pollution Research: 

After the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill in Prince William Sound, Alaska, at 
least four states created or expanded their own oil pollution research 
programs and Congress created an oil pollution research institute. 

* Alaska Division of Spill Prevention and Response. This division was 
established in 1991, although an official from the Alaska Division of 
Spill Prevention and Response told us that the state has had an oil 
pollution control program, which included research, since the 1970s. 
According to the agency's Web site, Alaska appropriated a total of 
$2.5 million in the wake of the Exxon Valdez oil spill to enhance the 
ability of the state and industry to respond to oil spills. The funds 
were to be used for research programs directed toward the prevention, 
containment, cleanup, and amelioration of oil spills in Alaska. To 
date, more than 30 research and development projects have been 
completed. 

* California Office of Spill Prevention and Response. This office was 
created in 1990 and has a variety of responsibilities related to spill 
prevention and response, including oil spill contingency planning. The 
office's research program operated from 2004 through 2010 and 
supported a total of 38 research projects with a budget of $430,000 
annually during this 6-year period. 

* Louisiana Applied and Educational Oil Spill Research and Development 
Program. Louisiana's program was established after the Exxon Valdez 
oil spill. The state created the Louisiana Oil Spill Coordinator's 
Office, which, with Louisiana State University, formed the Oil Spill 
Research and Development Program. The program's mission was to provide 
the state of Louisiana with tools related to oil spill prevention, 
detection, response, and cleanup. According to a program official, 
from 1993 through 2007, the program provided more than $500,000 per 
year to public colleges and universities to support a range of 
research. 

* Texas General Land Office Oil Spill Prevention and Response Program. 
According to a state official, the Texas General Land Office's Oil 
Spill Prevention and Response Program has spent $1.25 million per year 
for oil spill research since 1991. Its research is funded by a fee on 
oil loaded or unloaded in Texas. 

* Oil Spill Recovery Institute (OSRI). OPA established OSRI for 
research, education, and demonstration projects to respond to and 
understand the effects of oil spills in the Arctic and sub-Arctic 
marine environments, amongst other purposes. OSRI is administered 
through and housed at the Prince William Sound Science Center, a 
nonprofit research and education organization in Cordova, Alaska. 
Funding for OSRI comes from interest on $22.5 million in the Oil Spill 
Liability Trust Fund. OSRI received more than $1 million from the fund 
in 2009 and $225,000 in 2010 and expects to receive between $560,000 
and $1.3 million in 2011, according to an agency official. 

In addition, the National Response Team (NRT) coordinates some oil 
pollution research. NRT is an interagency organization responsible 
for, among other things, coordinating emergency preparedness and 
response to oil and hazardous substance pollution incidents.[Footnote 
5] EPA and the Coast Guard serve as its Chair and Vice Chair, 
respectively. One of NRT's responsibilities is to monitor "response 
related research and development, testing and evaluation activities of 
NRT agencies to enhance coordination, avoid duplication of effort and 
facilitate research in support of response activities." Every 2 years 
NRT's science and technology committee--which includes, among others, 
BOEMRE, the Coast Guard, EPA, and NOAA--provides the interagency 
committee with the information for its biennial reports to Congress. 
The science and technology committee also meets monthly and member 
agencies coordinate regularly on oil pollution research projects. 
These meetings allow agencies to leverage each other's resources to 
achieve mutually beneficial oil pollution research, according to 
agency officials. 

Federal Agencies Have Conducted Oil Pollution Research, but with a 
Limited Coordination Role by the Interagency Committee: 

According to our analysis of interagency committee reports, federal 
agencies have conducted at least 144 research projects on oil 
pollution prevention and response since 2003, but the interagency 
committee had a limited role in facilitating the coordination of 
agency efforts.[Footnote 6] The interagency committee established a 
joint research plan in 1997 that identified oil pollution risks and 
research priorities, but it has not updated that plan in light of 
changes in the oil production and transportation sector. The 
interagency committee also submitted biennial reports to Congress, as 
directed, but it has not evaluated member agencies' progress in 
addressing research gaps identified in the 1997 research plan; until 
recently, it also had not revisited the plan, as the National Research 
Council recommended. Furthermore, since completing the 1997 research 
plan, the interagency committee has taken limited action, until 
recently, to foster communication and coordinate research among member 
agencies and to reach out to stakeholders, such as industry and state 
organizations. 

Federal Agencies Have Conducted at Least 144 Research Projects on Oil 
Pollution Prevention and Response since Completion of the Research 
Plan: 

According to the interagency committee's biennial reports, since 2003 
member agencies have conducted at least 144 research projects related 
to preventing or responding to oil pollution. These projects have 
addressed a range of topics, such as responding to an oil spill by 
burning oil off the water's surface (in situ burning), detecting oil 
in icy waters, predicting oil behavior in deepwater blowouts, and 
using micro-organisms to remove spilled oil in saltwater marshes. As 
table 2 shows, BOEMRE, the Coast Guard, EPA, and NOAA--4 of the 13 
member agencies--accounted for all of the projects reported to 
Congress. Of the remaining nine member agencies, three agencies 
conducted research, but their research was not reported in the 
interagency committee's biennial reports, and six agencies did not 
conduct any research. 

Table 2: Number of Oil Pollution Research Projects Conducted by Member 
Agencies as Reported in the Interagency Committee's Biennial Reports 
to Congress, Fiscal Years 2003 through 2010: 

Fiscal year: 2003; 
Member agency: BOEMRE: 12; 
Member agency: Coast Guard: 1; 
Member agency: EPA: 12; 
Member agency: NOAA: 0; 
Member agency: Joint: 0; 
Total: 25. 

Fiscal year: 2004; 
Member agency: BOEMRE: 8; 
Member agency: Coast Guard: 1; 
Member agency: EPA: 9; 
Member agency: NOAA: 0; 
Member agency: Joint: 0; 
Total: 18. 

Fiscal year: 2005; 
Member agency: BOEMRE: 8; 
Member agency: Coast Guard: 0; 
Member agency: EPA: 8; 
Member agency: NOAA: 2; 
Member agency: Joint: 0; 
Total: 18. 

Fiscal year: 2006; 
Member agency: BOEMRE: 7; 
Member agency: Coast Guard: 1; 
Member agency: EPA: 5; 
Member agency: NOAA: 0; 
Member agency: Joint: 1[A]; 
Total: 14. 

Fiscal year: 2007; 
Member agency: BOEMRE: 7; 
Member agency: Coast Guard: 1; 
Member agency: EPA: 3; 
Member agency: NOAA: 10; 
Member agency: Joint: 1[B]; 
Total: 22. 

Fiscal year: 2008; 
Member agency: BOEMRE: 3; 
Member agency: Coast Guard: 0; 
Member agency: EPA: 2; 
Member agency: NOAA: 8; 
Member agency: Joint: 1[C]; 
Total: 14. 

Fiscal year: 2009; 
Member agency: BOEMRE: 9; 
Member agency: Coast Guard: 2; 
Member agency: EPA: 2; 
Member agency: NOAA: 9; 
Member agency: Joint: 0; 
Total: 22. 

Fiscal year: 2010; 
Member agency: BOEMRE: 2; 
Member agency: Coast Guard: 0; 
Member agency: EPA: 5; 
Member agency: NOAA: 4; 
Member agency: Joint: 0; 
Total: 11. 

Fiscal year: Total; 
Member agency: BOEMRE: 56; 
Member agency: Coast Guard: 6; 
Member agency: EPA: 46; 
Member agency: NOAA: 33; 
Member agency: Joint: 3; 
Total: 144. 

Source: GAO analysis of interagency committee biennial reports to 
Congress. 

Notes: We could not identify the number of projects completed in 2000 
because the interagency committee was not required to report on its 
progress that year per the Federal Reports Elimination and Sunset Act 
of 1995, and did not do so. Additionally, we could not identify the 
number of projects completed in fiscal years 2001 and 2002 because the 
interagency committee's biennial reports did not include projects; 
instead, the reports included publications authored by member 
agencies, and we could not confirm whether individual publications 
corresponded to a single project. The interagency committee plans to 
release the next biennial report in 2012, which will cover 2010 and 
2011. 

[A] In 2006, BOEMRE and EPA jointly conducted a research project to 
evaluate the reliability of a laboratory method used to test 
dispersant effectiveness. 

[B] In 2007, the Coast Guard and NOAA jointly developed a tool to help 
responders and planners assess the risk from chemical spills in rivers. 

[C] In 2008, BOEMRE and the Coast Guard completed a joint research 
project on verifying the reliability of a cooperatively designed 
monitoring program to use when in situ burning occurs and dispersants 
are used. 

[End of table] 

Projects conducted by these agencies and included in the interagency 
committee's biennial reports addressed a wide range of topics. For 
example: 

* BOEMRE: research to develop an aerial oil thickness and mapping 
system. Based on this research, initiated in 2005, BOEMRE developed a 
portable aerial sensor to detect and accurately map the thickness and 
distribution of oil slicks in coastal and offshore waters. The aerial 
thickness mapping system was deployed for the Deepwater Horizon oil 
spill and flown over the spill, providing maps of oil thickness. The 
Coast Guard used these maps to guide mechanical response efforts and 
dispersant operations and to plan in situ burns, according to Coast 
Guard officials. In addition, NOAA used this information to validate 
its model predictions for how the oil would behave in water, to 
document the potential for the oil to arrive on beaches, and to assess 
oil infiltration to the shoreline and marshes, according to NOAA 
officials. 

* Coast Guard: recovery of oil on the sea floor. This project, which 
is ongoing is intended to develop methods to recover oil located on 
the bottom of the sea, according to Coast Guard officials. Its first 
objective is to develop a number of potential methods for detecting 
the oil and then selecting the most cost effective methods for further 
development. 

* EPA: research into the biodegradability and toxicity of nonpetroleum 
oils.[Footnote 7] Through its ongoing research, EPA has found that the 
degree to which vegetable oils will biodegrade in the environment 
depends on a number of factors, including the oil's chemical 
structure, according to EPA officials. Also, EPA found that vegetable 
oils can readily biodegrade anaerobically--or without oxygen--
suggesting that a new treatment technology could be used for cleaning 
up a vegetable oil spill. This technology involves sinking the oil 
into the sediment by adding clay so that the oil rapidly biodegrades 
under anaerobic conditions with little adverse effects on the 
ecosystem. Currently, the National Contingency Plan provides that 
sinking agents may not be used as an oil recovery or mitigation 
measure, but as a result of this research, EPA is considering 
proposing an exception for treating vegetable oil spills. 

* NOAA: research into monitoring the effectiveness of chemicals used 
to disperse oil. This research, completed in 2008, compared the 
behavior of oils with and without dispersants in different types of 
sediment from U.S. coastal waters, according to the interagency 
committee's 2008-2009 biennial report. 

While these four agencies' research projects were discussed in the 
interagency committee's biennial reports, three other member agencies 
also conducted research that was not reported, according to our 
analysis of information that some agencies provided. In speaking with 
agency officials, however, we could not determine why the following 
agencies were omitted from the interagency committee's biennial 
reports. 

* PHMSA has administered an oil pollution research program since 
fiscal year 2002, but none of its projects have been included in the 
biennial reports. For example, PHMSA has an ongoing project to develop 
a model for commercial companies to predict the rate at which 
operating pipelines become weakened and suddenly fracture because of 
stress and corrosion, and in 2009, PHMSA completed a project examining 
the risk of plastic pipe failures, according to PHMSA documentation. 

* The Navy and NASA have conducted some oil pollution research, but 
none of their research efforts were included in the biennial reports. 
For example, the Navy has an ongoing, multiphase project to evaluate 
the efficacy of equipment used to separate oil from wastewater before 
the wastewater is discharged from Navy ships. The Navy decided to 
research this issue because the chemical and physical properties of 
synthetic lubricants, some of which are denser than water, have posed 
problems for its oil-water separators, which operate based on the 
differences in specific gravity between oil and water, according to 
Navy documentation. Similarly, NASA recently provided funding to an 
oil pollution detection project through its Gulf of Mexico 
Initiative.[Footnote 8] The goal of the project, which is being 
conducted in partnership with the Naval Research Laboratory and NOAA, 
is to demonstrate practical applications for oil spill detection from 
observations of two NASA sensors in low-earth orbit. From these 
observations, NASA officials said that new methods will be developed 
for NOAA to use to detect oil spills. NASA officials said they 
selected this project because it would employ an innovative use of 
remote sensing technology, not because of its focus on detecting oil 
spills.[Footnote 9] 

Without knowing about these projects, Congress may be less informed 
when making funding decisions about oil pollution research. 

The Interagency Committee Coordinated Efforts to Develop the 1997 
Research Plan, but until 2009, Took Limited Action to Foster 
Communication and Coordinate Research: 

The interagency committee completed the research plan mandated by OPA 
to help guide member agencies' research on oil pollution prevention 
and response in 1997. However, once the plan was completed, the 
interagency committee played a limited role in coordinating member 
agencies' efforts. 

The Interagency Committee Developed the 1997 Research Plan through 
Joint Efforts but Has Not Addressed Some National Research Council 
Recommendations: 

The interagency committee prepared a research plan required by OPA and 
submitted it for review to the National Research Council and Congress 
in 1992. The National Research Council provided its review of the 
first plan in 1994, and the interagency committee submitted the second 
edition of the plan to Congress on April 1, 1997. According to the 
interagency committee's documentation, the committee conducted a 2-
year voluntary interagency effort to address the National Research 
Council's recommendations. The interagency committee's 1997 research 
plan includes (1) an analysis of the oil production and transportation 
systems and associated oil pollution risks; (2) an identification of 
21 research priorities intended to address oil pollution risks, 
categorized into three priority levels; (3) an identification of 
research areas of focus for some member agencies; and (4) an 
identification of some nonfederal stakeholders. 

While the interagency committee revised its research plan in order to 
address the National Research Council's review, the committee did not 
fully address all of the council's recommendations. For example, after 
reviewing the interagency committee's first draft research plan, the 
National Research Council noted the interagency committee should, as 
part of its activities, comprehensively review and evaluate past and 
present oil pollution research to help guide federal research efforts 
and avoid duplication. The interagency committee followed this 
recommendation, in part, by capturing the results of some member 
agencies' oil pollution research in its biennial reports to Congress, 
but it did not assess whether completed research contributed to 
advancing the 1997 research priorities; rather, the reports provided 
only summaries of research projects. Without such an assessment, 
Congress may be less able to provide oversight on the contributions of 
federal research to prevent and respond to oil spills. Furthermore, 
while some member agencies maintain Web sites that are accessible to 
the public and that contain data and reports on oil pollution research 
that has been conducted, the interagency committee has not assembled 
or published a comprehensive inventory of all research projects 
conducted by member agencies, which limits the interagency committee's 
ability to evaluate past research. 

The interagency committee has recently taken steps to inventory member 
agencies' research. Specifically, according to Coast Guard documents, 
in September 2010, the interagency committee chair began to inventory 
research projects and categorize them according to the 1997 plan's 
research priorities. The interagency committee chair told us that this 
inventory is likely to help the interagency committee determine where 
to focus future research efforts in response to current and emerging 
risks. 

In addition, while OPA did not require the interagency committee to 
revise its research and technology plan, the National Research Council 
noted in its review that a comprehensive research plan should be 
continually reassessed. However, the interagency committee has not 
revised its 1997 research plan. As a result, the plan does not reflect 
significant changes in the oil production and transportation sectors 
or assess current and emerging risks or research priorities. 
Consequently, knowledge gaps in critical research areas may have been 
overlooked. For example: 

* The 1997 plan contained 21 research priorities, such as oil spill 
surveillance and environmental restoration methods, and identified 
knowledge gaps in these areas, but it did not identify deepwater 
drilling as a specific research priority. However, by 2000, deepwater 
oil production had surpassed shallow water oil production, and within 
5 years of the plan's completion, oil production in deepwater had 
tripled, according to data from BOEMRE.[Footnote 10] 

* The plan did not identify oil spills in icy waters as a risk, 
although oil production and shipping are expected to increase 
substantially in the Arctic, according to member agency officials. 

Coast Guard officials said that although the 1997 plan did not focus 
on oil spills in deepwater or the Arctic, many of the plan's research 
priorities are still relevant for guiding current research. However, 
most officials from the 13 member agencies we spoke with told us that 
they either did not know that the interagency committee's 1997 plan 
existed or did not use it to guide research; rather, each agency 
determined its own research priorities based on its mission. For 
example, EPA used a multiyear plan to guide all of its research, 
including oil pollution, but its plan did not reference the 
interagency committee's 1997 research plan. 

Recognizing the need for a more active approach, the interagency 
committee chair told us that the committee began to consider updating 
the 1997 plan in late 2009 and planned to ask member agency officials 
to draft components of the revised plan during the summer of 2010. 
However, a number of member agencies were occupied with responding to 
the Deepwater Horizon incident, according to agency officials, and 
were thus unable to begin revising the plan. Coast Guard officials 
expect drafting of a revised research plan to begin during the summer 
2011 and stated that it will take approximately 2 years to update the 
plan because the interagency committee intends to submit the plan to 
the National Research Council for its review. Coast Guard officials 
said that this effort to review and revise could take several years, 
as it did in the 1990s. Furthermore, according to Coast Guard 
officials, they have not yet decided whether the new research plan 
will include an evaluation of past research or address research 
priorities outlined in the 1997 plan. 

Interagency Committee Has Taken Limited Actions to Foster 
Communication and Coordination among Member Agencies and Nonfederal 
Stakeholders: 

As directed by OPA, the interagency committee was to coordinate a 
comprehensive program of oil pollution research among the member 
agencies, in cooperation and coordination with industry, universities, 
research institutions, state governments, and other nations, as 
appropriate. The interagency committee has helped member agencies 
collaborate on some occasions. For example, according to an agency 
official who participates in the interagency committee, the committee 
played a role in facilitating interagency cooperation between BOEMRE 
and EPA. These agencies jointly conducted research, completed in 2006, 
in comparing how laboratory tests of the effectiveness of certain 
chemicals in dispersing oil in sea water compared with certain larger 
scale tests at a research facility. 

According to some member agency officials, however, the interagency 
committee had taken limited action to foster communication among 
member agencies between 1997 and 2009, when the interagency committee 
chair proposed updating the 1997 plan. Although the interagency 
committee's meetings have occurred once or twice annually for the past 
2 years, they occurred irregularly before then, according to some 
agency officials. 

Additionally, member agencies were not consistently represented in the 
interagency committee. Specifically, five agencies did not have a 
representative designated to the interagency committee until 2010. An 
official at one of these agencies told us that he was assigned as the 
representative to the interagency committee only after the agency had 
received our request to discuss the interagency committee's work. 
Furthermore, officials at one agency said that they have never heard 
of the interagency committee and reported that the agency did not have 
a representative designated to the interagency committee. 

In October 2010, to better communicate with interagency committee 
member agencies, among others, the Coast Guard launched the 
interagency committee's Web site, which includes transcripts from past 
public meetings and biennial reports to Congress. In addition, as 
directed by OPA, the interagency committee was to cooperate and 
coordinate with industry, universities, research institutions, state 
governments, and other nations, as appropriate. With specific regard 
to states, the interagency committee was to consult with them on 
regional oil pollution research needs and priorities. The National 
Research Council echoed these requirements in its recommendations, 
noting that such work was necessary in order to avoid duplication of 
research efforts and to enhance coordination and cooperation with 
those entities. In its 1997 research plan, the interagency committee 
identified the activities of some stakeholders, including the oil 
pollution research programs of four states and three industry groups, 
but interested stakeholders have reported limited contact with the 
interagency committee. For example: 

* Officials from two of the four state oil pollution research programs 
we spoke with were unaware of the interagency committee's existence 
until we contacted them. 

* Officials from the other two state oil pollution research programs 
reported having past, albeit inconsistent, interaction with the 
interagency committee. 

* The committee hosted three public meetings in 2010 to solicit input 
from nonfederal stakeholders on the direction of a new research plan; 
however, it announced the meetings only 4 weeks in advance, which may 
have been insufficient time to obtain participation from a range of 
stakeholders. 

* An official we spoke with from a nonprofit oil pollution research 
organization had never interacted with the interagency committee until 
two of the conferences in 2010. 

By not communicating with key nonfederal stakeholders, the interagency 
committee may have missed opportunities to coordinate research efforts 
across sectors. For example, a state official we spoke with said that 
he is concerned that the interagency committee is not doing a 
sufficient job to minimize the duplication of research efforts across 
sectors; he noted that some of the federal and state research recently 
completed or currently underway is similar to federal and state 
research completed in the 1990s. Several state officials we spoke with 
also said that the interagency committee has generally not done a 
sufficient job of disseminating the results of completed federal 
research to nonfederal stakeholders, which could help nonfederal 
research organizations in planning their own research efforts. 
Furthermore, while the interagency committee's last biennial report 
listed workshops or conferences interagency members attended, it did 
not report on any efforts to consult with key nonfederal stakeholders. 

In December 2010, Coast Guard officials told us that the interagency 
committee was considering establishing a subcommittee to coordinate 
with industry on planning and research, but they had not yet firmed up 
any plans to do so. 

Conclusions: 

Like the Exxon Valdez spill in 1989, the Deepwater Horizon incident 
once again highlighted the need for new knowledge about oil spill 
prevention and response. The interagency committee completed a 
research plan required by OPA in 1997 to help guide member agencies' 
research on oil pollution prevention and response. Federal agencies 
have conducted at least 144 research projects related to this issue, 
but the interagency committee, established to develop a comprehensive 
research and development program on oil spill prevention and response, 
has been incomplete in its accounting for research projects and has 
done little until recently to coordinate the federal research effort. 

The chair of the interagency committee has recognized the need for a 
proactive approach to coordination, and the committee's recent effort 
to inventory member agencies' research projects is a necessary step to 
understanding past research. However, this effort will be incomplete 
without an evaluation of whether this research addressed knowledge 
gaps identified in the 1997 plan. Without such an evaluation, Congress 
may be unable to provide effective oversight on the progress made in 
federal efforts to conduct research on oil pollution prevention and 
response. Furthermore, Coast Guard officials expect the drafting of a 
revised research plan to begin during summer 2011, but the revision of 
the plan has already been delayed because of the Deepwater Horizon 
incident, and the interagency committee could take several years to 
complete the planned revision, as it did in the 1990s with the 1997 
research plan. Moreover, in the past, the interagency committee has 
not reached out effectively to identify and consult with key 
nonfederal stakeholders who could provide insight into the research 
that may need to be conducted, as it was directed to do by OPA. 
Without such outreach, the committee may be missing opportunities to 
advance knowledge across sectors and to avoid duplication of research 
efforts. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

In order to better identify oil pollution risks, determine research 
priorities, and coordinate research efforts, we recommend that the 
Commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard direct the chair of the interagency 
committee to take the following three actions, in coordination with 
member agencies: 

* Evaluate the contributions of past research to current knowledge on 
oil pollution prevention and response and report the results of these 
evaluations, including remaining gaps in knowledge, in its biennial 
reports to Congress. 

* Provide a status update regarding the revision of the research plan, 
as well as a schedule for completing the revision, in the next 
biennial report due in 2012, which will cover 2010 and 2011. 

* Establish a more systematic process to identify and consult with key 
nonfederal stakeholders on oil pollution risks and research needs on 
an ongoing basis. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided the departments of Commerce, Defense, Energy, Homeland 
Security, the Interior, and Transportation; EPA; and NASA with a draft 
of this report for review and comment. In commenting on this report, 
the departments of the Interior and Transportation, and EPA provided 
technical comments, which we incorporated as appropriate. In addition, 
the Department of Homeland Security concurred with our recommendations 
and provided a formal response, which we reprinted in appendix II. 

As agreed with your office, unless you publicly announce the contents 
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days 
from the report date. At that time, we will send copies to the 
appropriate congressional committees; the Secretaries of Commerce, 
Defense, Energy, Homeland Security, the Interior, and Transportation; 
the Administrators of EPA and NASA; the Commandant of the U.S. Coast 
Guard; and other interested parties. In addition, the report will be 
available at no charge on the GAO Web site at [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff have any questions concerning this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-3841 or ruscof@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. Key contributors to this report are 
listed in appendix III. 

Sincerely yours, 

Signed by: 

Frank Rusco: 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

To review the extent to which the Interagency Coordinating Committee 
on Oil Pollution Research (interagency committee) has facilitated the 
coordination of federal agencies' oil pollution research efforts, we 
analyzed biennial reports produced by the interagency committee to 
assess efforts to identify and set priorities for research needs and 
reviewed our guidance on interagency collaboration.[Footnote 11] We 
interviewed cognizant agency officials on the extent of coordination 
among committee member agencies and, in September 2010, we attended a 
public meeting of the interagency committee to observe efforts to 
coordinate oil pollution research. We also interviewed external 
stakeholders, including officials from California, Louisiana, and 
Texas, and the Oil Spill Recovery Institute, a nonprofit research 
organization. We selected these organizations because all were listed 
in the interagency committee's research plan as stakeholders. The 
findings from the officials we interviewed, however, cannot be 
generalized to other states or organizations. We also reviewed and 
analyzed interagency committee documentation to assess efforts to 
evaluate research projects and determine progress made toward 
completing research goals. We reviewed committee documentation and 
interviewed cognizant agency officials about any current and emerging 
oil pollution risks, as well as how they were identified. 

To determine the number of research projects conducted by member 
agencies, we reviewed the interagency committee's biennial reports to 
Congress. While we intended to count the number of projects conducted 
since completion of the 1997 research plan, we could not count 
projects for fiscal years (1) 1997 and 1998 because the biennial 
report that includes those years did not include any research projects 
initiated after completion of the research plan; (2) 1999 and 2000 
because the interagency committee was not required to report on its 
progress for those two years in accordance with the Federal Reports 
Elimination and Sunset Act of 1995, and did not do so; and (3) 2000, 
2001, and 2002 because the interagency committee's biennial reports 
included publications and not projects. Also, we could not confirm 
whether individual publications corresponded to a single project. 
Because of concerns about the availability and reliability of data, we 
were not able to identify all research projects completed during those 
years; however, we believe we captured the majority of the projects 
with our methodology because we were able to interview program 
officials from each member agency that conducted oil pollution 
research and confirm our approach and our list of projects with them. 

We conducted this performance audit from June 2010 to March 2011 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
These standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security: 

U.S. Department of Homeland Security: 
Washington, DC 20528: 

March 4, 2011: 

Frank Rusco: 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, NW: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Re: GA0-11-319, Federal Oil and Gas: Interagency Committee Needs to 
Better Coordinate Research on Oil Pollution Prevention and Response: 

Dear Mr. Rusco: 

The U.S. Coast Guard generally concurs with the Government 
Accountability Office (GAO) recommendations and appreciates the 
opportunity to comment on the draft report. The Coast Guard is taking 
corrective actions to address the recommendations. The President's FY12
Budget request includes a position to serve as the full-time Executive 
Director for the Interagency Coordinating Committee on Oil Pollution 
Research (ICCOPR). This position is a key step in the Coast Guard's 
efforts to revitalize the ICCOPR program. 

The GAO audit focused on the ICCOPR's activities after 2000. By doing 
so, numerous ICCOPR initiatives, interactions, and accomplishments are 
not discussed. Many of these actions addressed specific 
congressionally mandated requirements of the Interagency Committee. 
For example, Section 7001, subsection (c), paragraph (8), of the Oil 
Pollution Act of 1990 (codified in 33 U.S.C. § 2761(c)(8)) required 
the Interagency Committee to establish a regional research program and 
authorized those agencies represented on the Interagency Committee to 
make grants to universities and other such research institutions to 
perform research related to regional effects of oil pollution. 
Numerous academic grants were awarded with the funding that was 
authorized from 1992-95. In addition, the Interagency Committee 
conducted a series of port demonstration projects as well as 
successful international outreach initiatives prior to 2000. 

Specific DHS responses to the three recommendations follow: 

"In order to better identify oil pollution risks, determine research 
priorities, and coordinate research efforts, we recommend that the 
Commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard direct the chair of the interagency 
committee to take the following three actions, in coordination with 
the member agencies: 

Recommendation 1: Evaluate the contributions of past research to 
current knowledge on oil pollution prevention and response and report 
the results of these evaluations, including remaining gaps in 
knowledge, in its biennial reports to Congress." 

Response: DHS concurs. In the fall of 2009, the Chair requested that 
ICCOPR members review their respective research portfolios to identify 
any research projects that had not been previously reported in the 
ICCOPR Biennial Reports. The Interagency Committee will use this 
validated catalogue of projects to help communicate what research gaps 
from the 1997 Research and Technology Plan have been addressed.	The 
validated list of projects will also help to inform the ongoing 
revision of the research plan. 

Recommendation 2: "Provide a status update regarding the revision of 
the research plan, as well as a schedule for completing the revision, 
in the next biennial report due in 2012, which will cover 2010 and 
2011." 

Response: DHS concurs. The ICCOPR initiated plans and meetings to 
revise its 1997 Research and Technology Plan in 2009. For example, the 
ICCOPR scheduled three different Public Meetings to solicit input for 
the plan's revision. These meetings were arranged to obtain regional 
perspectives from the West Coast, East Coast, and the Gulf Coast. In 
addition, the ICCOPR met with the U.S. Arctic Research Commission to 
better understand its concerns and obtain feedback regarding needs for 
high-latitude research. The ICCOPR continues to review the input from 
these meetings as well as the perspectives and opinions contained in the
President's National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill 
and Offshore Drilling's findings and several other Deepwater Horizon 
reports. Additionally, as part of the ongoing effort to identify 
technology gaps for deepwater open ocean oil spills, the Coast Guard
Research and Development Center, in support of the Interagency 
Committee, hosted two symposiums on oil spill response and recovery. 
All of these information sources will be used to guide the ICCOPR's 
plan revision efforts over the next year. These efforts and a 
tentative timeline will be described in the FY10-11 Congressional 
Biennial Report. 

Recommendation 3: "Establish a more systematic process to identify and 
consult with key nonfederal stakeholders on oil pollution risks and 
research needs on an ongoing basis." 

Response: DHS concurs. The ICCOPR is examining the collaboration needs 
outlined in two joint industry task forces (Joint Industry Oil Spill 
Preparedness and Response Task Force and the Joint Industry Subsea 
Well Control and Containment Task Force) to improve spill response and 
containment research efforts. 

The Interagency Committee continues its participation and outreach at 
oil pollution research and development conferences and workshops, such 
as the International Oil Spill Conference, the Clean Gulf and Pacific 
Conferences, and the Arctic and Marine Oilspill Program (AMOP)
Technical Seminar on Environmental Contamination and Response. 

The ICCOPR continues to expand and advertise its website for further 
outreach efforts [hyperlink, http://www.iccopr.uscg.gov]. The website 
provides a convenient and informative way for stakeholders and the 
public to have access to ICCOPRs latest activities and to communicate 
with membership. An important element of the website is a 
comprehensive listing of ongoing conferences and workshops offered by 
academia, industry, and the federal government. 

The ICCOPR continues to support numerous academic/industry outreach 
endeavors. For example, ICCOPR members will be participating in the 
March 22-24 Workshop on Coordinating Research and Development on Oil 
Spill Response in the Wake of the Deepwater Horizon hosted by the 
Coastal Response Research Center (CRRC) at the University of New 
Hampshire. Also, the Coast Guard Research and Development Center 
hosted two symposiums on oil spill response and recovery as part of 
the ongoing effort to identify technology gaps for deepwater open 
ocean oil spills. These symposiums were organized to provide an 
audience of federal agency responders, academic representatives, and 
industry contractors involved in the Deepwater Horizon response with a 
forum to discuss current oil spill priorities and the needs and 
challenges in executing the spill clean-up. 

Although several state oil pollution research and development programs 
no longer exist as indicated in the draft report, the ICCOPR will 
reach out to those that still operate to share information about 
current research and education efforts. 

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on this Draft Report. We look 
forward to working with you on future Department of Homeland Security 
issues. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Jim H. Crumpacker: 
Director: 
Departmental GAO/OIG Liaison Office: 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Frank Rusco, (202) 512-3841 or ruscof@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individual named above, Christine Kehr, Assistant 
Director; David Bennett; Antoinette Capaccio; Nirmal Chaudhary; Scott 
Doubleday; Cindy Gilbert; Rich Johnson; Michael Kendix; Carol 
Herrnstadt Shulman; Vasiliki (Kiki) Theodoropoulos; and Jeremy 
Williams made key contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] The agencies assigned to the interagency committee under OPA 
include the Department of Commerce's National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
Administration and National Institute of Standards and Technology; 
Department of Defense's U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and U.S. Navy; 
Department of Energy; Department of Homeland Security's U.S. Coast 
Guard and Federal Emergency Management Agency; Department of the 
Interior's Minerals Management Service (now the Bureau of Ocean Energy 
Management, Regulation and Enforcement) and U.S. Fish and Wildlife 
Service; Department of Transportation's Maritime Administration and 
Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration; Environmental 
Protection Agency; and National Aeronautics and Space Administration. 

[2] The National Academy of Sciences, chartered by Congress in 1863 to 
advise the federal government on subjects of science and art, is a 
quasi-public honorary organization to which scientists are elected 
annually by vote of the membership. The academy in turn created the 
National Research Council, which can call upon respected scientists 
and engineers--who are not necessarily academy members--to serve on 
voluntary committees. 

[3] In addition to research and development, OPA allows the fund to be 
used for, among other things, oil spill removal costs; payments to 
federal, state, and Indian tribe trustees to conduct natural resource 
damage assessments; and payment of claims for certain uncompensated 
removal costs and damages. 

[4] Six agencies reported that they did not conduct oil pollution 
research: the Army Corps of Engineers, Department of Energy, Federal 
Emergency Management Agency, Fish and Wildlife Service, Maritime 
Administration, and National Institute of Standards and Technology. 

[5] NRT is the interagency organization responsible for planning and 
coordinating responses to major discharges of oil or hazardous waste 
in accordance with the National Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution 
Contingency Plan, which is the federal government's blueprint for 
responding to both oil spills and hazardous substance releases with 
the purpose of developing a national response capability and promoting 
overall coordination among the hierarchy of responders and contingency 
plans. According to EPA officials, the first contingency plan was 
developed and published in 1968 in response to a massive oil spill 
from the oil tanker, Torrey Canyon, off the coast of England the year 
before. More than 37 million gallons of crude oil spilled into the 
water, causing massive environmental damage. To avoid the problems 
faced by response officials involved in this incident, U.S. officials 
developed a coordinated approach to cope with potential spills in U.S. 
waters. 

[6] We could not identify the number of projects completed in 2000 
because the interagency committee was not required to report on its 
progress for those 2 years per the Federal Reports Elimination and 
Sunset Act of 1995, and did not do so. Additionally, we could not 
identify the number of projects completed in fiscal years 2001 and 
2002 because the interagency committee's biennial reports did not 
include projects; instead, the reports included publications authored 
by member agencies, and we could not confirm whether individual 
publications corresponded to a single project. 

[7] Nonpetroleum oils include synthetic oils, such as silicone fluids, 
and seed oils from plants, among other things. 

[8] Through the Gulf of Mexico Initiative, NASA conducts applied 
research and development on weather and climate change to enhance the 
ecological and economic health of the Gulf of Mexico by using remote 
sensing, oceanography, coastal processes, signal processing, and 
mathematical modeling. The initiative was created in 2007 in response 
to a series of hurricanes in 2005, including hurricanes Dennis, 
Katrina, Rita, and Wilma, according to NASA officials. 

[9] Remote sensing involves gathering data and information about the 
physical world by detecting and measuring signals composed of 
radiation, particles and fields emanating from objects located beyond 
the immediate vicinity of the sensor devices. 

[10] According to a BOEMRE report on trends in oil production in the 
Gulf of Mexico, in 1997 the Gulf of Mexico average annual oil 
production rates (in thousands of barrels a day (Mbpd)) were 830 for 
shallow water and 296 for deepwater. In its report, BOEMRE defined 
shallow water production as production from oil wells in less than 
1,000 feet of water and deepwater production as production from oil 
wells in greater than 1,000 feet of water. By 2000, the rate was 690 
Mbpd for shallow water and 743 Mbpd for deepwater. In 2007, the 
difference between shallow water and deepwater production had 
increased, with shallow water production at 381 Mbpd and deepwater 
production at 895 Mbpd. 

[11] GAO, Results-Oriented Government: Practices That Can Help Enhance 
and Sustain Collaboration among Federal Agencies, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-15] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 21, 
2005). 

[End of section] 

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