Environmental Groups Praise Criminal Indictments on Santa Barbara Oil Spill

Suzanne Potter / California News Service SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – Environmental groups are applauding the criminal indictment Tuesday of the company blamed for the massive oil spill last May in...

Suzanne Potter / California News Service

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – Environmental groups are applauding the criminal indictment Tuesday of the company blamed for the massive oil spill last May in Refugio, about an hour north of Santa Barbara.

A grand jury indicted Plains All-American Pipeline on 46 counts related to the spill. In addition, one employee is charged with a misdemeanor for not reporting the incident quickly enough.

Ashley Blacow, Pacific policy and communications manager for Oceana in Monterey, said that once oil is spilled, it’s impossible to completely clean it up.

“Companies that extract these public resources have to be held accountable for the safety of those operations,” she said, “and when a spill does occur, there’s a price to pay to clean up the damage that’s done.”

Plains All-American released a statement saying that while it regrets the accidental spill, its actions are not criminal in nature. The company noted that it has spent $150 million to mitigate the impact of the spill, which occurred after a severely corroded underground pipe owned by the company cracked, sending 140,000 gallons of heavy crude onto the beach.

Kristen Monsell, an attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, said the situation calls for more wide-ranging changes.

“All the indictments in the world aren’t going to change the fact that oil drilling and transportation is inherently dangerous and doesn’t belong in our fragile coastal environment,” she said. “Both the state and the federal government need to start decommissioning all of this aging offshore infrastructure.”

The Oiled Wildlife Care Network reported that more than 200 birds and 100 marine mammals were killed and many more injured in the spill. Plains All-American could face $2.8 million in fines.

Categories
Green living

RELATED BY

  • EarthTalk Q&A: Resumen de la COP30

    Roddy Scheer & Doug Moss EarthTalk En noviembre de 2025 se celebró en Brasil la 30.ª Conferencia de las Partes, el máximo órgano decisorio de la Convención Marco de...
  • EarthTalk Q&A: COP30 Recap

    Roddy Scheer & Doug Moss EarthTalk In November 2025, the 30th annual Conference of Parties —the supreme decision-making body of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change—was held...
  • EarthTalk Q&A: Fraude del camarón

    Roddy Scheer & Doug Moss EarthTalk El camarón es uno de los mariscos más populares en todo el mundo. “Consumimos más de mil millones de libras de camarón [al...
  • EarthTalk Q&A: Shrimp Fraud

    Roddy Scheer & Doug Moss EarthTalk Shrimp is one of the most popular seafood choices worldwide. “We eat over one billion pounds of shrimp ,” Kimberly...