By Mark Drajem and Katarzyna Klimasinska
June 18 (Bloomberg) -- Michigan’s depressed economy nearly toppled Grand Rapids-based awning maker Prestige Products. In April, the company’s fortunes changed when executive Brian Rickel got a phone call from an old contact at BP Plc.
It was 10 days after the BP-leased Deepwater Horizon rig had exploded, and the company needed help containing the gush of oil. Six weeks later, Prestige has rented a factory, filled it with millions of dollars of new equipment, and hired 74 workers, up from six in April. Using material similar to the vinyl in awnings, Prestige is churning out 12,000 feet a day of booms, the floating barriers that help contain oil slicks. Prestige hopes to double its output, if it can hire 50 additional workers.
“We’re in Michigan,” Rickel said in an interview. “The economy has been horrible for everybody here. But the expertise is here and we cashed in on it.”
The spill in the Gulf of Mexico will inflict billions of dollars’ worth of damage on the economies of Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi and Florida by destroying fisheries, halting oil drilling, and scaring off tourists. But for scores of businesses -- from small fry like Prestige to construction giant Fluor Corp. -- there’s money to be made in the aftermath of the worst oil spill in U.S. history, Bloomberg Businessweek reports in its June 21 issue.
Help Wanted Signs
It’s a dichotomy present across the Gulf region. A sign on a shuttered seafood shop in Grand Isle, Louisiana, blames BP and President Barack Obama for its woes. Nearby motels and repair shops display Help Wanted signs for maids and mechanics to help with the crush of cleanup activity. Local caterers are aggressively advertising, trying to persuade BP to hire them to feed spill-response workers gathering on the coast.
Rene Vegas, owner of Bridge Side Cabins & Marina, also in Grand Isle, says his summer sport fishing season is lost due to the fast-expanding oil slick. So, like many area businesses, he’s shifting his focus. Vegas has begun stocking rubber boots, hard hats and ropes to sell to cleanup crews.
Troy Petrovich, co-owner of T+T Boat Rentals in Buras, Louisiana, has seen demand for his marine-related services spike. Before the spill, “I kept calling, putting out more phone calls” in search of oil-company customers, Petrovich said. “Now my phone is ringing pretty steady; everybody is looking for boats.” T+T has rented out all 10 of its boats to oil companies and raised the daily rate to $450 from $325.
‘Mop Up Oil’
Plenty of other companies aren’t waiting for business to come to them. Shortly after the spill began, MOP Environmental Solutions Inc., a Bath, New Hampshire-based maker of a substance it claims absorbs up to 30 times its weight in oil, sent four employees to the Gulf to conduct demonstrations for cleanup officials.
The MOP workers came armed with fish tanks, oil and the absorbing material in the trunks of their cars. Some of the company’s shareholders hired a local pilot to fly around the region with a banner reading, “We mop up oil.” After weeks of being pestered, BP purchased its first three truckloads of the oil-absorbent material for $155,000, MOP President Charles Diamond said.
The company didn’t have to wait as long to get a full hearing as actor Kevin Costner. Costner’s company, Ocean Therapy Solutions Inc., uses barge-based turbines to separate water from oil. He first demonstrated the centrifuges to BP officials at a technology conference 10 years ago, but wasn’t given the go- ahead to test the gear in open water until earlier this month. Now Ocean Therapy says it has sold 32 of the centrifuges to BP.
Corexit, Skimmers
Another beneficiary of the cleanup is Nalco Holding Co. More than one million gallons of Nalco’s chemical dispersant Corexit, which breaks up oil slicks, have been used in the Gulf. The company sold $40 million of Corexit to BP through the week of May 15, according to spokesman Charlie Pajor.
Some faraway businesses are profiting from producing or deploying equipment to get rid of the oil residue. The Slickbar Products division of Finland’s Lamor Corp. sent employees to Mississippi to help install its skimmers, which collect oil from the water, onto shrimp boats. Its oil-boom plant in Seymour, Connecticut, is operating at a pace not seen since the Exxon Valdez spill in 1989. Slickbar has made more booms in the past month than it had in the previous 12 months, Chief Executive Officer Stephen Reilly said.
There’s activity on land as well. Irving, Texas-based Fluor has a contract to supply BP with workers to clean up tar on Alabama and Florida beaches. So far it has hired 1,200 workers in Alabama and 2,400 in Florida, all of them off unemployment rolls in those states, said spokesman Brian Mershon. Fluor plans to increase its Florida workforce to 4,100.
Birds, Shipwrecks
The Shaw Group Inc., a Baton Rouge-based power-plant builder that has a $360 million contract to construct barrier islands along the Gulf Coast, is hiring staffers to count birds on nearby islands and map shipwrecks.
The cleanup rush isn’t generating just blue-collar work. The Pensacola, Florida, law firm of Levin Papantonio Thomas Mitchell Echsner Rafferty & Proctor has hired an airplane to fly a banner over beaches reading “Prosecute BP” and is offering free claims evaluations.
“There are probably hundreds of lawyers who are working to generate claims on the BP spill,” said Fredric Levin, a partner in the firm.
Washington’s K Street lobbying crowd also stands to benefit as federal regulators crack down on drillers. Transocean Ltd., owner of the Deepwater Horizon rig, has hired former Oklahoma congressman Bill Brewster’s firm, Capitol Hill Consulting Group, to represent its interests, according to a regulatory filing on May 10.
BP Employees
Litigation or legislative changes may generate years of billings. For now, businesses in the affected area are taking advantage of the spill work while they can. Marina owner Vegas says he has as many as 60 BP employees and contractors staying at his marina, which normally caters to sport fishermen and beachgoing families.
“The motel is booked, the motel is doing fine,” he said. “But when they leave in January or December, we’re in trouble.”
(bloomberg.com)
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