More than 20 years later, a ship best known for causing an environmental catastrophe is finally being put to rest.
The Exxon Valdez, which spilled 11 million gallons of oil into Alaska's Prince William Sound in 1989, is being bought for $16 million by Global Systems Marketing
Inc., a firm that purchases ships for demolition, Bloomberg reports.
The vessel, now known as the Oriental Nicety, has changed names and
owners four times since the infamous disaster.
At the time, the Exxon Valdez spill was the largest in U.S. history and resulted in Exxon having to pay hundreds of millions of dollars
to avoid criminal prosecution, as well as to resolve civil claims made
by federal and state governments, according to the Exxon Valdez Oil
Spill Trustee Office.
In addition, the company paid nearly $4 billion in
cleanup costs.
Still, Exxon avoided a larger punishment. In 1994, an Anchorage jury
awarded victims of the spill $5 billion, but after a 15-year legal
battle the case made it to the U.S. Supreme Court where the justices awarded the victims just $507 million, according to CBS.
The long and protracted legal battle waged by victims may have helped
shaped the decision by fishermen affected by the Deepwater Horizon
spill in 2010 -- now the largest in U.S. history -- to settle quickly with BP, according to the Christian Science Monitor.
A group of fishermen agreed earlier this month to drop litigation against BP in exchange for a $7.8 billion payout.
The Exxon Valdez spill cost tens of thousands of people who depended on fishing for a living a total of $300 million,
according to the Center for American Progress. In addition, tourism in
southwest Alaska plunged 35 percent in the year immediately following
the spill.
But Exxon still managed to take home billions of dollars in the
spill’s aftermath and today is currently in a back-and-forth battle with
Apple for the title of most valuable company in the world.
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