Due Date: Wednesday
19th August, 2020 before 6pm.
You are required to
answer all questions. Answers should be written in paragraph forms with
evidence and support or quotes and examples if needed. Do not repeat questions
in your answer sheet. Use your own words and do proper referencing when using
others material. Assignments are to be
uploaded in Moodle by the due date. Please note the University Plagiarism policy and anyone not adhering to it will be
penalized.
Case 1: Oil Spill 10 marks
Oil
Spill
Peter has been working with the Bigness Oil Company’s local
affiliate for several years, and he has established a strong, trusting
relationship with Jesse, manager of the local facility.
The facility, on Peter’s recommendations, has followed all
of the environmental regulations to the letter, and it has a solid reputation
with the state regulatory agency. The local facility receives various
petrochemical products via pipelines and tank trucks, and it blends them for
resale to the private sector.
Jesse has been so pleased with Peter’s work that he has
recommended that Peter be retained as the corporate consulting engineer. This
would be a significant advancement for Peter and his consulting firm, cementing
Peter’s steady and impressive rise in the firm. There is talk of a vice
presidency in a few years.
One day, over coffee, Jesse starts telling Peter a story
about a mysterious loss in one of the raw petrochemicals he receives by
pipeline. Sometime during the 1950s, when operations were more lax, a loss of
one of the process chemicals was discovered when the books were audited. There
were apparently 10,000 gallons of the chemical missing. After running pressure
tests on the pipelines, the plant manager found that one of the pipes had
corroded and had been leaking the chemical into the ground. After stopping the
leak, the company sank observation and sampling wells and found that the
product was sitting in a vertical plume, slowly diffusing into a deep aquifer.
Because there was no surface or groundwater pollution off the plant property,
the plant manager decided to do nothing. Jesse thought that somewhere under the
plant there still sits this plume, although the last tests from the sampling
wells showed that the concentration of the chemical in the groundwater within
400 feet of the surface was essentially zero. The wells were capped, and the
story never appeared in the press.
Peter is taken aback by this apparently innocent revelation.
He recognizes that state law requires him to report all spills, but what about
spills that occurred years ago, where the effects of the spill seem to have
dissipated? He frowns and says to Jesse, "We have to report this spill to
the state, you know."
Jesse is incredulous. "But there is no spill.
If the state made us look for it, we probably could not find it; and even if we
did, it makes no sense whatever to pump it out or contain it in any way."
"But the law says that we have to report...,"
replies Peter.
"Hey, look. I told you this in confidence. Your own
engineering code of ethics requires client confidentiality. And what would be
the good of going to the state? There is nothing to be done. The only thing
that would happen is that the company would get into trouble and have to spend
useless dollars to correct a situation that cannot be corrected and does not
need remediation."
"But...."
"Peter, let me be frank. If you go to the state with
this, you will not be doing anyone any good--not the company, not the
environment, and certainly not your own career. I cannot have a consulting
engineer who does not value client loyalty."
Questions
1.
What are the ethical issues in this case? (
3marks)
2.
What factual and conceptual questions need to be
addressed? (3 marks)
3.
How do you think Peter should deal with this
situation? Why? (4 marks)
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