Stabroek News Sunday

Tobago oil spill has implicatio­ns for Guyana – AFC

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The Alliance For Change (AFC) is greatly concerned about the oil spill off the coast of Tobago and its implicatio­ns for this country.

In a release yesterday, the AFC stressed that it takes Guyana’s nascent oil sector very seriously and said that it was less than impressed with the stewardshi­p of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA) over the nation’s patrimony, stating, “The EPA is now a shadow of its former self.”

The AFC said that the oil spill off Tobago’s coast is of interest to the party on many fronts. The release informed that in an effort to get a first-hand view of the situation, the AFC dispatched its General Secretary, Sherod Duncan to the location.

It reminded too that local stakeholde­rs here in Guyana have wrestled with government and ExxonMobil to enforce and produce evidence of the US$2 billion Parent Company Guarantee that would safeguard the national interest in such a scenario.

According to an editorial in the Trinidad Express, the Tobago House of Assembly and the Tobago Emergency Management Agency (TEMA), informed that the oil slick measures 48 nautical miles (88 kilometers) long and 0.13 nautical miles (240 meters) wide.

The e ditorial also noted, “mystery continues to surround ownership of the tug and barge, its behaviour on its journey to Guyana, and the identity and fate

of its crew.” The “Solo Creed” is yet to be found.

Further, the affected area has now widened, moving into Grenada’s territoria­l waters and the Spice Island has in turn contacted the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency and other partners. It is also noted that the slick is approachin­g Venezuela’s northern marine territory.

The AFC noted that Trinidadia­n energy expert, Anthony Paul, like others, have concerns with how Trinidad has responded to the event and their pace. Paul said of Trinidad, “We are too long in this game.” And this the AFC said, begs the question, “How would Guyana with its weak institutio­ns and overwhelmi­ng political interferen­ce… fare?

 ?? ?? Sherod Duncan (right) with the Chief Secretary of Tobago, Farley Augustine at one of the sites contaminat­ed by the spill
Sherod Duncan (right) with the Chief Secretary of Tobago, Farley Augustine at one of the sites contaminat­ed by the spill

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