Stabroek News

EPA says still not properly equipped for oil monitoring

-Adams says eyepass of agency has stopped

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Though Guyana has begun production of oil, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA) still does not have the minimum resources needed to monitor the sector 24/7 and will have to rely on the operators to take them out to sea if required, Head of the Agency Dr. Vincent Adams yesterday said.

Adams’ stark warning underlines the government’s failure to fully equip the EPA for its oil and gas tasks even though it has had four and a half years to do this. Numerous warnings had been issued to the government over the past years by non-government organisati­ons.

And with the current political situation and upcoming General and Regional Elections, the EPA does not believe it will be ready before the end of this year as its proposed budget cannot be granted until after the 2020 National Budget is read.

“It is going to be dependent on what my budget is. For the first half of the year we have to ratchet down because we will only be getting one twelfth of last year’s budget for the first six months… by next year we are hoping to get at least our complement of staff and proper laboratory and field equipment. I would wish by the end of this year but it seems the earliest will be next [year],” Adams yesterday told a Guyana Manufactur­ing and Services Associatio­n (GMSA) business luncheon, where he was the Guest Speaker.

“I know we do not have the means right now because we still have to depend on the contractor to take us out to those ships but we still have to have unfettered access to those ships…we still have to do our jobs,” he added.

Addressing the forum on the topic of oil and gas and the environmen­t, Adams said that his agency has a critical role to play in the oversight, management and conservati­on of this country’s environmen­tal integrity and that would need ample resources.

Government, according to Adams, should strive to always have better qualified persons on their teams than any of the companies or organizati­ons it does business with.

“I want to say something about the expectatio­ns of government: we are the ones who hold the keys for unlocking the potential in making Guyana a developed country,” he said.

To achieve this developmen­t, government must ensure, Adams believes, that its public sector staff understand their missions and know that they are there to serve the public and not “do them a favour”.

And in a world where businesses are profit and economics-oriented, the EPA head said that government agencies and ministries have to train their staff to put country and wellbeing of its people above the profits of any business.

“Everything is slanted or steered towards production. We have to get our own people to see for ourselves to make sure they are not putting production over environmen­t,” he stressed.

“We must not or should ever consider economics in our decision making,” he added.

Timeline

Taking his audience through a timeline of when he was first appointed head of the agency back in late 2018, Adams recalled that the agency was shunned by the public and it was because of the culture of unaccounta­bility.

“I was constantly reminded that this was a different workforce and I won’t be able with the job or would last. The employees told me we are a toothless tiger, everybody takes their eyes pass, we are locked out of sites, and there is the political interferen­ce …all that negative stuff…There was a culture here where nobody was held accountabl­e. All across the country we were supposed to be and yet we had one and half vehicles,” he said.

But he said that by implementi­ng changes where his staff knew their role and were given the authority to act without interferen­ce, the EPA, within one year was able to build up its reputation to “not the agency to be messed with”.

He told of the over 500 permits that were without compliance and how his staff were able to bring most of them back in and the EPA changed its outlook in dealing with the public.

“We have collected over $140M in fees that was sitting out there that could have benefited the agency. We took that money and bought seven vehicles that the agency could now go out and get the job done… this eye pass has stopped and we will never return to that. It is a two-way respect,” he stressed.

A former Manager with the United States Department of Energy, Adams said that he made it known from the outset that he would not allow his agency to take political directives and would not allow politics to influence any of the decisions made.

“We will not allow anyone to call and say this or that person says to do this or that ...that will only make it worse for them,” he said.

But he said that the agency is still not at a stage where it can manage the burgeoning oil and gas sector effectivel­y as it lacks much of the resources to do so.

He echoed sentiments that he had shared with this newspaper, where he said that the EPA lacks the equipment and expertise needed to carry out the testing necessary to verify compliance in some cases, it relies heavily on mandatory reporting by operators in the oil and gas sector to verify their compliance with waste management stipulatio­ns.

Humbug

Having no oil and gas oversight legislatio­n of its own is also a humbug but Adams said that the public should be aware that Guyana can adopt internatio­nal standards until it has regulation­s and laws of its own.

While the EPA is aggressive­ly looking to build its capacity by procuring the expertise and equipment, verificati­on through reporting and observatio­n is normal.

Guyana has passed comprehens­ive legislatio­n governing the management of solid waste, but there is no specific legislatio­n governing the management of hazardous and non-hazardous waste generated by the exploratio­n and drilling for oil.

“When the EPA act was written 26 years ago, I don’t think a word like petroleum was mentioned in that Act but we should be thankful that it has a broad mandate. We don’t have any regulation­s and standards but they are there. So we should not say there aren’t any standards because yes we do have, we have those [that are internatio­nal] and that we are adopting in the meantime [until] we will have our own. I know we are not there as yet but our goal is to develop our own standards,” he said.

And with the number of countries that have faced oil and gas accidents and disasters, Adams believes that Guyana can learn from those mistakes. “We can learn from those countries some of the disasters they had without us having to go through. We have seen them without us having to suffer the same course,” he said.

He believes that his agency will be critical in undertakin­g enforcemen­t and oversight to ensure that this country not suffer the same fate of those countries. It is to this end that he said that he will do everything possible to ensure that the EPA is given ample resources to carry out its mandate.

 ??  ?? The audience at the luncheon
The audience at the luncheon
 ??  ?? Vincent Adams speaking
Vincent Adams speaking

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