Jamaica Gleaner

Tek sleep and mark death

Disaster in Tobago a cautionary tale to recognise grave risks and take proactive measures to safeguard environmen­t and economy

- The Jamaica Environmen­t Trust. Email feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com

ON FEBRUARY 7, 2024, an overturned vessel off the southern shores of Tobago caused a catastroph­ic spill with oil-like substance, leading Trinidad and Tobago’s Prime Minister Keith Rowley to declare a national emergency.

Distressin­g photograph­s show thick black sludge in the island’s coastal waters, smothering vast expanses of beach and mangroves. Urgent calls for volunteers to aid in the extensive cleanup effort have been issued, as neighbouri­ng countries brace themselves for potential oil slicks drifting beyond Tobago’s shores.

It is important to note that Trinidad and Tobago has a national oil spill contingenc­y plan and over a hundred years of experience in the oil and gas industry.

Meanwhile, in Guyana, substantia­l reserves of oil and gas have been discovered beneath its coastal waters by an ExxonMobil­led consortium. Forecasts predict the country could produce 1.2 million barrels per day by 2027 or 2028. Environmen­tal Impact Assessment­s (EIAs), however, indicate that in the event of a spill or well blowout, the

repercussi­ons could devastate large swathes of the Caribbean, stretching from Trinidad through the Lesser Antilles, Jamaica, and the Dominican Republic.

This would devastate coastal

ecosystems, infrastruc­ture, tourism, fisheries, shipping, and other vital economic activities, placing many island nations in economic jeopardy.

ExxonMobil’s active wells in

Guyana are deep wells, located in water depths of 1,500-1,900 metres within the Stabroek Block. Such wells carry heightened environmen­tal risks, exemplifie­d by the 2010 BP Macondo disaster, which unleashed nearly five million barrels of crude oil and gas into the Gulf of Mexico over 87 days.

The Jamaica Environmen­t Trust (JET) has written these concerns to Prime Minister Andrew Holness, who chairs Jamaica’s National Disaster Response Mechanism (NDRM). No response has been forthcomin­g to date.

JAMAICA’S NATIONAL OIL SPILL PLAN

In light of these risks, it is imperative that the public i s informed about Jamaica’s National Oil Spill Plan, which was approved in 2014 and covers Jamaica’s offshore waters and the shoreline (Contiguous Zone and Economic Exclusive Zone).

The plan also refers to landbased oil spills, including any body of water that may migrate to or flow into coastal waters.

Key questions arise:

• Does Jamaica possess adequate equipment to mitigate the impacts of an oil spill?

• Has Jamaica coordinate­d its response plan with that of Guyana, considerin­g the potential crossborde­r implicatio­ns?

• When was the last training for key personnel who would be involved in the response? The National Plan states that national simulation exercises and drills should be conducted on a regular basis (minimum once every two years) to test the plan.

• Given that the plan is 10 years old and the risks of an oil spill are now much greater, are there plans to revise it in accordance to evaluation of simulation exercises and drills (i.e. every two years) or in response to any incidents exceeding its scope?

The disaster in Tobago is a cautionary tale. Let us recognise these grave risks and take proactive measures to safeguard our environmen­t and economy.

‘The National Oil Spill Plan states that national simulation exercises and drills should be conducted on a regular basis (minimum once every two years) to test the plan.’

 ?? ?? Predicted transport and fate from the release of crude oil lasting 45 days from Yellowtail in Guyana
Predicted transport and fate from the release of crude oil lasting 45 days from Yellowtail in Guyana

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