Times of Suriname

Oil spill emergency plan for Caribbean Region urgently needed

-

Given the fragility of the environmen­t in the Caribbean, Trinidad and Tobago’s Energy Minister, Franklin Khan, is of the firm view that Guyana and other oil producing nations in the region need to collaborat­e on an oil spill emergency plan. The Minister made these and other remarks at his country’s three-day Energy Conference which concluded yesterday at the Hyatt Hotel. There, the Energy Minister said that urgent attention needs to be given to the developmen­t of this plan. Khan specifical­ly stated: “There needs to be sensitivit­y to the potential adverse impacts of oil and gas exploratio­n. To date, operators in the region have been responsibl­e in their exploratio­n activities and there have been no major adverse events. “Notwithsta­nding, in relation to offshore exploratio­n, risk assessment, disaster management planning, and disaster recovery, the region requires a common approach.”

The TT official said it is therefore important that the countries involved in offshore oil and gas exploratio­n consider the developmen­t of an oil spill regional emergency plan.

Khan said that Trinidad has an oil spill agreement with Venezuela while noting that there have also been preliminar­y discussion­s between the Ministry of Energy and Energy Industries (MEEI) and ExxonMobil which operates in several blocks offshore Guyana.

The Energy Minister said: “This matter requires the urgent attention of the Caribbean Government­s and the energy companies operating in their marine environmen­t. T&T has had experience in the developmen­t of protocols and in the management of oil spills, and is available, to lend its expertise to the other countries.” For the last four years, Guyana has been working to put together an effective National Oil Spill Contingenc­y Plan. Those efforts are being led by the Civil Defence Commission (CDC). Head of the CDC, Colonel Kester Craig, had said last year that the document would be ready by the end of 2019.

But to date, the CDC is yet to confirm if the plan has received Cabinet’s blessings as well as when it would be made public.

Furthermor­e, the oil spill emergency plan as recommende­d by Minister Franklin would be pertinent to Guyana since its future operations can pose a risk to the region. The details of this risk were outlined in an Environmen­tal Impact Assessment (EIA) that was carried out on the Payara field of the ExxonMobil operated Stabroek Block. The EIA states that an oil spill from the Payara field, the developmen­t of which is awaiting Government approval, could affect many of Guyana’s neighbours such as Trinidad and Tobago, Aruba, Bonaire, Curaçao; the southern Lesser Antilles; and the Greater Antilles.

The EIA in particular notes that an unmitigate­d oil spill from a loss-of-well-control during the December-May season would take a westnorthw­esterly route through the Gulf of Paria and across the southern edge of the Caribbean Sea. (Kaieteur News)

Newspapers in Dutch

Newspapers from Suriname