Joshua Seemungal
As an independent investigation begins into the February 25 tragedy which resulted in the death of four LMCS Limited divers at Pointe-a-Pierre, some industry experts believe Paria Fuel Trading Company Limited is responsible for the incident.
“Four people died and one person was injured, so some fingers must be pointed at somebody. In my opinion, Paria, who would have had overall responsibility for the job site should have had better oversight for this job, even though a contractor was doing the work,” said occupational safety expert and Director of the New York City Department of Environmental Protection Carlstein Lutchmedial.
Trinidad-born Lutchmedial is president of OSHE Consultants Corporation and a certified safety trainer and consultant, specializing in the oil and gas sector. He is also qualified in emergency response and led New York City’s remediation project for the September 11, 2001, World Trade Center disaster.
He said because the diving incident took place at Paria’s Pointe-a-Pierre facility, the company is ultimately responsible for everything that took place. Paria and the contractor were responsible for examining all potential risks associated with the exercise before the divers went underwater.
“That risk assessment is based not just on the diving operations, but let’s say vessels in the area might affect the diving operation, or any equipment in the area. So, if there is piping there that may have pressure in it. If there is piping that could break when the operation was taking place, those should have been evaluated,” he said.
“My understanding is that somebody either opened a valve or they removed a cap from a pipe. I spoke to someone who told me that from the location, so in the general scheme of things, those things should have been in place.”
The certified UK NEBOSH oil and gas instructor said the valve which could have caused the Delta P (pressure differential) that pulled the four divers into the pipeline, should have been locked and tagged out. It is the international best practice that valves that can pose threats to diving operations, based on an assessment, are either secured with a chain or cover to prevent them from being opened.
In the absence of that option, a large sign saying ‘Do Not Remove’ should be placed on the valve, or an attendant assigned to guard the valve.
“In a risk assessment, someone would have taken into account every possible situation that could go wrong. The person who does that risk assessment has to be somebody who has a vast amount of knowledge and experience, not just in diving, but in safety in general,” Lutchmedial said.
“Did Paria have all the right people on the job site to do this assessment? Were all the permits provided, meaning a diving permit? Did they have a dive plan in place? Did they do a proper assessment? Was a capability assessment done on this contractor for the dive plan? I could hire a diving contractor, but are they capable of such complex, highly hazardous diving operations?”
The former United States Army soldier, who writes safety regulations in New York, said based on his experience, a lot of times companies hire contractors who are not capable of doing the job to meet the rigours of international best practice.
He said regardless of the ability of the contractor, in root cause analysis, fault, in almost all instances, comes back to the client.
According to Lutchmedial, it is likely that Paria did not have a proper risk assessment plan or a proper emergency response plan to rescue the four divers.
“Somebody should have taken a good look at an emergency response plan. Normally, they would do a dry run of the emergency response plan catering for the worst-case scenario,” he said.
“There shouldn’t be a situation where somebody is saying we don’t have a permit to go down (to rescue). That permit should have been in place already. You cannot plan to get a permit for an emergency when the emergency is going on. It should have been part of the emergency response plan. All these things should have been foreseeable.”
Lutchmedial said the country has an important lesson to learn from the incident and needs to get far more serious about the enforcement of health and safety laws and best practices.
“The problem is when you don’t have good enforcement of rules and regulations. The enforcement of best practices must be in place. People need to take this as a lesson learned. Don’t wait until something has happened. A lot of times in the safety business, we let complacency set in.”
Local Expert Agrees
A local oil and gas expert, who spoke on condition of anonymity, agreed with Lutchmedial that Paria is responsible for the incident.
The expert, who has worked at executive levels in the industry for decades, said questions have to be answered about the procurement of the contract between Paria and LMCS Limited.
“It should not only be the price they tendered for the job but also what they put down as their safety qualifications. Did the procurement process offer sufficient oversight over the contractor and the contractor’s capacity for safety?”
“Having awarded this contract to the contractor, the responsibility resides with Paria. If a man comes to cut my lawn and in the process, he runs over a buried electrical cable and it electrocutes him and he dies, you would agree that the homeowner has some responsibility.”
The local expert believed Paria should have conducted an in-depth risk assessment on the job, going through every step of the exercise in detail to identify possible risks.
“Were those things done? Of course, Paria would say, yes, those things were done but were they done properly because that’s what I’m picking up from inside Paria from people. Complacency is a hell of a thing.”
The oil and gas professional said the question of what caused the—massive pressure differential that pulled the divers must be answered.
“All we heard is that suction was created and we don’t have much detail on that. It could be that somebody turned a valve. It could be that somebody started a compressor, or it could be that within the pipeline itself, there were pockets of air and liquid and it was creating a pressure differential,” he said.
“The investigation should start now. The longer they take to investigate, the more that information disappears and people forget.”
Legal Interpretation
Asked for his legal interpretation of the tragedy, attorney Israel Khan SC said we all have to wait for the completion of the investigation. However, he did offer an opinion based on what is in the public domain from the media.
“I am of the view that it’s pointing to gross negligence, bordering on criminal liability,” Khan said.
“First of all, we have to find out what caused the divers to be sucked in, into the pipe, whether it is their incompetence or negligence, or whether an expert diver would have been sucked into the pipe. We have to find out what was the reaction of the people responsible for trying to recover them.”
Earlier this week, the Occupational Health and Safety Authority announced that it is investigating the incident under the Occupational Safety and Health Act.
Under Section 83 of the OSH Act, a person who contravenes the Act or its regulations or fails to comply with any duty, prohibition, restriction, instruction or directive issued under the Act, commits a safety and health offence and is subject to the jurisdiction of the Industrial Court.
Subsection 2 of the section states that a competent person, employer, occupier or owner of premises only commits an offence under the Act if it is proved that he failed to take reasonable steps to prevent the commission of the offence.
Subsection 3 says that where an offence is proved to have been committed with the consent, connivance or acquiescence of, or to have been facilitated by neglect on the part of a director, manager, secretary or other officers of a company, such director, manager, secretary or other officers, as well as the company, is liable to be proceeded against for the commission of the offence.
Under 83A, an aggrieved person may apply to the Industrial Court for redress and the Industrial Court may make an award in favour of the aggrieved person and impose any penalty, other than a term of imprisonment, that a summary Court may impose in respect of that contravention or failure to comply.
Under 4I of the Offences Against the Persons Act, involuntary homicide includes manslaughter by provocation, negligence and causing death by reckless driving.