Exactly one year after he joined the State-owned gas company, chief executive officer (CEO) of the Trinidad and Tobago Petroleum Marketing Company (NP) Derek Luk Pat has resigned with immediate effect.
Luk Pat, a circular economy specialist, business consultant and entrepreneur joined NP on November 1, 2023.
He replaced one of NP’s general managers John Gormandy, who had been acting as CEO since 2020.
He’s now been replaced by NP’s general manager of Aviation and Marine Fuels Chester Beeput as interim CEO.
Beeput has been employed at NP for 24 years and has previously held the role of interim CEO.
Before joining NP, Luk Pat was executive director of the Trinidad and Tobago Bureau of Standards (TTBS).
He’s also worked in several industries across a spectrum of markets including manufacturing, import-distribution, retail, service and quality infrastructure.
Last year, NP praised Luk Pat for bringing extensive experience in business management, strategic planning, and process redesign which it said created sustainable revenue growth, increased profitability and optimal productivity.
In a release yesterday, the company briefly said he resigned without giving any explanation as to the reason why he only lasted one year.
Guardian Media understands he resigned for personal reasons.
When asked about suspicions of his performance or any falling out that may have occurred which led to his resignation, one NP official said, “there’s no ‘something’ there”.
However, the Petroleum Dealers Association (PDA) believes Luk Pat may have been pressured into leaving.
During Luk Pat’s short stint as the head of the gas company, NP was under much scrutiny by both PDA and the Oilfields Workers’ Trade Union (OWTU) after being accused of withholding audited financials and alleged corruption.
In August, NP admitted that its audited financial statements were late.
This was revealed after PDA president Robin Naraynsingh criticised NP for not publishing its financials in the last three to five years.
NP then responded by saying the company’s consolidated financial statements for 2020 were in fact published in the newspaper on Friday, November 10, 2023.
As it relates to the other years, NP said its financial statements for 2021 were completed and submitted to the Finance Ministry.
However, its financial statements for 2022 were almost completed at the time while its 2023 statements were still in progress at the end of August this year.
Speaking to Guardian Media via telephone yesterday, Naraynsingh praised Luk Pat’s good character and said he suspected he may have been pressured into resigning.
Naraynsingh said, “He (Luk Pat) is a good man. He’s a focused man. He wanted to do something better for the country because NP is a State enterprise which was formed for the benefit of the people of Trinidad and Tobago. When he took the position, I asked him, ‘Why would you take on a responsibility at this company?’
“This company has created a culture of wastage. They don’t care whether a gas station has gas, whether communities are out of gas. As long as they could extract money from the company, the workers are corrupted inside of there.”
“If he’s resigned, I think they tried to railroad him. The finance department of that company needs a complete shake-up. There are people in positions that do not know how to run it because they have been misled throughout the last ten years,” he claimed.
Meanwhile, OWTU’s chief education and research officer/treasurer Ozzi Warwick, said Luk Pat’s immediate resignation as CEO raised more questions about the board.
Speaking during a telephone interview, Warwick said, “The OWTU has been raising concerns about NP for some time now. I think the public is quite aware of that. I think this immediate resignation of the CEO raises more questions now for the board and for the chairman... the CEO falls under the board. If your CEO resigns with immediate effect then what does that mean?”
In July, OWTU, led by its president general Ancel Roget, picketed the home of NP’s chairman Sahid Hosein over alleged nepotism and corruption at the company.
Yesterday, NP thanked Luk Pat for his service and wished him all the best in his future endeavours.
Attempts to contact the Energy Minister and Acting Prime Minister Stuart Young on the matter were futile up to late yesterday evening.