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Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Paria’s lawyer: Company had no legal responsibility to rescue LMCS divers

by

810 days ago
20230112

kevon.felmine@guardian.co.tt

Paria Fu­el Trad­ing Com­pa­ny Ltd had no le­gal re­spon­si­bil­i­ty to res­cue five Land and Ma­rine Con­tract­ing Ser­vices (LM­CS) divers trapped in­side its Sealine No.36 last Feb­ru­ary.
The Com­mis­sion of En­quiry (CoE) in­to the Paria/LM­CS tragedy heard that the State-owned oil com­pa­ny’s on­ly oblig­a­tion was to sup­port emer­gency and ac­tion res­cue plans LM­CS had for its em­ploy­ees.

Pre­sent­ing Paria’s fi­nal sub­mis­sions to the ev­i­den­tiary hear­ing phase of the CoE at the In­ter­na­tion­al Wa­ter­front Cen­tre, Port-of-Spain, on Thurs­day, Se­nior Coun­sel Gilbert Pe­ter­son pre­sent­ed an 11-point de­fence of the com­pa­ny’s con­duct in the res­cue and re­cov­ery phase of the in­ci­dent.

Pe­ter­son not­ed that dur­ing the CoE, sev­er­al par­ties crit­i­cised Paria’s be­hav­iour on Feb­ru­ary 25, 2022, when a dif­fer­en­tial pres­sure (Delta P) event oc­curred at Berth No.6 in the Pointe-a-Pierre har­bour.

The event cre­at­ed a vor­tex that plunged LM­CS divers Christo­pher Boodram, Fyzal Kur­ban, Yusuf Hen­ry, Kaz­im Ali Jr and Rishi Na­gas­sar in­to the 30-inch pipeline.

How­ev­er, Pe­ter­son ar­gued that fac­tu­al and ex­pert ev­i­dence at the CoE did not sup­port the crit­i­cism and that Paria’s ac­tions were whol­ly rea­son­able, giv­en its op­er­at­ing con­di­tions fol­low­ing the in­ci­dent.
He said the re­sources avail­able and the safe­ty po­ten­tial for pro­posed res­cuers were live is­sues for Paria’s de­ci­sion-mak­ers.

Paria claimed it did not know the divers were in the pipe be­tween 2.45 pm and 5.30 pm on Feb­ru­ary 25, 2022. Per­son­nel on­ly be­came aware when Boodram emerged. LM­CS per­son­nel were un­co­op­er­a­tive and hos­tile to Paria em­ploy­ees that day.

Pe­ter­son said al­though LM­CS Man­ag­ing Di­rec­tor Kaz­im Ali Snr and Paria In­ci­dent Com­man­der Collin Piper knew each oth­er per­son­al­ly, there is no ev­i­dence that LM­CS pre­sent­ed a res­cue plan on that day.

“All we keep hear­ing is LM­CS want­ed to dive, and Piper stopped them.”

He said ow­ing to the LM­CS res­cue plan and its in­abil­i­ty to pro­vide ad­e­quate re­sources to at­tempt a res­cue, Paria en­gaged mul­ti­ple spe­cial­ist ser­vice providers: East­ern Emer­gency Re­sponse Ser­vices, Mitchell’s Pro­fes­sion­al Div­ing Ser­vices Com­pa­ny, HH­SL Safe­ty Sys­tems Ltd, Hull Sup­port Ser­vices Ltd, Sub­sea Glob­al So­lu­tions and Off­shore Tech­nol­o­gy So­lu­tions Ltd. It al­so had as­sis­tance from Her­itage Pe­tro­le­um per­son­nel and the Coast Guard.

How­ev­er, Paria’s knowl­edge of the pipeline con­di­tion was in­ad­e­quate, un­aware of the lo­ca­tion and state of an in­flat­able plug and the divers.
Paria then learned that haz­ards ex­ist­ed and as­sumed there was sig­nif­i­cant oil con­tent in the pipe. Boodram’s emer­gence, cov­ered in oil, sup­port­ed that as­sump­tion. Paria al­so de­duced that the in­flat­able plug pre­sent­ed the pos­si­bil­i­ty of an­oth­er Delta P event and saw there were oxy­gen tanks in the pipe.

At the time, Piper was aware of in­ci­dents lo­cal­ly and abroad where res­cuers per­ished while at­tempt­ing a res­cue, which was a fac­tor in his de­ci­sion-mak­ing. 
Pe­ter­son said none of the en­ti­ties con­tact­ed by Paria want­ed to en­ter the pipeline. The Coast Guard ad­vised that its divers did not pos­sess the train­ing or spe­cial­ist equip­ment. East­ern’s con­fined space tech­ni­cians could not un­der­take a div­ing res­cue, and Mitchell’s found the risk too high.

Sev­er­al ex­pert wit­ness­es ad­vised it was un­safe to en­ter the pipeline to res­cue the trapped divers. Dive su­per­vi­sor at Her­itage Rolph Seales and com­mer­cial div­er Kr­ish­na Fuentes’ ev­i­dence sug­gest­ed that a safe res­cue op­er­a­tion would re­quire six to sev­en com­mer­cial divers.

While LM­CS div­er Michael Kur­ban en­tered the pipe, and spe­cial­ist divers Co­nan and Con­rad Bed­doe were will­ing to go in for a res­cue at­tempt, the num­ber was in­suf­fi­cient based on Fuentes and Seales’ sug­ges­tion.

Re­gard­ing the con­tract, Pe­ter­son said Paria fol­lowed all its oblig­a­tions. How­ev­er, LM­CS’s dis­obe­di­ence of Paria’s Per­mit-to-Work (PTW) sys­tem caused it to re­move its mi­gra­tion cham­ber, which led to the dead­ly Delta P event.

CoE chair­man Jerome Lynch point­ed out that the Method State­ment se­quenc­ing the work that day in­clud­ed re­mov­ing the in­flat­able plug. The Method State­ment, ap­proved by Paria, ac­com­pa­nied the PTW.

How­ev­er, Pe­ter­son ar­gued that de­spite an over­sight, LM­CS erred be­cause the PWT did not au­tho­rise the re­moval of the plug.

Based on Pe­ter­son’s sub­mis­sions, he de­scribed coun­sel for the fam­i­lies of Na­gas­sar and Hen­ry, Prakash Ra­mad­har’s rec­om­men­da­tion for crim­i­nal pros­e­cu­tions of Paria per­son­nel as out­ra­geous.

“I wish Mr Ra­mad­har was here be­cause I want­ed to de­scribe his in­vi­ta­tion to the com­mis­sion for crim­i­nal pro­ceed­ings against Paria and its per­son­nel as out­ra­geous as the ev­i­dence did not sup­port this. It may grab a good head­line. It may grab the news­pa­per front page, but on the ev­i­dence: it can­not be sup­port­ed. There is no ev­i­dence here of any­thing close to crim­i­nal con­duct.”

Pe­ter­son said he knows the CoE would not eas­i­ly fall prey to that temp­ta­tion. Lynch said the CoE would have to find ev­i­dence of gross neg­li­gence to con­sid­er the rec­om­men­da­tion. 

In Paria’s rec­om­men­da­tion, Pe­ter­son asked the CoE to con­sid­er scu­ba div­ing guide­lines as ex­perts be­lieve it is not for com­mer­cial work. Sev­er­al wit­ness­es al­so spoke of divers with sat­u­ra­tion div­ing and con­fined space div­ing ex­per­tise.

He called for rec­om­men­da­tions to fine-tune those ca­pa­bil­i­ties to in­clude pipeline en­try since T&T has an oil and gas in­dus­try with sev­er­al plants.

He al­so pro­posed the cre­ation of a na­tion­al reg­istry de­tail­ing peo­ple and com­pa­nies with var­i­ous equip­ment and ex­per­tise that can re­spond to emer­gen­cies.

Lynch found val­ue in the rec­om­men­da­tions but added that a com­pa­ny as big as Paria should have some of this equip­ment, in­clud­ing those that can pro­vide live footage in­side a pipe to de­tect var­i­ous prob­lems.

Lynch said the CoE would write its re­port and have it ready by April. How­ev­er, it has no con­trol over whether it gets pub­lished. 

“It is in the hands of oth­ers.”
The CoE re­sumed at 9.30 am on Fri­day. 


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