Search of every oil tank following Eleuthera theft

By DANA SMITH

Tribune Staff Reporter

dsmith@tribunemedia.net

LAST week’s revelation of an oil theft ring responsible for the 70,000 gallon fuel leak in Eleuthera has prompted a comprehensive BEC probe of every tank in the country, chairman Leslie Miller said yesterday.

He attributed the theft ring and resulting spill to “gross negligence” on the part of the Bahamas Electricity Corporation and revealed the incident will cost the corporation around $350,000.

The spill was discovered around 9am last Tuesday in the area of a disused fuel storage tank farm for the Rock Sound, Eleuthera power station.

Mr Miller said yesterday BEC is expecting to recover “about 90 per cent” of the 70,000 gallon spill and the reported theft ring is being investigated by police as well as BEC.

“That was just gross negligence on the part of BEC. Gross negligence. Because here you have a new tank that is being put in place – a 200,000 gallon tank – and here you have the old tank still in place and still connected,” he said.

“Now you figure it out – why would you have the old tank connected to the same pipeline when you already completed new tanks? Those old tanks were decommissioned, they never should have been connected, and it’s the fault of the contractor as well as BEC that the incident took place.”

He said a full review of “every single” tank will now have to be done and BEC will “have to beef up security” to ensure the incident is not repeated.

“Everything what BEC has, now has to be looked at – all apparatus on every Family Island,” Mr Miller said.

When asked exactly how many tanks – both in operation and not – are in the country, he said: “Just think of all the Family Islands; we have and then multiply that by about four. On Nassau, too. I’m sure tests are going to go on everything.

“Thieves don’t stop. You think thieves will only steal from Eleuthera? Please. They don’t take breaks, they don’t take vacation, and they hardly sleep, they just keep thieving.”

On Friday, Mr Miller said the fuel spilled into an acre of land after a supply line from BEC’s new holding tank was diverted to one of its decommissioned tanks at the rear of the airport in Rock Sound.

From these old tanks, he said, persons were filling up their own tanks and possibly reselling the corporation’s fuel.

“This is totally deliberate and it has been ongoing for some time it appears. The total amount of fuel in the old tanks was some 30,000 gallons. Someone was running their own fuel station off BEC,” he said.

“This is systematic theft. There are supply lines running from the old decommissioned tank to the new 200,000 gallon one, and it’s like someone left the faucet on.”

Comments

jt says...

Recover 90% of fuel that has already seeped into the porous limestone and ruined the water table? Wow. They really think we are stupid.

Posted 11 December 2012, 12:42 p.m. Suggest removal

concernedcitizen says...

this is not the only gas station at a BEC plant ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

Posted 11 December 2012, 2:32 p.m. Suggest removal

jackflash says...

They need to review who has gas stations and how much legal fuel they recieve, then how much gallons show on thier pumps that they pumped.They might find out that the station down the road i involved as well....

Posted 11 December 2012, 4:04 p.m. Suggest removal

Tarzan says...

Gross negligence? Cost $350,000? Give me a break. This is corruption plan and simple and Heaven knows how much this systematic theft has cost the rate payers over the years. How can any competent firm not track and correlate how much fuel it buys and how much it uses, especially when our power rates are burdened with a huge "fuel cost adjustment".

Get the government out of the power business. The sooner this service is turned over to a private operator, the sooner we can see our power rates return from the stratosphere. The ludicrous cost of electricity in the Bahamas is a national disgrace.

Posted 12 December 2012, 10:59 a.m. Suggest removal

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