Wednesday, September 28, 2022
By LEANDRA ROLLE
Tribune Staff Reporter
lrolle@tribunemedia.net
ATTORNEY General Ryan Pinder said his ministry has received all of the necessary reports from agencies involved in conducting investigations into the Exuma oil spill and is now preparing paperwork “to bring action”.
Mr Pinder was asked for an update into investigations on the oil leakage ahead of yesterday’s Cabinet meeting.
He said: “The Office of the Attorney General has collected all of the applicable reports from the agencies including the police, the Port Department and from DEPP (Department of Environmental Planning and Protection) and have gone through this in respect to potential liability.
“We’ve also done an analysis both on domestic law as well as liability that would be connected to international conventions that we’re members of with respect to oil spills and have done an internal analysis on liability and we are now preparing the documentation to bring action.”
Some 36,000 gallons of diesel were spilled into waters off a bay at Exuma in late July as a vessel, contracted by Sun Oil, was offloading fuel to Bahamas Power and Light at George Town.
The leakage was said to have happened as a result of a “breach in the hose” that ran from the supply ship.
Following the incident, government officials pledged that those responsible for the spill would “pay” after investigations had been completed.
“We’re operating under the guidelines and principles that the polluters pay and the polluter will pay. How much? Of course, we don’t even know that and I’m certainly not at liberty to go into that, but the polluter will pay,” Environment and Natural Resources Minister Vaughn Miller told reporters in July.
When asked whether the government had any plans to tighten legislation geared towards preventing similar mishaps in the future, Mr Pinder said that officials were pleased with what was in place now.
“Well, I think the legislation is in place,” he told reporters. “You would’ve known shortly after coming to office that we updated the Merchant Shipping Act to bring it in compliance with international best practices.
“We are completing the regulations under that legislation now so that we can bring it into force and once that’s brought into force, certainly that will provide an enhanced amount of level of oversight under the Merchant Shipping Act which is the governing piece of legislation in this regard with respect to merchant shipping and the safety mechanisms needed.
“Our environmental laws are pretty stringent, so I think we’re pretty good there and needless to say, we feel pretty comfortable about the existence of liability and damages.”
Comments
tribanon says...
Ryan Pinder has not even received a full and proper accounting of the total costs government has incurred to date in connection with this oil spill. Nor has he made any effort to inform the public which laws were broken, delineating between those involving civil actions to recover costs and impose penalties and those involving criminal conduct warranting the pressing of charges, imposition of hefty fines and/or a possible prison term for the individuals found guilty of breaking the law in a most serious way.
Why didn't The Tribune's news reporter (Leandra Rolle) ask Ryan Pinder to comment on these matters in much greater detail?
Posted 28 September 2022, 5:47 p.m. Suggest removal
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