JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Monday, August 18, 2025

Guyana VP Jagdeo wants full probe of Tobago spill

by

543 days ago
20240222

The probe in­to the con­tin­ued spillage of diesel in­to To­ba­go’s wa­ters from the sunken Gulf­stream barge took a new twist yes­ter­day, af­ter Guyana me­dia out­let News Source re­port­ed that the coun­try’s Vice Pres­i­dent, Bhar­rat Jagdeo, had called for a full probe of the in­ci­dent.

This af­ter mul­ti­ple sources close to the Guyana gov­ern­ment and the state-owned Guyana Pow­er and Light Com­pa­ny re­vealed to News Source jour­nal­ist Gor­don Mose­ley that the ves­sel was des­tined for Guyana with fu­el for the Guyana Pow­er and Light Com­pa­ny.

But GPL last night de­nied it had any link to the ves­sel.

A source close to pow­er com­pa­ny had ear­li­er con­firmed to News Source that there may have been an arrange­ment for the fu­el to be sup­plied to the com­pa­ny, but the arrange­ment may have been shelved.

The barge, which cap­sized and over­turned in­to the sea off the coast of To­ba­go on Feb­ru­ary 7, has spilled thou­sands of gal­lons of diesel in­to the sea, caus­ing a ma­jor headache and clean-up ex­er­cise for the To­ba­go House of As­sem­bly and Gov­ern­ment au­thor­i­ties.

Both Guyana and T&T are in­ves­ti­gat­ing the in­ci­dent, since the crew of the So­lo Creed, which was tow­ing the barge, are still to be lo­cat­ed.

Jagdeo yes­ter­day told News Source that there is need for a full probe with re­gard to the in­ci­dent and the pos­si­ble links to the GPL.

“We should have a full-fledged in­ves­ti­ga­tion, and we want to es­tab­lish what the facts are. And if the fu­el was to come to GPL, we should know about that. But from what they have said, so far they have said to us that they had no agree­ment with any com­pa­ny that has been iden­ti­fied glob­al­ly, these are the com­pa­nies that own the tug and the name of the ves­sel that has over­turned in Trinidad and To­ba­go, they have no com­mer­cial en­gage­ment with them,” Jagdeo said.

News Source re­port­ed that while there may have been no en­gage­ment or agree­ment with the com­pa­nies that own the over­turned ves­sel or the tug that was ac­com­pa­ny­ing it, there was re­port­ed­ly a deal with Guyanese in­di­vid­u­als to sup­ply the fu­el to the pow­er com­pa­ny. Those in­di­vid­u­als, it said, are be­lieved to have con­tract­ed the ves­sel and the barge to ship the fu­el to Guyana for sale to GPL.

Jagdeo told the me­dia house that the state-owned pow­er com­pa­ny should make its records and con­tracts avail­able.

“GPL should make avail­able to you, all of the in­for­ma­tion, these were pub­licly ten­dered, and they should make that avail­able and who won the con­tracts,” he said.

There was al­so con­cern about the source of the fu­el that was spilled. Ma­rine track­er web­sites show the ves­sel was picked up in satel­lite im­ages in Pozue­lo Bay, Venezuela, dur­ing the en­tire fi­nal week of Jan­u­ary.

It is sus­pect­ed that more than 35,000 bar­rels of fu­el might have been pur­chased from Venezuela, which would be against cur­rent US sanc­tions on that coun­try.

But Jagdeo said he was un­aware of the orig­i­nal source of the fu­el.

“I am not sure about where the fu­el was bought, but the thing is, is that GPL can eas­i­ly give you the dates when we ten­dered, the bids they re­ceived, who won the bids and the con­trac­tu­al arrange­ments we had with them, full trans­paren­cy on this mat­ter,” Jagdeo said.

When ques­tioned on the is­sue, Guyana’s Min­is­ter of Pub­lic Works Juan Edghill, who holds min­is­te­r­i­al re­spon­si­bil­i­ty for GPL, said con­ver­sa­tions on the mat­ter were on­go­ing.

“As far as I am aware, all of those con­ver­sa­tions have been on­go­ing be­tween the rel­e­vant stake­hold­ers and that is what I will say at this time,” Edghill said.

Mean­while, Mar­itime sources, who have been prob­ing the satel­lite im­ages record­ed by tanker track­er web­sites, re­vealed that the last im­ages of the ves­sel be­ing towed were cap­tured just two days be­fore the cat­a­stroph­ic fu­el spill. It is al­so be­lieved that based on the satel­lite im­ages cap­tured, the ves­sels were be­ing tracked through­out their jour­ney and just be­fore the spill.

News Source re­port­ed that T&T and Guyana au­thor­i­ties have been work­ing close­ly on the probe in­to the oil spill, as they at­tempt to as­cer­tain own­er­ship of the over­turned ves­sel and the where­abouts of the crew.

Mose­ley al­so re­port­ed that promi­nent George­town busi­ness­man Mo­hamed Qua­lan­der, of the Queensway Com­pa­ny, had dis­tanced him­self from own­er­ship of the ves­sels as­so­ci­at­ed with the spill and any link­ages to trad­ing in fu­el.

In a state­ment, Qua­lan­der said he has nev­er owned any fu­el boat and has nev­er been in­volved in the trad­ing of fu­el in Guyana or any­where else in the world. He made it clear he has no knowl­edge of the ves­sels in­volved in the in­ci­dent.

The state­ment was is­sued by the busi­ness­man af­ter an anony­mous Face­book page al­leged he had links to the ves­sel that caused the spill. He said he had since filed a po­lice com­plaint over the so­cial me­dia post. (News Source)


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored