HL Deb 17 April 1996 vol 571 cc73-4WA
Lord Harlech

asked Her Majesty's Government:

What progress is being made by the Marine Accident Investigation Branch with their investigation into the grounding of the 'Sea Empress' off Milford Haven on 15th February and the subsequent salvage operation.

The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department of Transport (Viscount Goschen)

The Chief Inspector of Marine Accidents has assured my right honourable friend the Secretary of State for Transport that the investigation is progressing satisfactorily. The inspectors have interviewed many of the people from whom they need to take evidence and this process is continuing. All parties are co-operating with the inspectors. There has been a good response to the public notices placed in the press inviting people to make representations to the inspectors which would assist them both in determining the circumstances and causes of the grounding and in relation to the subsequent salvage operations. The chief inspector has received 35 detailed representations and a further 63 letters from people, some of whom wish to give evidence to the inspectors.

The chief inspector's target for investigations of this kind is to submit his final report to my right honourable friend within 12 months of the date of an accident. Within this time, he has to carry out a consultation process on the draft, a statutory requirement which normally takes two months or more. If at any stage of the inquiry the chief inspector feels that he can usefully and properly publish interim recommendations, he will do so. In order to carry out the investigation both speedily and thoroughly, the chief inspector has told my right honourable friend that he has appointed five of his nine inspectors to the investigation.

My right honourable friend hopes to publish the chief inspector's final report as soon as possible after receiving it.