While it is rare these days for divers to be killed by
carbon monoxide poisoning, a tragedy on the Baani
Adventure shows it is a threat, especially in Third World
countries. A Russian diver died, two Maldivian diving
instructors were hospitalized and eight other divers had
to be treated for carbon monoxide poisoning in their
tanks provided by the liveaboard. They were floating
unconscious after a morning dive at Raydhigaa Thila reef
on May 22 but according to another diver on board, the
problems had started from the beginning of the trip.
Lee Findlay, a New Zealand divemaster on board as
a guest, told Undercurrent that he noted several divers and
one dive guide had experienced headaches in the two preceding
days. The day before the accident, the dive guide
had requested a filter change on the two compressors
used to fill tanks, but that obviously did nothing.
Ten divers started the fatal dive. After 37 minutes,
Findlay’s dive buddy rushed to the surface, saying she
couldn’t breathe. When Findlay surfaced, he found most
of the divers and the two guides semi-conscious or unconscious.
The single bottle of oxygen on the dhoni didn’t work.
While a diver did CPR on the unconscious Russian diver,
41-year-old Roman Rudakov, four crew just stood by watching.
“None of the crew on either boat appeared to have any
training in emergency first aid,” Findlay said. “They were
completely overwhelmed by the situation.” He tried CPR on
Rudakov for 35 minutes but got no response. He believes
Rudakov was made unconscious by the bad air while he surfaced,
and drowned while floating face down in the water.
Tests found most tanks contained carbon monoxide
levels of 80 parts per million -- the maximum safe level for
diving is 15 ppm. Air in Rudakov’s tank measured 150 ppm
but because that was the maximum level on the testing apparatus,
the actual level may have been higher.
Police said a crack in the air pipe leading to the Bauer
compressor was poorly mended with duct tape, allowing contamination
to enter, probably in the form of engine exhaust.
They arrested the 21-year-old man responsible for filling
divers’ tanks. “But it’s the owners who should be held to
account rather than this young guy, who no doubt got inadequate
training,” says Findlay. Other divers told Maldives
newspaper Mini Van News that they discovered Touring
Maldives, Baani Adventure’s operator, failed to use a carbon
monoxide filter recommended by Bauer when compressors
are used in conjunction with an engine. When Undercurrent contacted Maldives Liveaboards, the Adventure’s owner, booking
operator Gundi Holm replied that the boat’s two compressors
were serviced by MA Services Male the day before
the cruise started, and both compressors were reported to be
working fine.
The glaring light on the Adventure’s lack of first-aid knowledge,
plus the fact that the country has no regulatory body
for diving safety, made the Maldives tourism bureau organize
a dive safety seminar for the local dive operators. It also
plans to inspect equipment on all boats.
Maldives Liveaboards says it will start checking boats regularly,
and it plans crew training in first-aid courses, compressor
handling and emergency management. But Holm says
it’s difficult to get well-trained crew in Maldives. “Restrictions
on foreign work permits don’t allow us to bring more educated
crew from abroad.” Perhaps, but training implemented
by dive operators themselves is long overdue.
Holm says divers concerned about doing a trip on that
boat or the Baani Explorer can cancel their bookings without
any fees, and Maldives Liveaboards will refund those who
already paid in full.
The Centers for Disease Control lists the most common
symptoms of carbon monoxide as headaches, dizziness,
weakness, nausea, vomiting, chest pain, and confusion. High
levels of CO inhalation can cause loss of consciousness and
death. Unless suspected, CO poisoning can be difficult to
diagnose because the symptoms mimic other illnesses.