We frequently get complaints from readers about the
high price of Nitrox. A typical one comes from Vicki
Caldwell (Sacramento, CA), who dived in April with
Osprey Divers at Grand Turk and wasn’t impressed with
the prices or the tank mixes. “We didn’t feel like we
got our money’s worth because none of the tanks were
ever full, and Oasis charges a whopping $13 for Nitrox.”
Co-owner Dale Barker was a good sport, agreeing to drop
the price to $11 for Caldwell’s group even before they
arrived, and then not charging them for their first day’s
dives when the Nitrox mix was only 29 percent.
While those figures can add $100 or more to a week’s
diving, you can count yourself lucky, Vicky. You’d pay
$14 at Aqua Dives in Belize’s Ambergris Caye and $15
at Grand Cayman’s Red Sail Sports. According to John
Flanders, owner of the Academy of Scuba in Phoenix
and co-owner of Geofish Dive Center in Mexico’s Playa
Del Carmen, Oasis’ Nitrox fees are in the middle of the
range charged by Caribbean dive resorts. “The average
Caribbean tank costs $12 to $15. Compressed air is only
$5 a tank on average, so at least half of what you’re paying
for is the oxygen, not to mention the costs of shipping it,
the man-hours for blending it and the mixing equipment.
While some resorts offer “free Nitrox,” nothing is free:
Nitrox increases an operator’s cost so it will be made up
elsewhere.
Dive operations produce Nitrox in one of three ways: partial blending, continuous blending and Nitrox membrane.
Partial-pressure blending is the cheapest technique.
A dive shop purchases oxygen separately, then adds
a specific amount to an empty, clean scuba tank and tops
it off with compressed air. Most dive operations, aiming
at a 32- to 36-percent mix, blend gas in a large tank and
pump it into individual scuba tanks. It’s labor intensive
because it takes time to hook up the bottle, get a precise
oxygen reading, then top it off with the compressor. Then
the tank must typically sit for 24 hours so gas particles can
mix properly.
In continuous blending, air and oxygen mix in a highpressure
compressor. The mixture flows through an oxygen
analyzer to get the desired oxygen percentage and is
pumped into a single scuba tank or a larger storage bank.
Big resorts with a steady stream of divers, like Bonaire’s
Buddy Dive and Captain Don’s, use this method. It saves
time, is less dangerous than partial blending, and blends
a large volume of Nitrox with more accuracy. But it’s also
pricier. Also, it’s not a great option for liveaboards doing
multi-day trips in remote places, as they have limited
space to store so many cylinders of oxygen for five dives
per day.
Many liveaboards use the Nitrox membrane, which
produces blends of up to 40% oxygen by removing nitrogen
particles from the air instead of adding oxygen to it.
Low-pressure air flows into a filter that removes hydrocarbe bons and other contaminants. Then it passes into a membrane
canister, where oxygen, more transferable than
nitrogen, filters through thousands of hairlike fibers. To
get the proper gas ratio, one just adjusts a needle valve to
“dial out” the nitrogen. The de-nitrogenated gas is then
transferred to a standard compressor for storage in nitrox
banks or filled straight into divers’ tanks. “You can run
the system all day, and the cost of making it is relatively
cheap as it just uses electricity,” says Bob Olson, president
of equipment maker Nitrox Technologies. “But the membrane
has the highest initial cost. You’re talking at least
$15,000 for a good compressor, and its lifespan averages
just five years.”
Wayne Hasson, president of the Aggressor Fleet, says
his boats use both continuous blending and Nitrox membranes.
It cost $20,000 for the membrane filter, another
$30,000 for the low-pressure compressors that pump gas
into tanks. Then there are upkeep and maintenance
costs. “It’s certainly not cheap. That’s why Nitrox is twice
the cost of air.”
Another major cost is shipping oxygen from the producer
– it’s not manufactured everywhere. “All our boats
are in remote areas, so the cost of getting oxygen to them
is expensive,” says Hasson. For the Fiji Aggressor, oxygen
is produced in Suva, a three-hour overland trip. For the
Costa Rica-based Okeanos Aggressor, the closest supplier
is in San Jose, three hours away. While the Nitrox membrane
can produce enough gas for all guests on board, it’s
still labor intensive, Hasson says. “It takes lots of hours to
run the compressor and fill the tanks.”
Dive resorts in bigger places like Grand Cayman have
an easier time getting oxygen, as it’s needed for bigger
customers like hospitals and the utility company, but
DiveTech manager Nancy Easterbrook says shipping costs add up. “Grand Cayman does bring in shipments from
the U.S. every week, but tack on to the U.S. price shipping
to the Florida port, shipping on the ship to Cayman,
duty, insurance, local transport, etc. To get to Cayman
Brac, the gas needs to have one more shipping charge
also. Our landed cost per cubic foot is almost triple the
cost Florida dive shops pay.”
Easterbrook says that for DiveTech to produce an
80-cu-fit tank of 32-percent Nitrox, it needs about 16 cu-ft
of oxygen, which costs with shipping, etc., $7.84. DiveTech
charges $10 a tank (discounted during slow times) on
Cayman, one of the lower prices.
Easterbrook adds that DiveTech is the only Cayman
dive shop using liquid oxygen, as she has the volume to
justify it (they fill 100 Nitrox tanks a day). ”It’s less expensive
per cubic foot than using the gas storage banks but
we’ve had to make capital investments to do this. We also
have the labor cost of producing our own Nitrox from
liquid. Nitrox costs us almost double what air does to produce
a tank but we keep a low margin on it to encourage
its use and maintain our place in a competitive market.”
Hasson says the Aggressor’s charge of $100 a week for
unlimited Nitrox is a deal. “If you do 25 dives, $100 is
cheap, compared to buying 25 tanks at $5 to $8 – that
adds 25 to 100 percent extra to your total bill.”
Still, if you’re a vacation diver, Nitrox may just be
unnecessary expense. At most diving resorts where time
and depth are religiously controlled, air will do just fine.
While Nitrox builds in a safety margin, especially for older
divers, if you’re making just two guided dives a day, following
your computer and making safety stops, Nitrox is most
likely an expensive luxury.
–Vanessa Richardson