Today at the Energy NL Conference in St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador, attendees heard from one of the most remarkable figures in offshore energy and commercial diving: Chris Lemons.
If you don’t know his story, it’s worth your time.
In September 2012, while working as a saturation diver nearly 300 feet beneath the North Sea, Chris experienced a catastrophic failure that should have been fatal. A dynamic positioning failure aboard the support vessel caused his umbilical lifeline—the connection supplying oxygen, heat, communications, and power—to snap. Instantly, he was alone in complete darkness on the seabed with only a few minutes of emergency breathing gas remaining.
What happened next continues to puzzle medical experts.
After his emergency supply ran out, Chris remained stranded on the ocean floor for approximately 30 minutes before being recovered by fellow divers Dave Yuasa and Duncan Allcock. Against all expectations, he survived—and remarkably suffered no lasting neurological damage.
The incident became the subject of the acclaimed 2019 documentary Last Breath, which used actual dive footage, real communications recordings, and interviews with the crew involved. The documentary captivated audiences worldwide because it wasn’t a dramatization—it was a real-life account of teamwork, courage, offshore professionalism, and survival against impossible odds.

Last Breath
The story was so extraordinary that it was later adapted into the 2025 feature film Last Breath, starring Woody Harrelson as Duncan Allcock, Simu Liu as Dave Yuasa, and Finn Cole as Chris Lemons.
But beyond the Hollywood adaptation, Chris’s story resonates deeply with those who work in offshore energy. It is a powerful reminder of the risks faced by workers every day, the critical importance of safety systems, and the extraordinary professionalism of the people who operate in some of the world’s most challenging environments.
Hearing Chris speak today wasn’t just hearing a survival story. It was hearing firsthand about resilience, preparation, teamwork, and the thin line between disaster and recovery in offshore operations.
Some stories are hard to believe.
This one actually happened.
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