Good catch by Patrick Hoyos over at the Broad Street Journal. Kammie Holder and a few others who monitor environmental matters warned us a couple years ago about Cahill Clare Cowan (Energy Barbados) plan to sell after construction of a mega plasma gasification plan was scuttled. Do we have to wait as usual for our leaders to speak on these matters? – David, Blogmaster

But Cahill Energy put out a press release dated March 20, 2019 (yes, dated just a few days ago) letting the world know it had sold off its “Barbados waste-to-energy company, Cahill Energy Barbados, to Quantum Utility Generation, which secured funding to build the plant that Cahill estimates the cost at $350 million USD.” This announcement seems to be a bit late, if I understand things correctly. I heard that the sale took place some time ago and consulting work has been done and permission applied for at Town Planning – Broad Street Journal

Once upon a time there was a Barbados administration which was, shall we say, very creative in finding ways to sell the rights of Barbadians to potential foreign investors with few of us knowing what was going on.

For example, the Hilton. For another one, the national oil terminal. For another, a west coast development that faltered, was bailed out at massive cost to the taxpayer, then left unfinished to weather in the sun and rain through, you could say, all four seasons.

And then there was the “enfant terrible” of them all – the most outrageous disposal of Barbadians’ future rights, in my view – the signing of a contract with a company called Cahill Energy.

Now, having been underground, I have read lots of stuff about what a supposed memorandum contained and how it was allegedly signed by some people in the former administration, all acting no doubt in what they may have considered the best interests of Barbados.

Which, if they did do so, would say a lot about their judgement, because the waste-to-management operation proposed to be built at Vaucluse by Cahill Energy was going to use a highly toxic and dangerous technology which would not vapourise garbage as it promised. It would leave mountains of sludge which still had to be buried somewhere.


But it was only when a multi-million pound investment at Teeside in Britain using the same tech – a risky one known as plasma gasification – went belly-up that the Dolittle Administration cancelled the Barbados project.

Read full article in the Broad Street JournalQuantum of incredulity

Here is the Press Release announcing the sale. Broad Street Journal posted a 2014 Press Release.

Cahill Energy Barbados acquired by Quantum Utility Generation

Toronto (March 20, 2019) – After four years of development, culminating in full government approval, Cahill Energy Limited has sold its Barbados waste-to-energy company, Cahill Energy Barbados, to Quantum Utility Generation, which secured funding to build the plant that Cahill estimates the cost at $350 million USD.“Cahill Energy is actually a spin-off from Cahill International. As a team we were globe trotters raising funds between $300 million to $1 billion USD. In 2013, we created Cahill Energy simply due to the opportunity to participate hands-on in what we thought then was a miracle: waste-to-energy. We built Cahill Energy to provide a leading edge, environmentally sound solution to the dual challenges of waste management and energy security,” says Clare Cowan, CEO, Cahill Energy Limited. “The ability to turn waste into energy has extraordinary value when you are working with an island that currently spends $1 million USD a month on landfill maintenance alone. Not only do you eliminate the waste but the landfill, as well. That’s exceptional value when you consider the fixed constraints of available land.”Having conducted in-depth analysis of the Caribbean region, Cahill Energy had determined that Barbados represented the ideal location to invest in a waste-to-energy plant.

“While we recognize that the country faces some challenges in the short term due to the impact of the 2008-2009 global economic downturn, we believe that the fundamentals are strong,” adds Cowan.

Many experts were involved in determining if Barbados had the requirements for a waste-to-energy plant. The focus was primarily on engineering and in this regard,Cahill selected Hatch due to their substantive global expertise. Cahill also worked with the most qualified in every discipline, from legal to finance to create the environment to attract the best in development. With Quantum Utility Generation now on board, this objective has been achieved.

Founded in 2010, Quantum Utility Generation, LLC (“QUG”) acquires, develops, operates and optimizes power generation assets in the Americas with a sharp focus on working with both customers and partners to find economic, environmentally sound and reliable power solutions.

The QUG team is power focused. Their team consists of power industry veterans with decades of experience in the acquisition, development, operations, management, financing and most importantly the economic optimization of conventional and renewable energy assets.

Quantum Energy Partners is the parent of Quantum Utility Generation, a Houston-based, private equity manager with more than $9.5 billion USD of capital under its stewardship and is focused solely in the energy space.

Once the team was assembled, Cahill researched and qualified each aspect required, which led the company to determine the benefits for Barbados in having such a plant. Ultimately, the plant will be a game changer for Barbados. Beyond the plant itself, Cahill was excited to see additional benefits such as:

  • Waste being used for energy hence the need for landfill will be limited
  • Carbon dioxide emissions from the landfill will become negligible
  • Energy security rising to 18-24%
  • A strong foundation for sustainable tourism
  • 500-600 skilled labor jobs created in the build cycle
  • 50-60 full time positions when the plant is operational

Following the successful closure of this chapter, Cahill is focusing on research into its next opportunity. Cowan is confident that any initiative Cahill undertakes will once again replicate the success of past projects.

“We have our eye on several business ventures and are excited and encouraged about new avenues and prospects moving forward,” says Cowan.

For media:

Joe Roma Communications for Cahill Energy
joe@joeroma.com
416-705-1723
info@cahill-energy.com
www.cahill-energy.com

169 responses to “Cahill Energy Barbados Sold to Quantum Utility Generation”


  1. Correction – neither did I say


  2. I forgot to ask – were Chris and Freundel part of the know-it-all group who messed up the country? I seem to remember Freundel claim that they had all the brains they needed in the Cabinet and therefore need no help.

    Just relieving Artax for a bit.


  3. “I expect more of him than this obsession with proving you a yard fowl. Especially since that has never been in dispute.”

    Clever piece of bowling


  4. Unfortunately she is not a good enough batsman to even get an edge on that one. And so she will bat on.


  5. White lady why dont u go mind yuh business and leave well
    Dont bother me if i dont bother u


  6. Interesting


  7. You mean flowery. LMBAO.🤐


  8. Would anyone care to comment on this Burnside entity some more?

    @ Brother Hants it would seem that you are one of the few people who either have the time and the special skills to “unearth” (pun intended) these consultants who seem to be engaged for close to 10 years continuously in work on behalf of the GoB yet they are a national secret?

    I wonder if persons like Mr. Kammie Holder might be able to comment on this matter?


  9. While there have been setbacks with the technology (like the one in the UK in 2015), plasma gasification remains the most efficient and environmentally friendly means of waste disposal that is currently available. It is imperative that we continue to develop this important technology and not give up the first time something goes wrong. I wrote an article on plasma waste converters recently if you would like more details about just how effective this technology can be
    https://adambolandblog.com/2019/04/10/win-win-win-win-the-magic-science-of-plasma-waste-converters/


  10. @Small Change

    It is the most effective WTE solution using what benchmark?


  11. It is the most effective WTE solution in that it can get rid of the largest amount of waste with the fewest emissions. The percentage of potential energy which is harvested is far greater than any other WTE solution. The by-products can also be used for other applications such as construction or oil-spill clean-ups


  12. You have not addressed the scale/size of the plant that was proposed under Cahill and the lack of performance data. Especially given the proposed build on a 21×14 island.


  13. I do not have to defend every iteration of plasma waste converters to defend the concept. It sounds like that particular design was extremely problematic. There has not yet been standardisation of design, meaning that each plant must be custom built. These are expensive mistakes, it is true, but the benefits that will come when this technology is perfected will be immense. Besides, there are plenty of plants which are already performing well


  14. The issue here is scale. From your response we are correct to be concerned.


  15. No one is suggesting that plasma gasification provide all of our power or get rid of all of our waste. Ideally, small plants would provide energy and waste management for small communities. We do indeed need to be concerned but it is not about the issues with scaling up PWCs. We need to be concerned about the devastating effects that climate change is already having on water, food and natural disasters. We also need to be concerned about the massive global loss of biodiversity that is resulting from pollution. We must not abandon technologies that can help to alleviate those very serious issues because there are setbacks with some of the designs


  16. We need to be concerned about all risk factors to ensure mitigating measures are adequately provisioned.


  17. I agree that if there is a risk of dangerous side-effects with a particular design (like that of Cahill Energy) that that particular design must be reexamined. However, there are many other designs available which do not have the same detrimental effects. Also, the ‘sludge’ that you mention is called slag and can be used as aggregate for building materials from concrete to tarmac. It can also be very easily processed into an efficient insulator which can also be used to clean up oil spills or grow plants hydroponically. In theory, slag is not toxic, as you claim, since toxic materials cannot leach out into the environment and won’t until after the materials have become inert. My final point is this; what alternative do you prefer? Is it landfills which produce huge amounts of methane and do nothing to actually get rid of the waste or is it incinerators which release all the carbon trapped in the waste into the environment and reclaim a tiny fraction of the energy which PWCs can reclaim?


  18. @Small Change, if it’s so good and the best thing since the creation of peanut butter why not build other plants elsewhere first acquire best practices. It seems the modus operandi is the same in countries with poor environmental governance and politicians who are hand to mouth that are easily bribed into acting against the best interest of their country.

    I do not think that many of you are aware that persons mainly Bajan whites are not afraid of standing in front of a bulldozer and going to jail in the name of civil disobedience. We are fully aware the security services monitor these pages, thus this is a message been sent for the writing must be on the wall for all to be aware we must stand up for our country irrespective of consequences. This may offend but most blacks only interested in a Buju show and that sports opium of football.

    Those residents in Checker Hall St Lucy and environs were assured by the management of Arawak during its opening of a big lie ” Zero Emissions.”

    Husbands Vs Arawak suit was presided over by the late Sir Clifford Husband who dismissed the case with the ruling as extracted from the summation ” Arawak Cement Plant is a public good and you must try to live with it.” Every day residents of Checker Hall and environs for more than 30 years have to deal with PM10 and PM2.5. #CausticSoda is but one danger we need not expose our Platinum Coast to which already experience Whiskey Fungus and Seasonal particulate matter from Haynesville Factory.

    Easy for those who are removed and under the drug of authority and enforcement to be indifferent to the suffering of others as its the only way they can keep up their fake lifestyles supported by social invites!

    @Small Change, not all Bajans are willing to sell out and display brainless third world thinking that providing wealth for a capitalist at the expense of future generations for the lure of a few jobs makes common sense.

    You will have a fight like nothing you have ever seen before thanks to Social Media and the monied of those in Sandy Lane with a vested interest. We are not against development but not questionable technology or less than transparent transactions for corruption is a threat to free health care, free education, social care and even the ability of the said Special Branch Officers to be paid.

    Bajans will not be guinea pigs when finders fees aka bribes are the modus operandi. We cannot even deal with vehicle pollution or even harmful chemicals due to lack of resources and legislation.

    Please bring a project that speaks to the Circular Economy and not one that seeks to greenwash or further indebt a country to the tune of $700,000,000 when police stations need fixing!


  19. @Small Change, you can send me an email thats on a secure server to info@futurecentretrust.org. Let’s have a dialogue and do note its nothing personal. This is for the file!

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

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