The following is a statement issued by the MD of Barbados Light & Power a few minutes ago. Prime Minister Mia Mottley has demanded a meeting with the Chairman of EMERA this evening.

Several stories have been floating about social media in the last 24 hours, BU will stay with the official positions issued by the BL&P for the moment.


Roger Blackman, Managing Director of BLPC
The Barbados Light & Power Company Limited (BLPC) wishes to update Barbadians on the electricity outages that have occurred this week. We recognise that this affects our nation’s productivity and ability to serve your own customers and clients. For this, we sincerely apologise and wish to assure you that we are taking this very seriously. Our teams are assiduously working to bring full restoration back to our island.
BLPC uses Heavy Fuel Oil to produce electricity to meet the needs of our customers. At present, we are experiencing a Heavy Fuel Oil quality issue, which has been plaguing us for an extended period. The presence of contaminants detected in the Heavy Fuel Oil is the main cause of the challenges we are experiencing.
The outage events which occurred this week are extraordinary events originating with a switch failure in one of our Spring Garden substations, and during that restoration process, a second event occurred on Tuesday morning with a fault on one of our generating units. In both cases system protection response is being investigated.
Over the past few months, to compound the restoration and supply issues, we have been investigating oil quality issues which are prematurely damaging equipment used to feed oil to our generating units. At present, generating units that we would normally rely on to supply electricity demand have periodically been shutting down due to the fuel issues and this has slowed the pace of restoration.
We are working with our fuel supplier and other stakeholders to hone in upon the specific cause and source of potential contamination from their suppliers, which is ongoing. We have been staying ahead of these issues while we completed other maintenance and repairs to the remainder of our generating fleet, however, this week highlighted the challenge we have been working through to prevent such an event from occurring.
We wish to thank you for your patience, support and encouraging words as we work through this period. We are meeting with the Prime Minister, other Government officials and the Barbados Water Authority this evening to give a comprehensive update and to provide an update on our status and plans going forward to resolve our challenges. We will of course keep you updated of any significant changes as things evolve.
The Chairman of our Board Rick Janega from Emera is on island and will be a part of the meeting with government.

256 responses to “Barbados Gone Dark”


  1. That is what yall UPPITY IDIOTS GOT THE PEOPLE…for not listening to IMF, S&P, MOODY’S, Bloomberg etc from when they were WARNING from 2006 to 2015….BOTH STUPID governments that this would happen if both governments took no measures welll….neither government did… so NONE OF U SHOULD EVER ENTER THAT PARLIAMENT AGAIN…

    The then jackass in the central bank Marion Mottley or Arthur or Williams or whatever her name is said the then world recesssion could never cause problems for Barbados ….then called herself brilliant..

    …..then when the other blights entered parliament they not only said the same thing….BUT CUSSED all the above mentioned who said different……yall have no shame.


  2. Indeed it appears as if Barbados is making some giant steps backwards. I can remember boasting of the stability of our electric and water services when I was in Trinidad in the 1980’s. Now I am hearing of water tanks, water shortages and power failures. Have we become the Trinidad of 1980s???


  3. @ Theo

    It is called incompetence. I will bet anything that all the individuals involved have degrees – from BAs and BScs to PhDs. Some may even call themselves doctors.
    Our problem in Barbados is gross INCOMPETENCE not corruption. Look at the management of any institution, public or private, and you see incompetence. Anyone with management experience can spot it.
    Corruption comes from job insecurity, which comes from political paternalism and interference. Deal with it.


  4. Wuhloss, wuhloss, Alex is being called a liar on facebook, they say he telling lies about the fuel. I would believe Roger Blackman over him any day…cause the Jamaica Observer is saying something completely different to what Alex is saying about Petrojam’s products..their information is coming straight outta Petrojam

    … ya cannot believe what yardfowls placed in taxpayer funded positions of power by governments who are known crooks… say.

    https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fjamaica-gleaner.com%2Farticle%2Flead-stories%2F20190217%2Ffresh-fuel-fears-petrojam-employee-mechanics-reveal-renewed-bad-gas%3Ffbclid%3DIwAR3ZPS8Yg_4VxGXFb5o_Dc_VQHYdhH0F-4ShgtyW-BzZrfkGtYdNrtkfkKY&h=AT0zBzYH81v7RDm7ceI_1E2N8I0wxPGSS-mpN2pPyedU6MGPjPYWI-PHTolPgZImM-f1W_sx3Q5f2hhOxcPymlLLd9-WMeT9SPC2Gku8kxn9GHCH7HfxXpjNh54OgtSFnGBUIIgNcqfr4qwk

    “Despite denials from Petrojam that its supplies are compromised, a source who has intimate knowledge of operational deficiencies at Jamaica’s sole oil refinery has explained the source of the smelly gas, and is warning that it undermines vehicle performance and threatens long-term damage.

    The employee, who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of disciplinary action, said the country could be on the verge of another bad-gas saga.

    “On the (Petrojam) compound, it has been making some people nauseous. Some people who have sinus problems, it has been affecting them because we are right in the middle of it,” the employee said.

    “It has been affecting the performance of cars. You start to experience your gas mileage suddenly going haywire, using more gas than usual. Your car will feel sluggish,” the employee told The Sunday Gleaner.”


  5. […] The blogmaster inquired from Chris Halsall how would a distributed power generation model affect BL&P’s profit and loss in the aftermath of last week’s catastrophe –Barbados Gone Dark. […]

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading