While uncertainty currently rules the day, there are still people out there with vision and the fundamental belief that our tourism industry will not only recover, but flourish in times to come.

For most of us, despite having traded though all the previous challenges including 911, SARS and others, the Covid-19 pandemic has been what can only be described as an earth-shattering wake-up call, severely questioning how we do business in the months or years to come.

Our own position is a classic case in point, having recently sold our small hotel, which hopefully sends a tiny beacon of hope that some return to normality may be in sight. To pretend this prolonged sales process was easy would be grossly misleading. It has taken an extraordinary amount of patience, compromise and understanding on both sides.

Are there lessons to be learnt from our personal experience, that may help others in a similar situation or those considering investment in our tourism sector generally, whether at a micro or macro level?

I believe YES, in a number of ways.

The first stumbling blocks are clearly the banks. Most of us can fully understand their reticence to provide loans and the circumstances that has led to this current entrenched position. It is abundantly obvious the need to ‘shop-around’, as the levels of caution vary enormously, depending on either the policies of the individual bank or key decision making personalities involved.

As an aspiring entrepreneur spanning over five decades, if I had accumulated $10 for every financial official who told me that the banks are not in the risk business, probably retirement could have been achieved sometime ago.

People of my generation saw the changes coming a long time ago.  For me, it was when one of Britain’s largest banks, Barclays, took the decision to retire all their branch managers aged over 50 years. It seemed to defy any obvious logic.
At 50, or close to that age, the individual manager has acquired an invaluable local knowledge of the area his or her branch was located, the business movers and shakers, their track record and probable ability to repay any loans.
It was an early sign that things were never going to be the same again in the financial world and that what we had accepted as true ‘customer service’ had been lost, perhaps forever.

Next is our local legal fraternity. Competition, driven by efficiency, attention to detail, the ability to act in a timely manner and accountability has not yet universally arrived on Barbados, with perhaps a few notable exceptions.

And thirdly, but perhaps the single biggest obstacle to even the most ardent investor are the multitude of Government departments that you are forced to deal with.  Persistent unanswered voice and emails and in the unlikely event that you can finally establish any form of human interaction, repeated run-arounds and lack of co-operation to achieve simple goals, except in the rarest cases.

Conversely, in our personal experience we encountered one or two outstandingly helpful individuals, but sadly not in any position of authority.

While there have been some bureaucratic improvements during the last four years, a great deal more could and has to be done to make Barbados a more investment friendly country, especially when the nation’s economic recovery depends on it.

In our technological world, every tool exists to make this possible, but it is frightening that ‘we’ seem to be incapable of implementing the fiscal environment that other countries take for granted and benefit from accordingly.

62 responses to “Adrian Loveridge Column – In Times to Come”

  1. NorthernObserver Avatar

    Congrats on the sale of P&Q. Kind of feel it was for sale for 6+ years.

  2. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Adrian,
    You seem to be getting close to an acknowledgement that this crisis has changed our economy forever when you say that “the Covid-19 pandemic has been what can only be described as an earth-shattering wake-up call, severely questioning how we do business in the months or years to come.”

    And yet you begin your article this week by squinting awkwardly through rose coloured glasses with a delusional panegyric to a “vision and the fundamental belief that our tourism industry will not only recover, but flourish in times to come.”

    Did the dinosaurs “not only recover, but flourish in times to come” after their “earth-shattering wake-up call?” NO!… but they evolved to become birds. The tourism industry of the future will no more resemble that of pre COVID times than a chicken resembles a tyrannosaurus rex.

    Your list of stumbling blocks is not wrong, but it is glaringly incomplete. Along with the Bankers, the Bureaucrats, and the Lawyers, you need most definitely to add the Businesspeople. I hesitate to call Businesspeople in Barbados entrepreneurs, because the vast majority of us create no value at all, but just misappropriate it from less fortunate members of society by underpaying wages, overcharging customers, and cheating the public purse.

    It is long past time to Businesspeople in Barbados to take a good long hard look in the mirror rather than their incessant whining about Bankers, Bureaucrats, and Lawyers.


  3. @Artax

    LIAT pilots not based in Antigua seeing red according to reports? The NUPW is begging the Barbados government to pay pilots severance as a former large shareholder. Looks like Browne has been smart (callous) in cutting of non Antigua based pilots to kill off the influence NUPW could have had on the new LIAT transaction.


  4. I refuse to believe our world class president has been outmanoeuvred by a little Antiguan politician.


  5. Ha! My best friend and I have that discussion frequently. Underpaying wages, overcharging customers and cheating the public purse. INDEED!

    We both cannot imagine why we cannot have business people who treat employees fairly, give value for money and contribute to the upliftment AND maintainance of the society in which they operate.

    We both believe that these practises would lead to greater profits.


  6. If the government gave its 49 per cent share in LIAT to the Antiguan government, along with that went all liabilities, including redundancies and pensions. Who negotiated that deal?

  7. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    @Adrian Good for you. Your timing couldn’t have been so apt.

    @PLT . Tell me about it. Bureacracy in the private sector is just as entrenched as the public sector.

  8. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    Banking is a risky business by nature, therefore, managing risk is a fundamental operation of any bank. If not, they should lock up shop . And banks cannot be viable in the long-run just living off government securities.


  9. As an aspiring entrepreneur spanning over five decades, if I had accumulated $10 for every financial official who told me that the banks are not in the risk business

    The run-of-the mill retail banks often struggle to evaluate the risks in businesses, especially small and medium sized ones and they tend to avoid extending credit to them. This happens everywhere.


  10. We need to develop alternative to the backward retail banks. Governments of both sides have failed the people. They have no ideas. Where are our financial engineers.


  11. @ PLT,
    Relax. Covid-19 is both a tragedy and at the same time may prove to be a blessing to Barbadians.

    Covid-19, has highlighted that our government under the stewardship of Mia is nothing but an empty vessel. Bereft of imagination; tangible ideas; and robust policies. The same can be said of those private companies and individuals who benefit from the largesse of this obese government.

    Barbados, unlike the vast majority of countries has avoided the covid-19 bullet. Yet, it is incapable of benefiting from this comparative advantage.

    The tourist industry is dead . However, Mia and her cronies are intent in ploughing money into the hands of a limited number of individuals.

    Congratulations covid-19. You have highlighted that our leaders and our private companies are incompetent and in cahoots with each other. More to the point , covid-19 has rendered these characters as mere redundant actors with no role to play in the future development of Barbados.

    I would urge this mottley crew to pack their bags and quit the island before the Barbados populace takes note that they are mere pretenders. Sorry I meant to say imposters.


  12. I see that Vienna has been hit by a wave of terrorist attacks. It is been reported that a minimum of seven people have been killed with a number of people injured.

    Are we in Barbados cognisant that we have a growing Muslim population within our region?

  13. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @TLSN November 2, 2020 6:02 PM
    “Are we in Barbados cognisant that we have a growing Muslim population within our region?”
    +++++++++++++
    The vast majority of terrorist attacks in our hemisphere are carried out by White supremacists.


  14. “In the latest updated COVID-19 travel protocols, which go into effect on Tuesday, the new countries which were moved into high risk are Antigua and Barbuda, Cayman Islands, Cuba, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Ghana, Greece, Iceland, Japan, Martinique, Norway, Sri Lanka and the United Arab Emirates.

    These join 36 others in this category, including Barbados’ major tourism markets – the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada, as well as the Caribbean islands of Jamaica, Guyana, and Trinidad and Tobago.”
    https://www.nationnews.com/2020/11/02/countries-added-covid-high-risk-group/


  15. @Hal Austin November 2, 2020 12:41 PM “a little Antiguan politician.”

    Are you making anassumption that little countries produce little politicians cursed with little brains?

    What if he is just as bright, just as able, just as competent as any first world politician?


  16. You got it sold good for you, the last time time I saw you, you were painting the sign, I will be home soon,, I will check it out on my way to the sea.

  17. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    All over the world it is government agencies, cooperatives, credit unions or mutual socities that take the most risk and invest in risky things like home mortgage, education( student loan), farming and small businesses. Commercial banks are more about lending money for personal consumption and to big corporate businesses. They have several other avenues to make money : from high fees and commission; treasury mgmt; wealth mgmt to corporate and government bonds.


  18. @ David BU

    In 2015, LIAT pilot Neil Cave filed a class action suit against LIAT (1974) Ltd., in the Antigua & Barbuda High Court on behalf of 9 other pilots, questioning the airline’s management’s decision to deposit EC$5M in CLICO as pension for pilots.

    It is very interesting to note, according to Cave, the Court ruled that the case, which was supposed to start on August 12, 2020, “could no longer go forward,” based on the defendant’s, (LIAT (1974) Ltd.), argument the new “Antigua & Barbuda Companies Amendment Act 2020, prevents absolutely any form of legal action however arising being taken against LIAT.” In other words, the ruling meant no legal process of any sort can be taken against LIAT, by any entity or existing creditor.

    I don’t know if you remember, but, in July this year, LIALPA president, Patterson Thompson, suggested the possibility of taking legal action to force LIAT into meeting its obligation to pay severance payment to pilots. Unfortunately, based on the August 12 Court ruling, it seems as though LIALPA cannot file any legal process against the airline as well.
    So, what are the other options do the pilots, and by extension, the other former LIAT employees have to be paid their severance?

    I believe the Barbados government should pay LIAT’s Barbadian employees who were made redundant as a result of the restructuring.

    Rather than fully embracing the opportunity to sell Barbados’ shares in LIAT for a few millions dollars, Mia Mottley ‘in her brilliance,’ stuck out US$44M, which was rejected by Gaston Browne. Now we’re faced with a situation where she was forced to sell the shares for E$1 and write off the airline’s debt to Barbadian taxpayers instead. So, Barbados essentially came away without anything in the process.
    Couldn’t Drs. Mascoll, Greenidge, Persaud……. or even White Oaks, advised her to think differently? Or, was it a case she did not accept advice, which is characteristic of autocratic leadership style?

    David, do you believe LIAT 2020 Ltd.’s ceremonial flight to Dominica yesterday, was a coincidence, especially if one considers Dominica is the new airline’s other shareholder? The airline is currently completing all the training and regulatory requirements for the territories it will be flying to……. and is expected to announce, later this week, its LIMITED SCHEDULE as well as the DESTINATIONS it intends to service. If BGI and SVG decide to retaliate, similarly to how some Caribbean territories reacted to RedJet, Browne would most likely run to CARICOM to gain sympathy, by crying about hindering the progress of Caribbean unity.

    I’ve repeatedly mentioned Gaston Browne’s plans on BU, which were as ‘clear as sunny day, from day one.’ So far, he has fulfilled two of his major election promises. To build a UWI campus in Antigua, so Antiguans wouldn’t have to travel to UWI Cave Hill and LIAT to be owned by Antigua. He is yet to force the USA government to relocate its embassy to Antigua so Antiguans wouldn’t have travel to Barbados to apply for US visas.


  19. @TLSN

    Ignore @PLT. If you said that Osama Bin Laden was a terrorist he would say he was never convicted. Of course, you are right. Check out Operation Trojan Horse.
    Put simply, there is nothing called a moderate Muslim. They are all fully committed to reversing the Crusades, that is the measure of being a good Muslim, as it would be with any other religious group.

  20. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    Is the UWI campus for Antigua going to be a full fledge campus or just a small satellite campus? Who is going to pay for its operation? If the bigger campuses are struggling financially, how will Antigua with its small population base, make this work. Even if you add the OECS students cohort population, it’s still going to be a financial challenge to pull off.

    With UWI three campuses offering to some degree most of the same courses, inter-territorial travel between students from these Islands will be very low to nil in the near future. It would seemed that jamaica, Trinidad, and Barbados have indirectly nationalise their respective campus.


  21. @fortyacres

    The decision to establish a university in Antigua could have been based on politics. That is appeasing the sub group.


  22. (Quote):
    He is yet to force the USA government to relocate its embassy to Antigua so Antiguans wouldn’t have travel to Barbados to apply for US visas. (Unquote).
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    And that’s a strong possibility when Barbados goes the republic route and its geopolitical influence wanes in the Eastern Caribbean as it struggles to keep its economy afloat and to control the resulting crime and social dislocation.

    The expanding impact of Information Technology would make the need to travel to collect visas a thing of the past; thanks a lot to Covid-19.

  23. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    @David. This is a classical case where economics should over-ride political persuasion. Is the other three campuses going to subsidies the antiguan operation? What about the financial effect of that pivot on cave hill?

    I don’t believe the USA would move its embassy to Antigua. That wouldn’t make sense.

  24. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Hal Austin November 3, 2020 10:26 AM
    Of course Osama Bin Laden was a terrorist. The people who carried out the recent Vienna attacks are also terrorists.

    I was simply pointing out that in the western hemisphere, terrorist attacks by White supremacists are a bigger threat that those carried out in the name of Islam. Who says so? The FBI, who point out that from 2009 through 2018, White supremacists have been responsible for 73% of US domestic extremist-related fatalities. Being the FBI they are undercounting the White supremacist atrocities of course.


  25. @PLT

    The US is not the western world. I know sometimes it feels like it.

  26. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @ Hal Austin November 3, 2020 6:32 PM
    I said terrorist attacks “in our hemisphere” meaning the ‘new world’ on this side of the Atlantic.


  27. @PLT

    Which geographical regions do most terrorist attacks take place – I am defining terrorism conventionally?


  28. ” Owner of both operations, local construction magnate Mark Maloney.”
    https://barbadostoday.bb/2020/11/04/new-fbo-opens/


  29. Big UK setback
    By Gercine Carter
    gercinecarter@nationnews.com
    Britain’s November COVID-19 lockdown threatens to leave several Barbados hotels reeling from cancellations from their major source market.
    In addition, British Airways announced yesterday it would be suspending commercial flights from London Gatwick to Barbados Antigua and Barbuda, Grenada and St Lucia, following the UK Government’s announcement of a national lockdown for London.
    The suspension period for Barbados is from November 11 to December 9.
    Last Saturday, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced a new month-long lockdown for England after a resurgent coronavirus outbreak that threatened to overwhelm hospitals. He imposed stringent restrictions on business and daily life from yesterday that will last until December 2.
    Hoteliers told the Weekend Nation yesterday the action is already having an adverse effect on their business, with several cancellations being recorded, while some reservations were being pushed back at a time when hotels were hoping to improve occupancies after a long COVID-19 shutdown between April and July.
    “It has affected us badly,” said Wayne Capaldi, general manager of Coral Reef Resort, whose guests are mainly British. That West Coast hotel re-opened on October 3 and is currently running an occupancy of 35 per cent.
    “We have had cancellations from before, but since this has happened we had further cancellations, so we are probably going to be looking at 25 to 30 per cent occupancy for the rest of the month,” Capaldi said.
    He anticipated “a tough winter” for all of Barbados’ hotels.
    General manager of Port St Charles, Marina Stephen Austin, a former chairman of the Barbados Hotel & Tourism Association, described the shutdown as “a devastating blow for Barbados”.
    “We have a lot of homeowners who were looking to come in November and early December, but they are
    delaying their flights. Some of them are waiting to see what happens,” he said.
    Postponed till December
    Austin said the fallout was also being seen from “a couple of 12-month visa applications”, while one guest who was planning a long-stay at Port St Charles had postponed the visit until December.
    According to Morgan Seale, general manager of Sugar Bay Hotel at Hastings Christ Church, which only reopened its doors to business on Sunday and re-employed the majority of its staff, the UK lockdown is “devastating”.
    He said the impact has had a similar effect on the sister hotel Bougainvillea, since both properties attracted a significant level of British visitors.
    The story is no different for the Accra Group, comprising the 221-room Accra Beach Resort at Rockley, Christ Church, and Abidah by Accra at Enterprise, Christ Church. Group general manager Suresh Monickoraja confirmed Accra had been receiving “drastic cancellations” from the UK, the hotel’s main source market.
    Those cancellations extended from November to February 2021.

  30. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    Putting money at the disposal of businesses especially hotels and the tourism sector was a big mistake unless done as low interest loans backed by some sort of collateral to prevent misappropriation. Unemployment should have been extended from 6 to 12 months with government support.

    That would have kept things going until the pandemic is over.


  31. @ Critical

    It should have been offered as equity for debt, aft er a thorough audit of the books over the last three years. But, going forward, the conventional hotel model is out of date.


  32. @Critical Analyzer November 6, 2020 6:27 AM “That would have kept things going until the pandemic is over.”

    So can you please tell us when the pandemic will be over. You don’t have to give the week/hour/minute/second. Just the year and month is fine. Thanks.


  33. Of course our boy John has been telling us for months that the pandemic is over. So who is right? John? Or you?

    100,000 Americans tested positive for Covid19 yesterday. And hundreds of thousands more worldwide.


  34. Extracted from the Throne Speech..

    “The funds will primarily be distributed through investment in the companies by way of a class of shares that mirrors preference shares. There will be some limited opportunity for grants. This method of support will help to strengthen the weakened balance sheets of these firms. This Green and Digital Innovation Fund and training will also be available to small businesses and to manufacturing and agricultural enterprises, provided that they too have retained a significant portion of their jobs. The sums available for investment and grant will be capped to ensure that as many entities benefit as possible.”

  35. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    @Cuhdear Bajan November 6, 2020 6:38 AM
    The world governments will stop the lockdowns after the first week in December and certainly no lockdowns by Christmas. The cure can’t be worse than the disease and Christmas is the biggest commercial economic activity and goodwill driver of the year. Do you know how many businesses will fail and misery people will suffer if there is no Christmas economic activity after a totally lackluster year.

    The cases have increased but there is no commensurate increase in serious cases and deaths because the doctors are vastly better at treating it now than back in April when they were making colossal mistakes like waiting to treat, putting covid positive patients and workers in nursing home and rushing to put people on ventilators that ended up killing thousands.

    Don’t run wholesale with the statistics. Case numbers don’t tell the whole story and are strictly based on testing which has vastly increased since April. 80% of cases or more are mild cold-like symptoms or asymptomatic and most susceptible people already died. When the increase in serious cases and deaths doesn’t follow the large increase in new cases, this pandemic is over.

  36. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    @David November 6, 2020 7:19 AM

    Extracted from the Throne Speech..

    “The funds will primarily be distributed through investment in the companies by way of a class of shares that mirrors preference shares. There will be some limited opportunity for grants. This method of support will help to strengthen the weakened balance sheets of these firms. This Green and Digital Innovation Fund and training will also be available to small businesses and to manufacturing and agricultural enterprises, provided that they too have retained a significant portion of their jobs. The sums available for investment and grant will be capped to ensure that as many entities benefit as possible.”

    That is money magic trick speak for taxpayers will give the business owners some money you can divert to themselves, declare bankruptcy of your current business venture and restart something similar under a new name in about a year or two. These decisions happen when you put doctors and lawyers in charge of business. Money for them grows on trees cause they can bill and charge to suit their needs without consequences like most other business that must constantly fight balance expenses against revenue to survive.

  37. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    @Hal Austin November 6, 2020 6:35 AM

    @ Critical

    It should have been offered as equity for debt, aft er a thorough audit of the books over the last three years. But, going forward, the conventional hotel model is out of date.

    I personally would not care about the books before the loan but they must follow quarterly accounting reporting principles going forward and agree to random surprise audits at short notice until the money is paid back in full.

    The future is the personalised airbnb model with the hotels focusing on the wealthy, the business traveller and tourists that really desire that concierge treatment. But the hotels will rail as long as they can against that model since they currently have the money clout and so much invested in that conventional hotel model.

    Anybody building a house of more than 2 bedrooms should be looking to build the 3+ bedrooms as a separate studio type addition they can offer for rent to tourists who are yearning for local culture at a reasonable rate.


  38. @ Critical

    Quarterly reporting is simply meant for the stock markets; they are often not audited and reflect what the CEO wants them to. Annual reports for listed companies are audited by law and so we have better figures. Even then they are often cooked.
    As to the hotel model, airbnb is simply the latest trend.


  39. Unfortunately after reading the column by Mr Loveridge, I am again insulted by the expressions which form the mindset of these people. It seems to clearly(well at least to me) point to the absolute “dumpsiness” and uselessness, of this group. Hoteliers from Time and Memorial were begging for concessions and favors. They wanted the world at Duty Free concessions, claiming that their role in the country’s biggest employment sector (weather by design or default) was so critical that their request to be Illustrious Parasites on the rest of us was warranted.

    They paid local employees next to nothing for the most part while importing high-priced trash into this island to live high on the hog.
    Some even become so callous that they started to advertise for the most common jobs claiming that they could not find suitable candidates here. Pathetic!
    Now that Covid has closed many doors, they have shown that they aren’t resilient. Truthfully, whether we like it or not, our tourism product was very fragile for years. It is the reason that we quickly sought out and prosecuted, sometimes persecuted those who committed heinous crimes against visitors. But we had no Plan-B for a major attack on tourism whether planned or unintended. Greed-mongers, a.k.a Hoteliers, were holding Barbados and its successive governments ransom all along but never thought or sought to seek to ask ” What would happen if people couldn’t come here anymore? Where would that lead us economically?”

    Sandals, yes, Sandals came here and apparently have been identified as a big part of the reason that the South Coast Sewerage issue became publicly, sorry, Internationally apparent. Yet, now that we have a tax associated with this shit( no pun intended here) which aims at correcting the problems associated with this Human waste disposal matter, Sandals still has not been asked to pay a red cent( as far as I am aware). Worse yet, over 80% of Barbados is graced with “suck Wells” as we like to refer to them as, and they are paying this tax. And that is deemed to be fair!
    Look, Tourism is just about dead. Let it DIE!

    I do not want a dollar of my tax dollars, especially those that are unfairly levied against, me to go to support parasites.Tired of you and your complaints.You had a long run. Your time is up
    This economy needs to transition to a Information based, services economy. Those who wish to visit Barbados are always welcome to do so, but our focus now needs to be on attracting those “visitors” who are able to assists and guide us towards Digital Transformation and economic resilience, not transcendental meditation and wallowing in the past!
    Keep coming to this column, complaining and fussing about something that is clearly useless to the majority of us now. Something that is dear to you, that you have used to help rape and pillage the country for at east two decades and cant seem to accept that it is now at an end.
    Keep expecting us to line your pockets under the guise that you are valuable to Barbados or Barbadians.
    This is your space, it is your voice, it is your soapbox, but we, aren’t interested in it or you anymore!
    Now go away and let positive change reign!


  40. To suggest that tourism is fragile and not resilience is to say what in a covid period?


  41. IS to say that: You either didn’t read in its entirety the submission or don’t understand what was said therein.
    Is to say that: Whether it was Covid, Terrorism or just plain stupidity, there was clearly no Plan-B for dealing with an incident that could have impacted tourism negatively.

    Is to say that: Covid is just the newest scapegoat that the Tourism sector has used to quantify their under-performance and continued failures while continuing to attempt to justify why we need to pump money into this bottomless pit.

    Is to say that: We are now tired of the lies, and coverups and want this gone, and now!

    yes. there is the passion emerging in the writing but you know what, its just the lies and wastage that we are being asked to continue to prop up financially with certain people benefiting while the rest of us can just go suck salt.
    Well no more! Its dead. Let the parasites nursing the corpse of this dead animal catch a case of Septicemia and perish too!


  42. What Plan B can a tourism dependent economy have in a global economy gripped by a pandemic? The bigger issue is how should we structure the domestic economy to mitigate exogenous events.


  43. So I thought long and hard of the response to your question.
    The reason that I did is that there is something that bothers me as to whether we are that “mind-locked” or truly unaware of what options and opportunities lie our way.

    When The Hon. David Thompson first took the reigns of government, in his first budget speech, he removed all duties and taxes from Alternative Energy Generating Sources.I suspect that he had a vision back then.
    Those duties included duties on Wind, Solar, Wave and Geothermal energy generating sources. However, in Barbados today, we seem to focus exclusively on Solar, but that is fine.
    So here is my thought.

    While Tourism is faltering, we had the opportunity to invest heavily in Solar and Wind energy projects.
    Not because we ( the country here) expects to be paid by BL&P for the energy that we generate and put onto the national grid, but because for every kW of energy we produce using these alternate sources, we save $10, or $15 or $20 on the cost of purchasing fuel oil and gasoline from the word market.
    So it means that while our Energy import bill s $200 Million in 2015 for example, it drops to 50 Million in 2019 because of what we are producing. So we save. Those savings get re-invested into another A.E project, or into R&D in some emerging technology. This will means however that the ” Dumpsies” who have their dirty paws all over this economy now, will be relieved of their grip if only because they cant control the “New Economy”. They can just participate in it.
    How does that translate you may ask?

    Well, we can now compete with bigger countries in the manufacturing space because we can sell energy significantly cheaper than we could previously. So we are more resilient and competitive.
    We always want to see the light at the end of the tunnel, and Tourism certainly cant cut it now, so what will we do?
    I see that one core issue is that when we diversify to that extent, the average man can become involved and that is a threat to the Political Class (a term coined by Fruendel Stuart). That class seems to always need someone to look up to them for their bread crumbs and other paltry handouts, and without that perceived level of pseudo-importance, they will fight tooth and nail to keep this country back, to their own benefi and our collective peril.

    Stop thinking like a slave mind. If we continue to see this as a curse, we will never rise above it. Get away from tourism and do so now.
    Start to “Think services”
    Think Intellectual Products,
    Stop seeing every transaction as having to exchange a physical item, for money. Tourism doesn’t do that right now, so we are already part way there in our thinking.Start seeing transactions as being able to exchange ideas, and thoughts, the results of Research and Development ( R&D).
    Stop expecting only certain “classes” to lead this economy and country. They have clearly failed because new ideas aren’t part of them.
    “What Plan B can a tourism dependent economy have in a global economy gripped by a pandemic?” The one that neither depends on Tourism, or is affected by a pandemic.
    The one that everyone needs, wants and uses, regardless of the time of day, month or yea is is. Think Instagram and Facebook. And to that point, Allan Emptage was the first person to write a search engine. The grand daddy of Google and BING. That’s what we Barbados should be selling. The proceeds from great minds who are conceptualizing ideas that are revolutionary, and evolutionary.
    We need the will to let go of the status quo and enter into that bold new world where everyone can play a part in making it a success.
    Do you see a new structure for a domestic economy now?


  44. Supporting an alternative energy program is a good thing, from what has been discussed on BU over the years, however, replacing fossil fuel and BL&P must be done in a way to avoid destabilizing the grid in the process. The blogmaster is not an engineer to be useful discussing the intricacies of an aggressive transformation from fossil to alternative except to to suggest alternative energy is one strategy to save forex but it is not the only strategy. This government is pinning its hopes on the reemergence of tourism, all agree we should take the opportunity by using the current crisis to work at building a resilient economy by weaning ourselves from tourism. Let us agree on this point.


  45. @The Watcher November 7, 2020 11:02 PM
    “I see that one core issue is that when we diversify to that extent, the average man can become involved and that is a threat to the Political Class (a term coined by Fruendel Stuart). That class seems to always need someone to look up to them for their bread crumbs and other paltry handouts, and without that perceived level of pseudo-importance, they will fight tooth and nail to keep this country back, to their own benefi and our collective peril.”
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    There is a lot of intellectual substance to your contribution; especially to the above quoted statement.

    But questions still remain (as the Blogmaster pointed out subsequently) about the reliability and consistency of alternative energy supplies and their impact on the stability of the existing island-wide grid to undergird a modern economy dependent on the supply of services of whichever kind, in whatever form and whether local or international.

    What will happen to the generating plant at Spring Garden? Should there be no further capital investment in it to ensure its capacity to supply?

    BTW, just one minor matter of adjustment.

    As is his wont, Freundel Stuart more ‘copied’ than “coined” that term “political class”.
    It has been around in the realm of political science since the writings of Max Weber and even before.

    Neither FJS nor his Bajan classmates pursuing politics purely for a vocation can ‘think’ that big outside their ‘myopic’ brain boxes to appreciate, even superficially, what you have just written.


  46. @ Miller November 8, 2020 4:27 AM

    I see that you simply adore the previous PM as much as some others do.
    “Neither FJS nor his Bajan classmates pursuing politics purely for a vocation can ‘think’ that big outside their ‘myopic’ brain boxes to appreciate, even superficially, what you have just written.

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    To the substantive point that you made, and that point made by the Blog-master on the stability of the grid and the usefulness or future of the SG Generating plant.

    There is a MYTH, yes, a MYTH proliferated by elements of, or agents of the BL&P, or the BL&P themselves regarding this narrative surrounding destabilizing the national grid with PV generated power.
    If you were ever graced with the ability to see what a 120V waveform at 50 hertz (cycles) looks like on an Oscilloscope, you can’t distinguish the source of the power between Fossil generated electricity or PV or other Alternative energy sourced power.
    The only differentiation you will see here in Barbados at least is lots of “artifacts” from the BL&P source as their equipment i so old and ram-shackle that it is best to install Power Conditioners at your home when connected to these clowns. But enough about them.

    The reason that the claim of destabilizing the grid makes no sense, lies in two facts:
    1. There are stringent requirements imposed on any residential or business entity wishing to engage in a Grid-Tie arrangement with the local power company
    2. The PV equipment used in grid tie is regulated and tested by organizations like UL (Underwriters Laboratory) and other bodies which are standards based organizations that ensure compliance to international electrical codes.

    Let me at this point say that the BL&P should be grossly ashamed to even run this “smush” grid which really exists few other places in the world. The frequency/voltage combination ensures that we are not only NON-standard, but that when we have to go back to places like GE and Westinghose to order new generators, we have to pay top dollar based on this non-standard approach. And we know based on previous experiences with the BL&P, they will expect to put that cost directly on us because apparently their business model doesn’t support Op-ex, Cap-ex or any form of business expense. This is one of the reasons that we need to take over this national grid and run them out. Penniless too!
    But that’s another discussion for another time.
    Back to the grid.

    So PV or any Alternative Energy source doesn’t destabilize any grid based on the Standards Based approach to engineering, design and integration. It would be quite surprising if it were to be able to do so here. But we are Barbados after all, and we just do everything differently than the remainder of the world, so who knows!

    Let’s quickly touch on the generating plants at Spring Garden and Seawell. Put simply, they will run under less load. Our power usage during the daytime hours when I last researched it was somewhere around 130 Megawatts (130MW). At night this drops to 90 Megawatts (90MW). Of course, with no sun shining at night, their use is still necessary, but let’s hypothesize that we can produce across the grid cumulatively somewhere around 60MW per day, then we only need to produce (70)MW by fossil fuel generators like those at Spring Garden and Seawell to meet daily demand. And with more and more PV plants coming onto the grid, this figure can become lower by a percentage point or two over the calendar year.
    So we aren’t throwing them away, but you can see how the cost of generating electricity falls dramatically with the integration of more and more solar onto the grid. Well honestly, more and more Alternative Energy. I keep reverting to Solar or Photovoltaic (PV) because it seems to be the most popular form or AE here in Barbados.
    If we include wind into the mix, it gets even better. I envisage the erection of 5 or 6 multi megawatt wind turbines at the old location of the Earth Station at Bath St John. Let’s say we just erected 6 10MW turbines and grid tied them, that’s 60MW of power into the grid 24/7. Now dependency on the sun. Don’t bother to ask about salt air and all that because the world places these turbines out in the North Sea and they work. So if they can’t work at Bath, we have real problems.
    The point here is, we can achieve significant gains with Alternative Energy, but are afraid of who will be able to own and use it to suppress the masses.as opposed to uplift them. So, we are going to have to decide what’s best; Throwing cold water and doubt on proven science, or getting Barbados really moving and not with Massa-controlled baby steps that amount to nothing in the grand scheme of things.
    My action items would be as follows:
    1. Make the necessary moved to re-claim and own the national grid. Offer Barbadians through a scheme similar to the NIS, a fixed share ownership in the company and limit investment by businesses or high net worth individuals so that it is truly a National asset.
    2. Set a goal of 20 MW to the grid per year for the next 5 years as a National Initiative to grow the generating capacity of the company and invite power dependent business here to offer employment but more critically, technological development in the country.
    3. Offer a rebate on the cost of a new EV with a trade in program for “old beaters” equivalent to the age of that old car up to 30 years. So as an example, if I own a 15 year old car, I can get a 15% discount towards the purchase cost of a new EV. I believe that this is significant in a few ways. First, the fuel import bill goes down. The cost of parts also gets reduced. We start to reduce automotive garbage generated as a result of having to dispose old car parts and sometimes, old cars themselves. Finally, but probably of the greatest importance, we reduce pollution and other dangerous by product gases of combustion.

    This is not rocket science, it just takes the balls to implement in the face of rising stupidity and greed!


  47. You are suggesting by your comment that the government does not have access to SMEs equipped to shatter the MYTH?


  48. I don’t know who has access to what.
    That MYTH should never have been allowed to take any root sufficiently so that it can come up in intelligent discussions. Should have long been put to bed.
    So if the government possesses the mechanism(s) to have dealt successively with it is really unknown to me.
    In my mind, I don’t think that it was honestly a government issue to be fair. It was so nonsensical that it should have just died with the average man in our population being educated enough to be able to discern truth from lies.


  49. The government has access to expertise and it can be found in the private sector. Why have parties in the know not felt obligated to be strident advocates a la Cahill for example?

  50. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    It all comes down to the big players and how governmental decisions will impact their revenue streams and the level of influence these players can bring to bear on government’s decision makers and their making process to adjust it to favour their interests or delay the decision process long enough that they can take advantage of the change when it comes.

    Big players are not just big business but also various groups and associations that have the ability to influence the decision makers if they so desire.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

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