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Less than one month after the Phillip J. Pierre’s St. Lucia Labour Party (SLP) won the government in St. Lucia from Allen Chastanet’s United Workers Party (UWP) the Deputy Governor General read the following in the Throne Speech:-

My Government in recognition of the widespread, unprecedented reports of alleged corruption during the term of the last administration will appoint a special prosecutor to investigate allegations of corruption and Government. This appointment is expected to be completed soon. My Government will strengthen the integrity commission to return our country to a system that respects our democratic norms and the rights of the people. My Government will reactivate the bipartisan parliamentary committee to review Justice Suzie d’Auvergne Constitution report and the parliamentary recommendations, with a view to adopting final recommendations for implementation.

Extract from Throne Speech (St. Lucia)

The appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate charges of corruption by the former Chastanet government delivered on a key campaign promise by the SLP. In less than one month the SLP has started the ball rolling in a tangibly and visible manner. Time will tell if the special prosecutor will be able to discover evidence of the corruption hinted on the campaign platform.

The decision taken by the SLP government in St. Lucia contrast starkly to what occurred in Barbados post 2018 general elections. The Mia Mottley led government after three years in office has made no tangible or visible attempt to deliver on a similar promise made on 2018 general election campaign to prosecute corruption. Thousands of Barbadians were ‘mamaguyed’ into a belief that there was a mountain of evidence safely stored in the RED BAG by then Opposition Leader Mia Mottley. After three years it is safe to say Barbadians were given a ‘big rock’, the RED BAG was a prop in a well designed melodrama called – Geh Muh de Vote and Watch Muh.

Some will suggest former minister Donville Inniss suffered the ignominy of being the first minister in a Barbados Cabinet to be incarcerated, therefore the incumbent government must receive some credit? The irony is that Inniss was incarcerated in the USA because of a transaction that originated in Barbados. It was reported in the case notes local authorities cooperated with US law agencies, however, to date no charge has been made against Inniss by local authorities. The electorate geh dem de vote and watching dem like a hawk with 2023 quickly approaching.

All manner of reasons have been shared with the public by Prime Minister Mia Mottley and Attorney General Dale Marshall why they have been unable to deliver on expansive promises about corruption made in 2018. One does not have to do scientific polling to deduce that the 30-0 mandate the Barbados Labour Party (BLP) received was because a large segment of the electorate bought into the promise that corrupt behaviour would have been exposed and actors held accountable by this government. Three years later it is fair to surmise we are having more of the same.

The government will proffer that it has had to grapple with an economy in unprecedented decline, followed by the pandemic made worse by ash fall from La Soufriere- the result of which the economy loss 2 million dollars in economic activity. A reasonable question must be asked and answered – why has St. Lucia been able to initiate a formal process to investigate corruption suspected of the Chastanet government in less than one month?


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101 responses to “Red Bag Politics”


  1. Mia needs to keep Africa out of her mouth until she SETUPS systems that ENSURE African DESCENDANTS in Barbados have ALL RIGHT OF WAY and INROADS to THEIR CONTINENT…

    OUR CONTINENT will not be used for small island nasty colonial politics and dirty games…..eg the THUG IN ST. VINCENT…and yall wicked plans with corrupt CRIMINAL minorities.

    Africa is WATCHING…welcome to the REAL WORLD OF THE NEW BLACK WORLD ORDER….sans Pope White Dress.


  2. Concern over ‘back and forth’
    The Crown’s prosecutor has expressed displeasure with the slow pace of the extradition proceedings against former senior vice-president of the Insurance Corporation of Barbados Ltd, Alex Tasker.
    However, Chief Magistrate Ian Weekes says his ruling on the matter could come at the end of this month.
    The parties were back in the District “A” Magistrates Court, where Tasker, of Mayfair Terrace, Lead Vale, Christ Church, is facing extradition proceedings. He is wanted in the United States to face trial for conspiracy to launder money and money laundering between August 2015 and April 2016.
    Both sides had submitted written arguments to the court, and Queen’s Counsel Andrew Pilgrim, who is representing Tasker, suggested that the next court date could be used “to reply and respond either orally or in writing and then the court could adjourn to decide”.
    However, Acting Director of Public Prosecutions Alliston Seale responded by saying he thought they had canvassed all the arguments in the matter.
    Noting that he was becoming frustrated, Seale said: “I thought when (Mr Pilgrim) had asked that they be reduced to writing that this would have been it. I didn’t know that it would be more forward and backward and back and forward. I thought that we were at the end,” he said.
    “I surely thought, as we move forward, it would have been now, having gotten them (written submissions) today, how long the court would take to consider these things and make a determination.
    “I am now at a loss to believe we would be canvassing issues now that come out of these written submissions that came out of these oral submissions. I really thought we would have gotten past this by now, having started this matter last year,” Seale said, before adding he was “in the court’s hands”.
    Chief Magistrate Weekes then told the parties, he would hear Pilgrim’s arguments on the next occasion.
    “And it may be such that I can respond the same time. I anticipate it could be something I can rule on the next time,” he said before adjourning the matter until August 31.
    Tasker remains on $200 000 bail with a surety; his passport remains in the custody of the court; he continues to report to the Glebe Police Station every Tuesday, Friday and Sunday and is on a 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew.


    Source: Nation

  3. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Tasker has to report THREE times per week and is on a daily curfew?
    How archaic is this?


  4. @NO

    It gives an insight into the mind of the magistrate?


  5. “I surely thought, as we move forward, it would have been now, having gotten them (written submissions) today, how long the court would take to consider these things and make a determination.
    “I am now at a loss to believe we would be canvassing issues now that come out of these written submissions that came out of these oral submissions. I really thought we would have gotten past this by now, having started this matter last year,” Seale said, before adding he was “in the court’s hands”.

    that’s the 40 YEAR OLD TREND…after written submissions…NOTHING…and that can last for years and years and NEVER end..

    the CCJ keeps complaining and the SUPREME COURT KEEPS IGNORING…


  6. When DLP members met yesterday to vote, angry citizens would have loved to drive up with a tanker full of slurry to spray them with shit – so they could smell for themselves what their grandees have done to the South Coast.


  7. Oh dear! Mia hit the “big time” British journalist fuh six! Wuh the impression that was given by a BU Bajan Brit was that it was the other way around.

    These fake narratives the white man spins need to be exposed.

    I only found out during the Trump years the extent of US debt to China.

    Next fake narrative is money laundering. More escapes there than here.

    Down here to get even a damn health insurance policy you need two forms of ID. So you have to spend money on a passport or a driver’s licence.

    How much money can one launder through a health insurance policy? How much money WOULD one launder through a health insurance policy that only pays big if one gets really ill.


  8. Cud dear it ain’t fair that Donville up there in an orange jump suit and he don’t have a friendly face to talk to about Bim. Wunna could at least send up Tasker so they could sit and chat about the good old days for the next few years!


  9. Guy Fawkes?

    BBC Anchor Zeinab Badawi was carved a brand new ASS on July 25, 2021 de new official Guy Fawkes day.

    As BDS Prime Minister proceeded cogently, The task was witnessed by the world @ Large.


  10. @Hants

    A slick political move by the PM to offer to nominate the DLP appointed GG Sandra Mason.

  11. William Skinner Avatar

    @ David
    It is a simple courtesy and reflects a smooth transition to republic status.
    Sir John Snow was Governor and he became our first Governor General.
    Nothing politically “ slick “ here. This was expected .


  12. @William

    The government could have nominated another, their man or woman. By transitioning Mason the government has effectively muted some of the opposition criticism regarding pace of transition to republic.


  13. Mottley: Covid-19 must not divide us
    In her first public appearance since taking a two-week official holiday, Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley yesterday attempted to bring the country together on the controversial choice of getting vaccinated in an all-out effort for Barbados to reach herd immunity.
    During a 60-minute nationally televised address, Mottley said she had paid rapt attention to the thoughts, feelings and choices of Barbadians surrounding a decision to be or not to be vaccinated during three recent town hall meetings where Ministry of Health officials tried to settle the nerves of citizens through explanation of the advantages of taking vaccines, but did not want the issue to split the country down the middle.
    “We want to be able to set clear objectives to keep Barbadians safe. The variants have placed pressure on all countries across the world, and we are very conscious of what is happening with the Delta variant.”
    Mottley added that stakeholders would be meeting the Social Partnership on the matter for a second time on August 30.
    The Prime Minister revealed that Cabinet had determined there should be no introduction of a mandatory vaccination programme in Barbados, even though Government had still sought a legal opinion it.
    “The Cabinet has agreed we should not mandate vaccines but we want to keep the country safe and to keep the country united,” the Prime Minister said. “COVID-19 must not be allowed to divide us as a people. We have to keep talking about it, and we agreed that is the way we should go. We’ve never allowed these things to divide us as a people,” she added, while enforcing the point that though the virus had still only touched two per cent of the country, it had affected at one stage, almost 90 per cent of the country’s workforce.
    Respected choice
    The Prime Minister said she respected the choice of Barbadians who continue to stress they do not want to be vaccinated, for fundamentalist, religious or medical reasons. “We will talk to you,” she said to those who remained ambivalent about taking any vaccines. “Those who don’t want to, we respect you,” she said, while adding she appreciated that more workers on the frontlines were coming forward to be vaccinated.
    But, she reminded all that vaccination remained the best way to significantly reduce the pressure on Barbados’ public health system, since it reduced
    the level of hospitalisations and deaths associated with the viral illness. She said a clear example of that was that just one vaccinated person in Barbados had required primary care after contracting COVID-19.
    Mottley said from tomorrow she would be attending institutions to hear first-hand from workers their thoughts and concerns about vaccinations.
    She said consultation had also commenced with stakeholders in the Ministry of Education, the Pan American Health Organisation (PAHO) and UNICEF regarding a framework for the eventual vaccination of the 28 000 students between the ages of 12 and 18 who could be inoculated now that Barbados has received 70 000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine.
    The Prime Minister said officials from the Ministry of Health had consulted with the paediatricians in Barbados, and had been given the recommendation to start vaccinating the country’s younger generation. That is expected to start by the end of this week, Mottley revealed.
    (BA)

    Source: Nation


  14. Curbing unethical behaviour
    Unethical behaviour significantly increases the cost of doing business. – Frank Sonnenberg.
    In our last submission, the Integrity Group of Barbados advocated for more to be done to reduce corruption by the private sector. This piece will continue our focus on the private sector and offer some practical solutions to mitigate the occurrence.
    Not only are some business leaders in the Caribbean motivated to engage in corruption when conducting business with government, but some employees also feel pressured to behave unethically for a variety of reasons.
    How to counter both employee and employer unethical behaviour, whether provoked by company policies/ structure or as a result of poor ethics on the part of the employee and employer, must be prioritised. We believe that curbing corporate corruption demands deliberate and collaborative efforts.
    Businesses within the private sector operate in a global environment which has the resources to provide much needed advice on good practices for companies that value effective corporate governance. There is no excuse for continuing misbehaviour.
    One such global resource available to all corporate leaders is the Ethics Resource Centre, which provides information and guidance for ethics in business.
    Such information serves as a practical benchmark for companies which are desirous of assessing their own internal attempts to implement and secure ethical and compliance programmes. This is true for both long-established businesses as well as emerging small enterprises, the latter often lacking in resources and tools to ensure that they pursue ethical practices.
    We cannot sufficiently underscore the importance of ethical leadership in this regard, and while we understand that leaders, too, are a product of the environment in which they live, good corporate governance practices have evolved over the course of the last few decades.
    The existence of ethical leadership will undoubtedly provide the necessary fillip for all workers
    to follow and avoid the lure of corruption.
    The centre makes it clear that, given the increasing importance placed on transparency, many savvy consumers tend to look beyond the companies’ internal practices by focusing too on how companies treat their suppliers and the ethical standards employed.
    Minimally, corporate ethical leaders must undertake risk assessments that have, as a basic pillar, an evaluation of all its suppliers, vendors and other point of contacts within the orbit of the company.
    The importance of good practices cannot be overstated.
    Two of the most basic instruments used are the code of conduct and mission statement, which must be communicated to all of the companies’ stakeholders as the sine qua non of their modus operandi.
    It is crucial that employers are resolute in their stance to not only counter but to transform the culture of corruption into a business environment that has adopted a no-tolerance approach to the same. A robust whistle-blowing process is integral to this effort.
    Substantial and lasting eradication of corruption requires that the board of directors and management prioritise ethical practices by responding to the prevalence of this issue with persistent action. Failure to advise on these habits and core values can impede progress.
    These approaches must also be open to scrutiny and feedback from workers, in keeping with a business culture of transparency and fairness.
    This article was submitted by the Integrity Group of Barbados.


    Source: Nation


  15. I expected nothing else. A good move to calm fears and also to avoid the appearance of denigrating the lady.

    It suggests to those who were expecting major changes that the roles will not be changed significantly.


  16. They don’t mind the country being divided SOCIALLY and FINANCIALLY for 55 YEARS, post-emancipation, but got a problem with it being divided MEDICALLY…

    no one gives a shit about the social partnership of parasites and CROOKS…everyone should STOP WORKING WITH OR FOR THEM…

    corrupt governments will NOT be making corrupt decisions for intelligent Black people anymore..people will decide if they want to be vaccinated or not given that BOTH HAVE HIGH RISKS.

  17. William Skinner Avatar

    @ David
    In one breath you berate the fact that polarization is killing the country. In another, you have to “ could have” this and that to credit the PM with being “politically slick.”
    Rather than accept that on this occasion the PM made a decision that will be regarded as the correct thing to do.
    As a firm supporter of the country becoming a Republic, I can assure you that those who oppose it will not be silenced by this move.
    Not one single opponent of becoming a republic has sought to draw Dame Sandra into the raging debate.
    Just admit that you like others believe Mottley is a political McGuffie but so was Barrow and Arthur. And after all of that hero worship BS , the question remains: Where is the country to day?
    Even those opposed to becoming a republic will welcome President Mason because as the PM correctly stated she is highly commended for the way she has thus far executed her duties as GG.
    Sometimes we just spit in the air and then let it drop on our faces.
    Nobody plants okra and reap corn. Stop stroking the fire of polarization while pretending you want to put it !

  18. William Skinner Avatar

    Should read : “ while pretending you want to put it out ! “


  19. @Wlliam

    As usual you have problems with conflating issues. What does being slick have to do with polarization? She made a decision that is correct but there is the political considerations that must fact given the goal of a politician/political party.


  20. @WS
    @David
    “By transitioning Mason the government has effectively muted some of the opposition criticism regarding pace of transition to republic.”

    This was a slick move. To do otherwise would have been adding coals to a lit fire. Here she has closed off one line of attack and dare I say “added some legitimacy” to a process that was being questioned.


  21. A decision. Without legalization
    A dececision which employers can toss and turn for their best interest
    Mia states that COVID must not divide the country
    Well her decision yesterday did not help to heal the division
    MIA tossed the whole bag of vaccine back into the public hand as an escape valve and one which requires meaningful legislation to put the issue at rest


  22. The government cannot dictate to businesses how to proceed. Those businesses that want to proceed with such a policy open themselves to facing a legal challenge. The governments interest is public sector employees.


  23. “Fowl slave”…………

    The PM made the announcement YESTERDAY……….. Saturday.

    How do you know or who told you there won’t be any legislation?


  24. ArtaxAugust 22, 2021 7:17 AM

    “Fowl slave”…………

    The PM made the announcement YESTERDAY……….. Saturday.

    How do you know or who told you there won’t be any legislation?

    Xxxxxxx
    Firstly she made a comment that cabinet and her agreed to No mandatory vaccine
    One would have expected that to underscore that statement she would have made a comment which as to strengthen the issue as to having legislation
    She did not
    Therfore my comment remains and which u cannot refute or call a lie


  25. DavidAugust 22, 2021 7:16 AM

    The government cannot dictate to businesses how to proceed. Those businesses that want to proceed with such a policy open themselves to facing a legal challenge. The governments interest is public sector employees.
    Xxccccc
    Says who
    On COVID issues of health this govt has unilateral decision
    This one and important issue govt can implement legislation
    Mottley statement yesterday does not have the legal strength necessary to stop employers from demanding the employee from taking the vaccine
    Mia took a political football and threw it back into the people laps


  26. No it does not.


  27. Mia does realize that in the interview with the BBC presenter shows hypocrisy at its most ugly….there is NO RESPECT for the BLACK/AFRICAN descendants coming from the haunted parliament…and nothing but minority rule, apartheid, racism, disenfranchisement, and oppression….which makes the Black majority 2nd class citizens in THEIR COUNTRY built by them and their ANCESTORS……that is NEVER GOING AWAY as long as it’s MAINTAINED with money generated by the African descended majority…

    am now watching the WHOLE INTERVIEW..


  28. Lawd….it took 5 years but damn they got them. The Panama Papers stars..

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/real-estate-fractional-investing-1.6148981


  29. For those who are obsessed with and impressed by 99c dime store titles like president and colonial agent banners worn by those who are, have been for 55 years and ALWAYS WILL BE subordinate to others…..not my style.

    https://www.nationnews.com/2021/08/22/de-peiza-no-power-constitution/


  30. The stain of corruption
    “HOWEVER, if stricter measures are implemented and enforced, partaking in corrupt practices can potentially expose executives, directors and employees to the corresponding legal penalties in the form of fines.”
    THIS IS AN EXTRACT from an article appearing on Wednesday, August 11, in the MIDWEEK NATION newspaper headed Corruption Not To Be Tolerated, which calls for sobering analysis.
    The article dealt with politicians and aspects of the private sector, but bankers get their fair share of corrupt offers. Politicians are bombarded with requests to grant favours, manipulate deals, and so on. Bankers are asked to grant loans, forgive loans or legal action and also get their fair share of corrupt offers.
    Nothing can be compared to a country in crisis. Jamaica was in crisis, especially during the 1960s and 1970s – perhaps it is still in crisis.
    Prime Minister Manley had said that there were five flights a day to Miami and Jamaicans were taking them, anxious to leave. Nothing could have challenged a bank manager more.
    There were customers who would enter my office, place their gun on my desk and request a loan of, for example, $120 000, telling me $100 000 was for them and $20 000 for me.
    You do not get on your high horse with such behaviour. You tell them to take that thing off your desk, swear a little and ask them what they really want – if you want to do any business for the day.
    And that would not be the only corrupt proposal for the day.
    The bank might be selling units under a subdivision where the owner is in default. A wealthy customer may call and ask: “What is the minimum price set for the auction?”
    Toxic atmosphere
    The banking atmosphere was toxic and it took care and a tough stance to operate in such an environment. However, it was not this situation that prompted me to leave the scene of battle. I did not like the violence in the society and figured that at some point, it would catch up with me. That is when the opportunity arose to come home to Barbados.
    While the threat of violence was absent in Barbados, the offer of bribes to the manager of a bank was – if not quite as open as in Jamaica – the same. And the offer of a brown paper bag was payment for a favour.
    It would not be proper of me to go into details, but I can say that what was outlined in the mentioned article above cannot be gainsaid. Added to this was the relationship between the private sector and the Government.
    This really reared its head in the political arena where politicians rely on the support of the private sector to fund their campaign at election time. Reluctantly, I threw my hat into the ring at the persuasion of what I felt was a raw deal.
    I would say that what was portrayed by the article Corruption Not To Be Tolerated is not far off the mark. Every year the Auditor General produces a report that confirms this article. It seems that it is a game that politicians and the rich private sector play on a continuous basis. Such a game is so persuasive that it seems to be the way business should be run and to hell with ordinary people.
    Little hope
    I hold out little hope that it will change in the near future. I wish the Integrity Group of Barbados good luck in changing something that seems to be endemic in politicians in the Caribbean. Maybe not only slavery was brought over, but the habit of the slave traders in Africa.
    Today, there is talk about reparation, but to whom is the hullabaloo addressed?
    In many cases, British, Portuguese and French marauders could not get their vessels filled with slaves without the intervention of black chiefs who had captured the slaves and brought them to the coast. Even when there was an effort to end slave trading by the British government, there was open resentment from the black chiefs whose prosperity depended on their being able to supply slaves.
    Slaves from East Africa made their way into the East to India for agricultural cultivation, just as slaves from the west of Africa made their way to the Caribbean and America. In fact, slaves from East Africa eventually made their way to Brazil and the United States, increasing gradually in the 18th century.
    Until appropriate legislation is passed and enforced, we will not be rid of this blemish that has haunted these shores from the time the British merchant seamen asked the name of this place.
    Harry Russell is a banker. Email quijote70@gmail.com

    Source: Nation


  31. Excellent.
    It’s good to see Bajans speaking up. We are moving from the point of a trickle of information and everybody knowing a rumor, to those on the battlefield speaking up and confirming the presence of corruption.

    Notice that the information on politicians is skimpy to too general. We have not found the courage to cross that bridge.

    We are getting somewhere, but we have to move past the point where clients a separated for decades and having show trials to clawing back money and giving lawyers serious jail time.

    Bankers, politicians, lawyers …..


  32. We are getting somewhere, but we have to move past the point where clients are separated from their money for decades and having show trials to actively clawing back the clients monies and giving their lawyers serious jail time.


  33. Don’t get me wrong, I’m all for mother Africa. However, let us not forget the reason we exist outside of the continent of Africa. It is due to the duplicity of our own brothers and sisters on that continent. Africa is embedded with their own versions of the notorious Drax’s family having accumulated over the centuries extraordinary generational wealth.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-58291132


  34. TLSN…life is funny, BECAUSE OF and given those 400 year old chain of events…we are now actually 60 YEARS AHEAD of the continent in terms of knowledge etc

    ….pay back is quite the bitch….and now they need us, beause of WHO they SOLD/BOUGHT/KIDNAPPED..


  35. BECAUSE of WHO they SOLD/BOUGHT/KIDNAPPED..

    everyone needs to do their own research on their African origins..


  36. in saying that, the continent IS OURS through glorious ancesty…and i will defend it TO THE END from minority thieves, the sellouts/TRAITOR who are their fellow criminals in parliaments on blighted Caribbean islands…..

    we are THE CHOSEN…

    the more you dig, the more interesting it gets..


  37. giving out tips today…

    just remember these three POWERFUL ANCESTRIES:

    KUSH, KEMET & TIMBUKTU…

    remember the world criminals tried to steal the Timbuktu name, patented it and had to return it recently….and others over the decades tried to steal our CHOSEN designation to label their fraud selves……..pay attention…


  38. Wuh rumour wuh! Long time we have known that bankers sell repossessed cars and houses foreclosed upon to their friends, often well below the market price. They recover their funds and most likely split the difference with the buyer while the defaulter gets zilch.


  39. information is very easy to find….do some research and forget the 2-bit political joke that the island’s ambience has become..

    https://youtu.be/b86XE3TbXg0?t=2


  40. Everyone’s favorite tool these days…climate change…let’s see what comes out of this.

    https://youtu.be/XT0-6Fi8jHU?t=4


  41. Why don’t the local GPs in Barbados have access to the vaccines…not everyone wants to face these centers that some say are disorganized…some people are way more comfortable in their doctor’s office..

    .long Covid is ugly business..

    https://www.nationnews.com/2021/08/23/young-people-britain-warn-long-covid-19/


  42. Ah guess the police in the region no longer know the difference between MILK and COCAINE….there is a test the man in the street uses to differentiate, so the police station has none…lol

    https://www.nationnews.com/2021/08/23/drug-charges-dropped-woman-heading-barbados/


  43. St. Philip Polyclinic is very organised.


  44. Let us get as aggressive with transition to renewable energy to compare with republic?

    Millions saved by renewable energy

    by SHAWN CUMBERBATCH
    shawncumberbatch@nationnews.com
    BARBADOS IS SAVING millions of dollars in foreign exchange as the transition to a renewable energy by 2030 continues.
    An analysis by the Ministry of Energy, Small Business and Entrepreneurship’s Energy Division concluded that total foreign currency saved from the use of renewable energy reached $9 million last year and is a significant number when compared with 2013’s numbers.
    The information was published in the division’s latest annual bulletin, which also showed that local oil and gas production fell last year, as did the local use of hydrocarbons.
    “The total foreign exchange saved from renewable energy has increased by $8.8 million, calculated when comparing $200 000 saved in 2013 to $9 million in 2020. These savings are primarily photovoltaics (PV) uptake by Barbados Light & Power (BL& P) to the national grid,” the state agency reported.
    The Energy Division said interest in renewable energy continued to increase.
    “Further to the cumulative total of 40 megawatts (MW) of both distributive and utility renewable energy installations on the grid, an additional nine MW of distributive renewable energy installations were submitted to the Ministry of Energy, Small Business and Entrepreneurship and added to the grid during 2020,” it stated.
    Financially worthwhile
    The report also pointed out that the authorities were making it more financially worthwhile for Barbadians to get involved in renewable energy.
    “In September of 2020 the Fair Trading Commission released their decision on feed-in-tariffs (FIT) for renewable energy technologies above one MW and up to ten MW. The effective start date for this extension of the FIT programme was October 1, 2020,” it noted.
    “The rates to be applied to all new projects sized over one MW up to five MW shall remain applicable for 18 months until March 31, 2022.”
    It added: “The rates for all new projects sized over five MW up to ten MW shall remain applicable for seven months until March 31, 2021, or until such time as a competitive procurement framework is established.”
    The division also reported on Government’s efforts to achieve energy efficiency.
    “Under the Public Sector Smart Energy Programme, Component 1 of the programme, in January 2019, the contract between the Government of Barbados and Caribbean LED Lighting Inc. for the supply of 24 250 LED street lights to the BL& P and 3 000 LED streetlights to the GEED (Government Electrical Engineering Department) was signed,” it outlined.
    “At the end of December 2020, 22 557 of the BL& P fixtures were installed on minor and major roads by the BL& P and approximately 1 500 of the GEED fixtures were installed on major highways.
    “It is expected that on completion we will see a reduction of electricity
    consumption of 4.3 MWh (megawatt hours) per year totalling 64.5 MWh over a period of 15 years; which will see average savings in electricity bills of approximately US$1.7 million annually.”
    The bulletin noted that “given the volatility associated with the energy sector locally, regionally and internationally, the ministry will continue its focus on its 2030 greening vision in an effort to negate these international market dynamics”.
    It spoke against the backdrop of Barbados’ electricity demand falling by five per cent to 893 Gwh used in 2020 when compared with the 943 Gwh observed in 2019. The report said this prompted Government to “accelerate and bring forward investments in the renewable energy subsector to help Barbados’ economic recovery post-COVID-19”.
    Barbados’ production of crude oil decreased by 36 406 barrels in 2020 when compared with 2019’s output. Sales and exports of crude oil decreased by 38 634 barrels.
    “During 2020, there was a decrease in both the sale and production of natural gas. These declines were due to decreases in production and importation of liquefied natural gas by Barbados National Oil Company Limited and the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic,” the Energy Division said.
    “Decreases were also seen in gasoline and fuel oil of 85 119 and 498 barrels, respectively. Similarly, jet fuel decreased by 511 494, while on the contrary, diesel increased by 51 751 barrels, respectively. These increases and decreases were driven primarily by local demand influenced by the COVID-19 pandemic.”
    (Taken from this week’s BARBADOS BUSINESS AUTHORITY.)


  45. https://barbadostoday.bb/2021/08/24/student-fighting-against-difficult-odds/

    these are the kind of people who impress me, those who survived the structure of ignorance and still stand strong and motivated.


  46. @ David,
    Take a look at this bar chart. Barbados continues to punch above its weight.

    https://www.globalpetrolprices.com/gasoline_prices/


  47. @TLSN

    You cannot expect to live in a welfare state and deny the government access to generating revenue in various forms. Additionally governments apply tax regimes based on a particular economic approach, for example in Barbados road tax was removed and is now applied at the pump, several Caribbean countries decided to join petrocaribe. That said the government of Barbados will have to revisit fuel prices especially diesel that is a significant input material for business.

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