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Chairman of CoopEnergy Trevor Browne issued the following clarification statement in reply to the following comment made by Dr. Roland Clarke – Blogmaster

Dr. Roland Clarke

This issue is perhaps at the very heart of the current impasse in the ongoing Rate Hearing, and even more fundamentally in the dismal lack of progress of the proposed energy transformation for Barbados.

It is quite clear that EMERA thinks that BLPC belongs to them, and that they therefore have the option to do as they please in exercising that ‘ownership right’. We are also aware that Dr Clarke has been a paid consultant to the Government of Barbados and perhaps has been able to convince local officials that this is the case.

As a direct result of this thinking, the Ministry of Energy has been pursuing a policy of promoting competition in the energy market in an effort to ensure that BLPC / EMERA are not allowed to dominate and exploit customers using this monopolistic advantage.

Unfortunately, Barbados is much too small for such competitive – styled development in such a critical utility. Due to better economies of scale, centralised administration, responsibility for performance, and better compatibility of equipment and maintenance systems, it is significantly more efficient to have a unified, collaborative approach to such national development.

WHO OWNS BL&P?

The Barbados electric utility is well over 100 years old. It is established by the Laws of Barbados as an entity created for the public good. BLPC is regulated by the Fair Trading Commission (FTC) and its day-to-day administration is leased – via a long term franchise, through a license issued by the Minister of Energy. The current lease expires in 2028, having been issued in 1986 for a period of 42 years.

Under the license, the Franchise Holder is required to upkeep the infrastructure in tip top shape and to plan and prepare for new innovations and improvements. No major changes can be implemented without the written approval of the FTC. The Franchise holder is unable to sell anything, buy anything, retire anything or give away anything without such prior written FTC approval. They must also maintain a FTC approved minimum standard of service during the franchise period.

The Franchise holder is unable to raise rates or to offer discretionary rates (even to employees) without specific FTC approval.

Come 2028, unless the Minister of Energy is somehow disposed to continuing the current quagmire by extending the present arrangement, the BLPC / EMERA franchise ends, and a new Franchise Holder may well be appointed to take over what is left at the end of the BLPC/EMERA term.

Obviously then, the Barbados Electric Utility is owned by the people of Barbados, is regulated by the FTC, and its day-to-day operations are leased, by the Ministry of Energy, to the most appropriate bidder at renewal time.

CAPITALIZATION

Electric Utilities require high levels of capital investment. The Laws of Barbados provided for the capitalization of BLPC by way of raising share capital, and also by various investment instruments which could be issued by the franchise holder. For over 100 years, BLPC shares were held by a range of electricity stakeholders ranging from foreign speculators, Government, the NIS, BLPC employees, the general public and other businesses. The Board of Directors also reflected the broad range of stakeholders until 2013.

In 2013, for some reason yet to be explained, The FTC permitted EMERA to acquire 100% of the share capital by forcibly displacing all other stakeholders from the equity holdings, and subsequently as well, from the Boardroom. It is to be noted that the very same FTC refused a request from SOL to purchase BNTCL on the grounds that this would be anticompetitive for the oil market.

The FTC more recently refused the sale of BICO on similar anticompetitive grounds. Not all Barbadians buy ice-cream, nor does all Barbadians buy oil directly, however every single resident of Barbados is directly impacted by the cost of electricity. As intervenors, we await FTC’s explanation for this critical variation in policy.

This situation maybe confusing to those who think that BLPC is a regular company that was created by its shareholders to achieve their own specific objectives. However it simply means that EMERA owns 100% of the allocated share capital of BLPC, which continues to be fully subject to the Laws of Barbados, to the regulation of the FTC, and most critically, to the decision of the Minister of Energy come 2028.

Meanwhile, the BLPC records clearly show that exactly 100% of all costs associated with BLPC operations have been borne by its customers – the residents of Barbados. Total investments by all others so far, has been zero dollars.

Perhaps it is becoming clearer to Dr Clarke why we may not have sought his advice for CoopEnergy to date, as we have a completely different view of the status quo than the one that he has accepted.

We can also say, for the record, that CoopEnergy has already submitted our formal application for consideration by the Minister of Energy in the allocation of the new Franchise – which is imminent.

We have also already made contact with our Co-operative partners at the International Cooperative Alliance (ICA) in order to access all of the needed technical, financial and regulatory support that will be required to remake Barbados into a model of Co-operative Ownership in the energy sphere.


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77 responses to “COOPENERGY Responds to paid consultant”


  1. If we are hesitant about having a gasification plant on a 2×3 island we want to go one step further on the risk scale? What is the blogmaster missing?


  2. @ David,
    There’s no date on this PDF file. I believe it must date back to the previous administration. The rum flavoured Clare Cowan, CEO of Cahill Energy is referenced. The list of incentives is eye-watering and explains how tax waivers and government largesse played a direct role in destroying the country’s economy. Those individuals who were able to make the most of those incentives would not have been your typical Bajans. Here is a classic case of the Bajan taxpayer subsidising the largesse of foreign entities and an elite who know nothing better than how to play the system. This renewal energy policy was clearly open to fraud and money laundering.

    https://www.ceintelligence.com/files/investment_opportunities/documents/Barbados-Renewable-Energy.pdf

  3. NorthernObserver Avatar

    Missing? True risk assessment.
    Nuclear is very safe today.
    But if you don’t want it, they are all kinds of boogeymen to keep you away.
    Plus, you can probably BORROW more for RE than nuclear? W2E doesn’t compare to nuclear.


  4. Isn’t the idea to retreat to a clean read renewable energy source? Doesn’t nuclear energy take us back to where we started having to mine a finite resource?


  5. “Nuclear is very safe today.”
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    @ N.O.
    Bushie was unaware of your forays into the realm of comedy… You always came across as a ‘hard nosed businessman’ (albino-centric as Shiite LOL).

    You would REALLY put a nuclear plant in brassbados? …or by ‘safe’ do you mean (SAFE BECAUSE YOU IN CANADA???)

    Shiite skippa, a BASIC ‘sewerage plant’ almost kill we donkeys bout here FUH YEARS!! – because a pipe burst….
    Up to now um still ain’t fix…

    DooBad still trying to assemble $25 million in steal houses from China after three years…

    Who the Hell will plan, build and run these nuclear ‘weapons’? …cause you CAN’T be serious…!!!

    Boss, stop with that kinda talk before some foolish politician or lawya get hold of the idea, and get wind of the cuntsultancy fees that would be possible yuh..!!

    Umm would be no more brassbados …
    ..more like BLASTbados…
    LOL ha ha


  6. Those who shall remain afraid of big ideas until they are so directed are now beyond the pragmatic and have entered blindness.

    For there are so many applications for nuclear technologies – from medicines to agriculture.

    Indeed, cáncer patients in Barbados are serially exposed to isotopos for “healing”. There are scores of such nuclear medicines.

    Xtray machines, utra-sound machines and the like may also have some kind of nuclear basis.

    Therefore, is nuclear energy not already a part of us. Some may even say we’re exposed to radiation by merely going outdoors.

    Certainly, it would be a radical departure to consider a nuclear power plant.

    However, to this writer it would make more sense than to continue to pussy-foot with jaded ideas which only represent partial and sometimes unreliable solutions.

    And yes, the orders of magnitude of risks are much,much, larger. So too are the potential rewards!


  7. David
    One can ‘frame’ it however you choose.
    The need is clean, inexpensive energy.
    Having multiple renewable energy infrastructure scattered all over the landscape, then the need for storage, and still requiring a consistently predictable source. Nuclear. A single plant.
    All these so called finite inputs, have multi year reserves. The 80’s estimates is we should be out of oil?
    Isn’t the whole renewable infrastructure finite? Did you know photovoltaic cells/panels degrade over time? I learned that the hard way. As does the energy storage infrastructure.
    Xxxxxx
    Bushie we have plenty reactors around me. I’m not suggesting something “we” don’t have.


  8. The RE energy sources are not finite until the world ends as we know it. Sorry, the blogmaster is not sold on nuclear power for Barbados, it is an ‘overreach’.

  9. Sewage and radiation Avatar
    Sewage and radiation

    Bushie
    That is/was a gem. A superb reply to this new idea

    I, too, was surprise to see our Canadian representative ready to sell us a nuclear energy scheme.

    Whilst some may have confidence in the safety of nuclear agency, I have a great fear that someone would accidentally bungle their way and build a nuclear bomb which would leave us all dead or in involuntary exile from our glowing sandy beaches.

    Not even our bravest politicians would be inviting us to bathe in radiation an sewage.

    Great job, Bushie.


  10. You still don’t get it N.O.
    There IS an existing abundant oversupply of nuclear energy already in Bdos. It is fission powered and called the SUN…. millions of miles away …and still bussing our black donkeys every damn day wid heat.

    The very thought of Doobad being in charge of building a small version at Vaucluse boggles the bushman’s mind…
    ..and then the BWA providing emergency cooling…??!!
    wuhloss!!!

    You think this is Canada – where you could always run to Vancouver?.. or to NewBrunswick?

    No bosie…
    Wunna build one in Toronto – near Young Street first… we will then consider it…


  11. TLSN on September 9, 2023 at 6:34 PM said:
    Rate This

    @ David,
    There’s no date on this PDF file. I believe it must date back to the previous administration. The rum flavoured Clare Cowan, CEO of Cahill Energy is referenced. The list of incentives is eye-watering and explains how tax waivers and government largesse played a direct role in destroying the country’s economy. Those individuals who were able to make the most of those incentives would not have been your typical Bajans. Here is a classic case of the Bajan taxpayer subsidising the largesse of foreign entities and an elite who know nothing better than how to play the system. This renewal energy policy was clearly open to fraud and money laundering.

    https://www.ceintelligence.com/files/investment_opportunities/documents/Barbados-Renewable-Energy.pdf

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

    …. and there you have it … the thinking behind accessing the billions available to fight climate change and reduce carbon dioxide emissions without which green plants cannot survive and produce the oxygen necessary for us to survive.

    Its all a scam.


  12. TheOGazerts on September 10, 2023 at 7:20 AM said:
    Rate This

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2023/09/08/caribbean-off-target-in-meeting-goals-on-renewable-transition/

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

    None of these people who signed on to these unattainable goals are even remotely able to figure out how limited renewable energy is and how unlikely it is to replace fossil fuel energy.

    All they see is the billions on offer.

    Their only goal is to figure out how they can get a cut.


  13. Two comments on the document found in the link by TLSN

    (1) An excerpt
    “The island has a population of 280,000 which is predicted to reach 300,000 by the end of 2030”

    ** For quite some time we have been aware of our declining population, but, as given above, statistics to support growth or decline are thrown around as needed.

    By the way this number is a
    dishonest use of statistics. In the source document the population was rounded to 0.3 million in both 2020 and 2030.

    To further illustrate, a population of 280,000 prior to 2018 and a population of (say) 251,000 would both be rounded to 0.3M. Yet there is an obvious decline and not a growth.

    (2) I was searching for the actual date of this document and could not lot locate it. However, the year 2015 is given in the footnotes.

    Free advice… be extremely careful of documents without dates, names and point of contact. Nibble if you must but make certain it is more than bait on a hook.

    Everything is a scam in the making.


  14. Energy
    Níger just increased it’s price for uranium ore from 0.80 dollars a kg to 200 dollars per.

    About 25,000 percent? World market prices.

    These White devils!

    This is where the action is. Tells discerning readers how much time we have wasted with merchants and their descendants posing as farmers in the socalled sugar industry who have taken us over centuries into a developmental culdesac.

    An exit is required.

    Niger now needs, Afrika now needs, to throw out all of these White people, all.

    And industrialize OUR continent ourselves.

    Chocolate manufacture is the same deal. The Germans make 450 billion USD a year but Afrikan cocoa farmers get 3.5 billion for raw cocoa.

    Nearly told them that they should process the uranium tooooo. However, if this writer is around some would have certain fears.

    Let’s get to nuclear energy and forget the White devils.


  15. Pachamama on September 10, 2023 at 11:27 AM said:
    Rate This

    Chocolate manufacture is the same deal. The Germans make 450 billion USD a year but Afrikan cocoa farmers get 3.5 billion for raw cocoa.

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

    The finished product always reaps the sweets.

    Never heard of German chocolate before but obviously the manufacturers have successfully burst their buts to market their product all around the world.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IJwR345HYS8

    Were it not for that Niger would probably get little or nothing.

    That’s why we need to promote Barbados rum made from Barbados molasses around the globe and help build a demand for a product that will utilise those 5,000 acres.

    Me, I am a Cadbury man, not because Cadbury was formed by Quakers in the 1800, but because it tastes so good.

    I see in my searches that the Swiss make a good chocolate too.



  16. The Madden article above describes how the alternative energy bus has been long missed.

    When we had Husbands and others with solar, since the 60s and 70s maybe, nobody cared.

    Cared that a local industry could have been pioneered, built out. The commentators are generally right that the bus has been missed by more than 20 years we suggest.

    And knowing the mercantile mentality centralized we’ll fall back on buying and selling again.

    Move on to nuclear!

    And this country, like Pavlo’s dog, only knows how to bark when directed.

    But once such an opportunity is missed it’s impossible to recover it.

    Those who disagree should say what is the exception to this rule.

    Except for looking forward to the next. The next alternative energy………. nuclear 😜😜😜😜😜😜😜


  17. @ Pacha
    Trying to follow your logic here…

    The alternative energy bus definitely pass the Bajan bus stop some time ago.
    But how is this different to the many other busses and ZRs that have also passed by the land of brass bowls?
    …like the sewerage bus? …the education bus? …the Legal system bus? ..the sale of family silver bus…etc…???

    If we had caught the energy bus, THAT would have gone against the trend of every other BB shiite in our experience.
    …besides, who bout here could have led such a revolutionary charge…?
    Sealy or Stinkliar?
    Doobad or Abrams or Symmuns?

    give Bushie a break Boss….

    The day will come …. and SOON, when our ability to turn on a light at night (or fry a bake) will be solely dependent on whether we can do so WITHOUT requiring imported oils from foreign sources…. cause they will be unavailable ..or just plain too expensive.

    YOU can wait for Doobad to bring in a LEGO atomic steal plant from China for assembly… but not stinking Bushie…
    The bushman looking for a reliable little 1/2 HP donkey that works offa grass and water, … and a good solid butt pot that can work with either wood or cow down….

    You alright yuh hear!!…??!!


  18. Bushie

    Truly!

    We dungly concede!

    For you and Pacha but we have to think about the mass, no?


  19. “transitioning to full use of renewable energy and, subsequently, more affordable electricity for customers”
    Is this fact?
    Or is this myth?
    How is ‘more affordable’ calculated?
    Or do we feel so good about generating via RE that we don’t question costs (and hence price).
    The product (electricity) still has to be distributed.
    I guess we will find out when the hard numbers are forecasted.


  20. Jennifer Grandhomme the energy secretary of the USA, decided to show people there that electric cars work.

    She and her staff (the foolish bitches) decided to go on a 4 day road trip using electric cars but failed to appreciate their cars’ limitations ….. charging takes time, as in hours!!

    The cops had to be called to intervene in an altercation.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12507063/Charging-stations-blocked-family-road-trip-Biden-Energy-secretary.html


  21. National energy investment plan in the works

    The Government is expected to launch an updated National Energy Plan and a Barbados National Energy Investment Plan by November.
    Addressing the launch of the Caribbean Climate Investment Programme – Energy and Climate Financing for the Eastern Caribbean at Hilton Barbados on Wednesday, Minister of Energy and Business Senator Lisa Cummins also disclosed that the investment plan would allow the private sector and other stakeholders to be able to identify “greenfield” and “brownfield” opportunities for investment in the energy space.
    She suggested to her audience that consideration should be given to the level of investment needed for Barbados to reach its 2030 target of 100 per cent renewable energy as well as the new opportunities in the transition process.
    “Equally, we are going to be preparing by November/ December at the latest, the launch of the updated Integrated Resource and Resiliency Pan (IRRP). That was done in 2021 but the world has changed so rapidly, technology has evolved so quickly, the space has been crowded in amazingly and incredibly, that we now are in a space in 2023 [where] we made a decision earlier this year that we needed to update the IRRP, which also gave us our energy mix,” the minister said.
    “We expect also to be working with one of our international multilateral partners to have a storage strategy as well. So we would have a new energy mix, a new storage strategy…in both instances, which would require investment from the private sector.”
    Cummins said her ministry expects to work with stakeholders to be able to capitalise on the energy transition and collaborate with colleagues across the region.
    She told the audience which included the president of the Barbados Chamber of Commerce and Industry (BCCI) James Clarke, Grenada’s Minister of Climate Resilience, the Environment and Renewable Energy Kerryne James, and Deputy Chief of Party for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Energy Sector Reform Programme Gerald Lindo, that while seeking to achieve the transition goals was important, it should be done in such a way that it would benefit the pockets of electricity consumers.
    Cummins made reference to the idea of a common Caribbean energy strategy and asked participants to think about the areas of commonality that can bridge and anchor the investment approach to capitalising on the renewable energy transition.
    “We have been working with the UN Special Envoy for Energy, and in 2024 June, Barbados will be host to the Global Forum on Energy. We will be inviting the entire private sector because there will be an opportunity to look at our energy transition plan and our energy investment opportunities for the energy sector,” she said.
    Speaking on the topic Transition to Resilience by the Private Sector, BCCI president Clarke called on businesses to do an impact assessment of climate change, severe weather events and other national occurrences.
    He said such assessments should be done not only in their own location but also in their suppliers’ markets and where their customers are so that they can prepare as well as they can to increase the likelihood of their survival and continuation of their operations.
    “So the importance of the business community surviving these types of events is critical. All of these things carry very high risks,” Clarke said.
    “We must have resilient buildings designed to withstand such weather events. They must be energy efficient, comfortable to work in; they must have your backup power.
    Also remember that in a disaster situation, the recovery is likely going to be triage. So you are going to have certain aspects that are going to take precedence,” the Chamber president said.
    (EJ)

    Source: BT


  22. Bajans ‘burning’ more electricity

    The ongoing heatwave could be a factor in Barbadians burning up more electricity over the past two months.
    Director of operations at the Barbados Light & Power Company (BL& P) Johann Greaves told the Sunday Sun that consumption for July and August has been nearly five per cent more than the same period last year. The increases have been noticed in both residential and commercial areas.
    However, he pointed out that in the absence of a detailed analysis, he could not attribute the increase solely to the sweltering temperatures, as the period coincides with the summer holiday for schoolchildren.
    Greaves explained that while the increased use of air-conditioning units and other cooling devices must be factored into the equation, the fact that children were using greater amounts of electricity during the day must equally be considered.
    “Electricity usage patterns for the last two months have not been analysed in detail [but] there has been an increase. Of note, there is always more electricity usage during the months of July and August coinciding with the period of summer holiday for our children. This makes it difficult to say whether any increase is due to the ambient temperature only,” he said.
    “Whatever the major factor, Light & Power has seen a higher demand and an increase in usage at both the residential and commercial level. Over the summer period in 2023, the demand on average has been 4.6 per cent more than the demand for the same period in 2022.”
    In the United States, the heatwave is significantly testing the power grid as millions of Americans attempt to beat the sweltering temperatures by cranking up their airconditioning units. Power grid officials have warned that large swaths of the US could face blackouts. “Two-thirds of North America is at risk of energy shortfalls this summer during periods of extreme demand,” the North American Energy Reliability Corporation concluded in its summer outlook published a month ago.
    However, Greaves said Barbadians need not entertain any such fears as BL& P was capable of meeting the increased demand.
    “The increased load will not create any issues regarding the supply of electricity to customers. Light & Power has adequate generating reserves and network capacity to meet the increased demand that has been observed over the past few months,” he said.
    However, he cautioned Barbadians that energy efficiency and conservation must remain watchwords, especially during this period.
    “With the increased usage of fans, airconditioning units and other cooling devices, Light & Power advises customers to use their energy wisely. The company encourages customers to consider energy-efficient options that are the right size for their specific heating or cooling needs when selecting appliances.”
    (CLM)

    Source: Nation

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