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PNM in Gov't (2020-2025)

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Habit7
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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby Habit7 » December 17th, 2020, 7:27 pm

sMASH wrote:congo bongo fed up with dhal dougla, they want arepa mulato now. dais why rowley tell dem to come register.

Here is the inevitable UNC racism that has them stuck in 2nd place for 10yrs.

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby sMASH » December 17th, 2020, 7:39 pm

Habit7 wrote:
sMASH wrote:congo bongo fed up with dhal dougla, they want arepa mulato now. dais why rowley tell dem to come register.

Here is the inevitable UNC racism that has them stuck in 2nd place for 10yrs.
they get a 6month extension to to stay, by that time will vene be better off and safe for them to return? if so, then good. if not, then would it be wise to send them back to that place? if u send them back to go tru the same ting again, would it not make the time they spent here amount to nothing?
it come like they took a break from the struggles and then went back in.
if it was bad enough there to accept them here, and nothing has changed, u gonna send dem back? that is like sending back chirren to live with they abusive parents, cause well, 6 months pass.

rowley said the opposition didnt fight the election, so maduro win, what u want him to do. maduro win, rowley comfortable while we harboring his citizens.

u take them cause turmoil in vene, cause it was the right thing to do. rowley aint trying to influence a lil remedy, things will remain the same, and he will send them back, cause is the right thign to do?

cant eat ur cake and have it too.

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby Blaze d Chalice » December 17th, 2020, 8:56 pm

Image

Waye boi ollor eh get over that election loss yet?

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby Redman » December 18th, 2020, 6:55 am

Habit7 wrote:
sMASH wrote:congo bongo fed up with dhal dougla, they want arepa mulato now. dais why rowley tell dem to come register.

Here is the inevitable UNC racism that has them stuck in 2nd place for 10yrs.


The extension of the knife and fork internal dynamic.

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby zoom rader » December 18th, 2020, 7:04 am

Redman wrote:
Habit7 wrote:
sMASH wrote:congo bongo fed up with dhal dougla, they want arepa mulato now. dais why rowley tell dem to come register.

Here is the inevitable UNC racism that has them stuck in 2nd place for 10yrs.


The extension of the knife and fork internal dynamic.


Those are the people that you and many red government agents prefer .


Don't let today be another day for you in collecting a kant award

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby Redman » December 18th, 2020, 7:31 am

Morning Zoombindranath

I figure if I win two or three in a row I will get whole hog.

Like how UNC did give out contracts.

I figure it will work on you like a fire truck on a UNC cabinet.

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby zoom rader » December 18th, 2020, 7:49 am

Redman wrote:Morning Zoombindranath

I figure if I win two or three in a row I will get whole hog.

Like how UNC did give out contracts.

I figure it will work on you like a fire truck on a UNC cabinet.
Non red Goverments not in power

We dealing with the present red Goverment clowns.

We will not know of what contracts are given out under the red Goverment cause they ramrod the laws to protect their family and bussiness from exposure.

Stop being an arsehole as you are.

Dumb kant

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby Redman » December 18th, 2020, 8:01 am

Yuh see it working.

Yuh can't help your self Zoombindranath.

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby Redman » December 18th, 2020, 8:24 am

Double

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby zoom rader » December 18th, 2020, 8:44 am

Redman wrote:Double
Yawn

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby zoom rader » December 18th, 2020, 2:54 pm

RAD
HICA DE SILVA

radhica.sookraj@guardian.co.tt

Higher property taxes will mean higher water rates for some customers in the new year.

This was revealed yesterday by acting chief executive officer of the Water and Sewerage Authority Dr Allan Poon King who said WASA is facing a debt of $4.2 billion and had embarked on several cost-cutting initiatives.

Speaking at the Parliament’s Joint Select Committee Land and Physical Infrastructure meeting on Thursday,  Poon King revealed that increases in property valuations can lead to increased water rates for some customers.

In response to a question posed by UNC Senator Saddam Hosein, Dr Poon King said, “ If the property law is amended our rates will be amended accordingly and in some cases, some customers will be metered and the metered rates will apply.”

He added, “The new property tax values will affect the water rates.”

Poon King revealed that WASA pays US$6 million monthly to the Desalination Company of T&T. He noted that the desalinated water is used on the industrial plants operating at the Point Lisas Industrial Estate, noting that the Authority collects $25 million per month for water.

Fifty-five per cent of the 40 million gallons produced per day by DESALCOTT goes for domestic consumption, but Poon King said domestic customers pay far less than industrial customers.

“When (the water) goes outside the rate is $3.50 per cubic metres but for the industrial estate, the rate is $12 per cubic metre,” Dr Poon King revealed.

He explained that WASA has been experiencing a cut in revenues since several plants were shut down on the Estate.

“There is a deficit in the collection of revenue from the Estate. The additional water that was consumed by Arcelor Mittal goes out now on the domestic system but there is not a commensurate collection of money from those areas. We collect less money since the closure of those plants,” he added.

Dr Poon King also said Cabinet has appointed a team to review the Authority and based on the report submitted, a decision will be taken as to whether the Authority will be privatized.

He revealed that the Desalcott contract has been signed and the government has to take 40 million gallons of water per day from Desalcott until 2036. 

He noted that the Authority had taken two loans to build several wastewater plants.

This included a wastewater project in southwest Tobago, the Trincity Wastewater plant, the Malabar plant and the San Fernando wastewater plant, which is 91 per cent completed. This plant will be formally opened next year.

Asked whether WASA had made any recommendations for privatization, Poon King said some aspects of operations were already outsourced, noting that this could either be increased or decreased in the future, based on Cabinet approval.

Two months ago, Public Utilities Minister Marvin Gonzales said water rates have to be adjusted for WASA to run more efficiently. He said water rates in T&T was among the cheapest in the world and that the last adjustment was back in 1993


Take more bull,

Red Government running Investors away and citizens now have to pay higer water rates .

This all yuh bring back Habit 7 here ? to post ah set crap

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Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby sMASH » December 18th, 2020, 3:10 pm

Running away investors?
The train 1 share holders don't even want to spend money to turnaround their own plant.

But no fear, dragon gas is here!

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Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby zoom rader » December 18th, 2020, 4:36 pm

sMASH wrote:Running away investors?
The train 1 share holders don't even want to spend money to turnaround their own plant.

But no fear, dragon gas is here!
The red Goverment has moved away from oil , gas , steel and chemical industry. High skill work forced gone.

They then stop higher education cause this creates one part of an educated population which are mostly injuns.

They are hell bent on creating an island store clerks and servants. .

Now you have kant holes like Habit 7 abd Elitecongo putting spin and showing bigger support for the red Goverment

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby sMASH » December 18th, 2020, 6:44 pm

mugabe would be proud

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby zoom rader » December 18th, 2020, 10:56 pm

sMASH wrote:mugabe would be proud
Rowlee and his mob following his thinking.

Gone are oil, gas, steel, agriculture and chemical industries.

Skill workforce gone

An island of store clerks and Maids that is what Rowlee and dem want.

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby sMASH » December 18th, 2020, 11:01 pm

frying chicken and twirling baton.

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Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby toyota2nr » December 19th, 2020, 7:43 pm

zoom rader wrote:
Redman wrote:But ZR were they given any help....where you see that they were given preferential treatment

Who is TT Congo PM?


Where they stranded ?
In stress?

You defending Jackarsesness you Little Kant


Were they in need more than citizens?

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Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby toyota2nr » December 19th, 2020, 7:53 pm

eliteauto wrote:https://trinidadexpress.com/newsextra/hundreds-coming-home-for-christmas/article_82707956-406a-11eb-b7ef-9bcee65e8496.html

SEVERAL hundred nationals are expected to return home for Christmas, as part of a series of repatriation exercises.

Acting Principal Medical Officer in charge of institutions Dr Maryam Abdool-Richards said yesterday three repatriation flights are expected within the next five to six days.

One group of about 132 returning nationals was expected by 8 p.m. yesterday from New York, Abdool-Richards said during the Ministry of Health’s virtual press conference on Covid-19.

Another group of 132 people is expected from Barbados on December 18 and flights are expected from Miami and Canada in the coming days.

She reminded that repatriation exercises were dependent on the ability of the parallel healthcare system to host returning nationals either in quarantine or in hospital care if a person is found to be Covid-19 positive.

“The repatriation of returning nationals from high- and medium-risk countries, as per the Ministry of Health’s policy, is dependent on the availability of spaces in the State and State-supervised quarantine facilities,” Abdool-Richards said.

She noted that of 15 new positive cases reported on Tuesday, seven people were returning nationals.

Facilities coping

State quarantine facilities are currently at 75 per cent capacity, Abdool-Richards said.

There are now 13 State and State-supervised quarantine facilities in operation, she said, adding: “These repatriation exercises are timed on the availability of these facilities, which is dependent on several factors and not just the availability of occupancies. We have to take into consideration if there are positive Covid-19 cases, which would affect the sanitisation and decontamination of the facility. Also, there has to be an airing out period for that room or area for two weeks, as per (World Health Organization) guidelines.”

Two facilities are reserved for high-risk groups and those unable to self-isolate, Abdool-Richards said, disclosing that a cohort of deportees had arrived from the US requiring additional security. Repatriated nationals from high-risk territories like the US are required to quarantine for six days in State or State-supervised facilities, to be followed by a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test on the sixth day.

The returnee must then isolate at home for seven days, under State supervision.

Abdool-Richards also confirmed that Government has not yet ordered a Covid-19 vaccine and local authorities continue to monitor for certification by the WHO.

Trinidad and Tobago maintains close contact with the WHO and the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) for this purpose.

“The Ministry of Health will be guided by the WHO for the selection of a vaccine,” she said, adding that Government on Tuesday signed an agreement with PAHO for distribution of a vaccine by the Ministry.

She addressed reports of a mutated strain of the coronavirus coming out of the United Kingdom and said this was unlikely to impact the efficacy of a vaccine.

She said the Ministry was awaiting the Caribbean Public Health Agency’s pronouncement on if a mutation occurred.


All these people coming in are a mix of UNC people that WE didn't want here for elections and PNM people who jumped the line.

So they bringing the UNC people after the election?

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby De Dragon » December 19th, 2020, 9:23 pm

Redman wrote:
Habit7 wrote:
sMASH wrote:congo bongo fed up with dhal dougla, they want arepa mulato now. dais why rowley tell dem to come register.

Here is the inevitable UNC racism that has them stuck in 2nd place for 10yrs.


The extension of the knife and fork internal dynamic.

sMASH is a UNC spokesperson? :?
You hyenas like to gang up like little women and keke, like the PNM doesn't have racists within their ranks, like Sandy, Fake Rasta and Weavy BuySperm, all condoned by JUHN Scarfy.

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby sMASH » December 19th, 2020, 11:22 pm

"UNC" is code.... doh study it. the second coming of Sat maraj happening.

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby De Dragon » December 20th, 2020, 3:41 am

sMASH wrote:"UNC" is code.... doh study it. the second coming of Sat maraj happening.

Red Plastic Bag and the dummy crew love to invoke the racism bogey to deflect and when they can't explain LFRFD PNM party's numerous failures.

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby sMASH » December 20th, 2020, 6:34 am

De Dragon wrote:
sMASH wrote:"UNC" is code.... doh study it. the second coming of Sat maraj happening.

Red Plastic Bag and the dummy crew love to invoke the racism bogey to deflect and when they can't explain LFRFD PNM party's numerous failures.

they jess vex vassant and jack didnt GT. so unc is a curse word now. vassant didnt pull tru so time to mash up the concordat.

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby matr1x » December 20th, 2020, 10:42 am

So who the Lamborghini for?



The amount of alleged mistress and ladder climbers really funny

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby zoom rader » December 20th, 2020, 11:10 am

De Dragon wrote:
sMASH wrote:"UNC" is code.... doh study it. the second coming of Sat maraj happening.

Red Plastic Bag and the dummy crew love to invoke the racism bogey to deflect and when they can't explain LFRFD PNM party's numerous failures.
Yep , Eliteauto had gone back to the dummy crew . He's showing full support to these racist mob.

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby rebound » December 20th, 2020, 2:53 pm

matr1x wrote:So who the Lamborghini for?



The amount of alleged mistress and ladder climbers really funny
The Lambo is Xtra Foods one

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby Dizzy28 » December 23rd, 2020, 8:42 am

Transparency PNM style!!

Public procurement collapse – part two
Afra Raymond December 20, 2020

THE previous article explained that our Parliament reduced independent oversight of the biggest contracts in our country. But all the power is not in Parliament, so it is important to note that civil society has substantial power and influence in these public policy matters.

For example, take the June 2019 attempt by the Government to effectively erode citizens’ right to information held by public authorities, by amending the Freedom of Information Act (FoIA). On June 7, 2019, Attorney General Faris Al-Rawi laid proposals in Parliament to extend the existing 30-day time limit for public authorities to respond to FoIA requests to 180 days. The 30-day time limit is regularly exceeded by public authorities, so the proposed extension would have made nonsense of citizens’ right to information.

Those of us committed to those rights to information took up the challenge by alerting the public to the perils, led by the Media Association of Trinidad and Tobago (MATT) under Dr Sheila Rampersad’s direction. Our brief, intense campaign culminated in MATT’s overflowing seminar on Saturday, June 15, 2019 at Hotel Normandie, with Ramesh Lawrence Maharaj SC being the powerful and persuasive lead speaker.

The AG withdrew the proposals “for further consultation” and no more was heard on that count. This demonstrates that it is possible, by concerted, focused and informed agitation, to stop detrimental public policies. Our history is replete with these important lessons.

It is important to understand how these changes arise. The 1961 Central Tenders Board Act surfaced from the political directorate, so there was an appetite for good standards of governance which accorded with the then-popular slogan “Morality in Public Affairs”. In complete contrast, the current Act was conceived and drafted by civil society and private sector groups , which participated in the working party on public procurement appointed by former PM, the late Patrick Manning, in the wake of the Piarco Airport scandal and the shocking revelations of the Bernard Commission of Enquiry.

On December 22, 2010, the Joint Consultative Council of the construction sector (JCC) submitted a complete draft Public Procurement and Disposal of Public Property Bill to the Joint Select Committee of Parliament established by the People’s Partnership government to examine this issue. After four years of intense lobbying, both by JCC and the wider Private Sector Civil Society Group on Public Procurement, that draft bill became The Act, passed in January 2015 as Act No 1 of that year.

The Office of Procurement Regulation (OPR) board was appointed in January 2018, with The Act then being partially proclaimed thereby allowing its operation. That board has spent three busy years to prepare the OPR to take proper oversight of the multitude of public procurement and disposal contracts in the public sector. The OPR has been ready to conduct all its functions since December 2019.

The Act is what is termed framework legislation. The OPR prepares the required regulations, which must be approved by Parliament before the Act can be fully proclaimed.

This intervening stage was one of maximum peril because the Minister of Finance has to lay the regulations in Parliament and, of course, there could be further amendments. In light of the People’s National Movement’s well-established hostility to this kind of independent oversight, there was every case for the PSCSG to have maintained a strong, constant and diverse campaign to make the public aware of just how high were the stakes.

Given my resignation as JCC president in November 2015, it is impossible to know what were the causes of the PSCSG failure, but that campaign never materialised. There were only few and sporadic public engagements from the PSCSG in the five-year period 2016 to 2020. My erstwhile PSCSG colleagues were fully capable of effectively campaigning, but, in the end, made only sporadic, last-ditch, and ultimately futile, attempts to shape the public perception of this critical issue.

Educated and conscious people are able to identify, defend and advance their interests, which our groups failed to do. That failure raises pointed and painful questions as to our real priorities and intentions.

The constitutional issues – The Act was passed by special three-fifths majority, which was required since certain fundamental rights were to be infringed. I am advised that these subsequent amendments via simple majority are lawful if the outcome is reduction in the scope of, or powers derived from, the original special majority Act.

While these amendments do reduce OPR oversight, in so doing they are also giving rise to an imminent breach of citizens’ constitutional rights. Local contractors or suppliers, not engaging in PPP, will be required to follow the Act under OPR oversight. Finance Minister Colm Imbert and his colleagues stated that they do not want G2G to be under OPR oversight.

According to S. 4 (d) of our Constitution, one of the ‘rights enshrined’ is -
“...the right of the individual to equality of treatment from any public authority in the exercise of any functions...”

Parliament has now amended the Act to establish this non-OPR Public Procurement channel, through which huge contracts could be expected to arise. Apart from that amendment doing violence to the intention of the Act, it also gives rise to an arguable case for ‘inequality of treatment from a public authority in the exercise of its functions’, which is of course, unconstitutional. Clearly, these amendments to the Act require a special majority as they infringe upon the rights enshrined at S.4 of our Constitution.
https://trinidadexpress.com/opinion/col ... 19919.html

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Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby zoom rader » December 23rd, 2020, 9:12 am

^^^Those are dictatorial measures that kants Habit 7 and Redman go tooth and nail to defend

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Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby zoom rader » December 24th, 2020, 9:33 am

The Red Government are a total failure




FRANKLIN KHAN

ANISTO ALVES




Curtis Williams BG logo
















This year has been a chal­leng­ing one for all economies and, with the ex­cep­tion of the tech com­pa­nies, most oth­er sec­tors have strug­gled un­der the weight of the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic.

The pan­dem­ic has had a par­tic­u­lar­ly dev­as­tat­ing ef­fect on trav­el, tourism, restau­rants and ser­vices as gov­ern­ments im­posed lock­downs in an ef­fort to re­duce the rate of trans­mis­sion by lim­it­ing in­ter­ac­tion among the pop­u­lace.

The knock-on ef­fect has been a ma­jor drop in de­mand for goods and ser­vices in­clud­ing en­er­gy and en­er­gy re­lat­ed prod­ucts.

En­ter­ing in­to 2020 the glob­al en­er­gy mar­ket was al­ready soft as the risky strat­e­gy by Sau­di Ara­bia to dri­ve shale pro­duc­ers out of the mar­ket while rag­ing a price war against Rus­sia has so dam­aged glob­al mar­kets, many think it is now un­like­ly that crude oil can ever re­turn to the hay days of US $100 a bar­rel.



The way the glob­al crude mar­ket works is not sim­ply based on sup­ply and de­mand al­though that is very im­por­tant, but its al­so on sen­ti­ment and a built-in lev­el of spec­u­la­tion.

The Saud­is strat­e­gy seemed to be that their cost of pro­duc­tion is so low they could sus­tain, for some time, low crude prices with the thought that shale pro­duc­ers that have far high­er costs and that have not made a lot of mon­ey and there­fore does not have cash on hand will face bank­rupt­cy and fall-out of the mar­ket.

The Sau­di strat­e­gy in 2019 did not seem to take in­to ac­count the re­silience of Amer­i­can busi­ness­es, the fact that ef­fi­cien­cy and tech­nol­o­gy had re­duced costs, the in­crease in crude pro­duc­tion from non-OPEC mem­bers and that the sup­ply and de­mand sit­u­a­tion was not very tight, with in­ven­to­ries al­ready built up and slow­ly on their way down, be­fore the world’s largest oil pro­duc­er de­cid­ed to com­mit harakiri.

So when Covid19 hit the world econ­o­my at the end of the first quar­ter 2020, ground­ed planes, re­duced do­mes­tic trav­el and crushed glob­al de­mand; an al­ready weak oil mar­ket nat­u­ral­ly col­lapsed and we had the un­prece­dent­ed sit­u­a­tion where for the first time West Texas In­ter­me­di­ate prices fell in­to mi­nus ter­ri­to­ry.

Crude prices have re­cov­ered some­what and as of yes­ter­day Brent was trad­ing over US $50 a bar­rel and WTI just un­der US $50 a bar­rel.

Nat­ur­al gas and in par­tic­u­lar LNG prices were al­so neg­a­tive­ly im­pact­ed by the de­mand/sup­ply prices as shale gas pro­duc­tion had changed the US mar­ket and the huge new pro­duc­ers in Aus­tralia and UAE caused the Asian mar­ket to sig­nif­i­cant­ly re­duce its ar­bi­trage from the North Amer­i­can mar­ket.

Petro­chem­i­cal prices, in par­tic­u­lar methanol and am­mo­nia prices were ham­mered as de­mand re­mained weak and you see that T&T’s main for­eign ex­change earn­ers were all un­der pres­sure at the same time.

You then add to that falling crude and nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion and the prob­lems with the gov­ern­ment pol­i­cy, im­ple­men­ta­tion and the fis­cal regime and you see why we are in the po­si­tion we are in.

Make no bones about it T&T’s en­er­gy sec­tor is in trou­ble and what is in­creas­ing clear is that the gov­ern­ment and the Min­is­ter of En­er­gy seem in­ca­pable of find­ing so­lu­tions.

It would or­di­nar­i­ly be wrong to blame any sin­gle per­son for the state of the En­er­gy sec­tor. But we have had a min­is­ter in the per­son of Franklin Khan who has been at the helm for al­most five years and it is worth ex­am­in­ing his record to make a de­ci­sion on whether he has de­liv­ered to the coun­try.

This is not a time for par­ty sym­pa­thies nor for is­sues of con­ge­nial­i­ty. Franklin Khan is the man in charge since 2016 hav­ing tak­en over from the in­ef­fec­tive and in­con­se­quen­tial Nicole Oliv­erre.

In 2016 when Khan be­came the Min­is­ter of En­er­gy this coun­try’s crude pro­duc­tion had av­er­aged 72,000 bar­rels of oil per day (bo/d). This has now fall­en to 56,000 bo/d. That rep­re­sents a de­cline of 23 per­cent.



In 2016 the av­er­age nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion was 3.3 bil­lion stan­dard cu­bic feet per day (bscf/d), In 2020 the Min­istry of En­er­gy’s own fig­ures show it is down by 100 mil­lion stan­dard cu­bic feet per day, av­er­ag­ing 3.2 bscf/d. So when you hear Khan and the gov­ern­ment tak­ing cred­it for what it has done in nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion the ev­i­dence says oth­er­wise.

The sto­ry is the same with methanol, am­mo­nia and LNG; all down.

Khan of­ten in­sists that the coun­try is a price tak­er and there is truth in that but it can im­pact its own pro­duc­tion and the gov­ern­ment’s pol­i­cy of try­ing to take as much tax­es as it can from a small­er and small­er pie is ill ad­vised.

There are those who may ar­gue that Khan is not the one to blame, they have seen how the min­is­ter of every­thing has all but usurped the pow­er of the Min­is­ter of En­er­gy, who is of­ten forced to gen­u­flect in his pres­ence prais­ing Stu­art Young for do­ing the work that the sub­stan­tive Min­is­ter of En­er­gy should be lead­ing, but there is al­so the ques­tion of Khan’s health and whether he has the en­er­gy to run the Min­istry of En­er­gy.

It is no se­cret that Khan un­der­went ma­jor heart surgery a cou­ple years ago and we are all hap­py he was able to re­cov­er but as we looked at him shuf­fle to re­ceive his let­ter of ap­point­ment from the Pres­i­dent one could not help feel a sense of sad­ness that the Prime Min­is­ter would put such bur­den on a man who has giv­en so much and who is clear­ly in the win­ter of his years and would bet­ter spend his time with fam­i­ly and tak­ing care of his health.

It is not just the fall in pro­duc­tion that we must judge Khan’s per­for­mance by. He has over­seen a botched bid round where a year lat­er no block has been award­ed nearshore and the bids made by Roy­al Dutch Shell and BPTT were al­most not worth the pa­per they were writ­ten on as sources in the Min­istry say they were so be­low the thresh­old it ap­pears they were on­ly meant to save the gov­ern­ment’s blush­es.

Khan has been Min­is­ter of En­er­gy and, to date, there is not a sin­gle deep wa­ter bid round. To be sure we will pay the price as a coun­try down the road for his in­er­tia.

All of the drilling in­clud­ing the Touch­stone suc­cess were based on blocks giv­en out by the for­mer ad­min­is­tra­tion.

It may not be ap­par­ent but the PNM has been in pow­er for 14 of the last 19 years. In the last 11 of the PNM’s 14 years it has failed to award a sin­gle block for ex­plo­ration.

Khan has had the du­bi­ous ho­n­our of over­see­ing the clo­sure of Petrotrin, the col­lapse of the Point Lisas Es­tate and it ap­pears that he is on­ly al­lowed to be the bear­er of bad news or de­fend the in­de­fen­si­ble in Par­lia­ment. Any good news is an­nounced by the Prime Min­is­ter.

I have known Mr Khan for a long time and he is al­ways a pleas­ant man. But when it’s time to go we must ex­it the stage. We must all know when we can do no more.

Rather than be­ing pushed out, the En­er­gy Min­is­ter should do the ho­n­ourable thing and re­sign. The time has come when peo­ple need not to be wed­ded to of­fice but to prin­ci­ples and sure­ly Mr Khan must know this stint as Min­is­ter of En­er­gy has been one of fail­ure.



Over this Christ­mas sea­son and as we pre­pare to en­ter a new year one can on­ly hope Khan re­flects and does the right thing.

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De Dragon
TriniTuner 24-7
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Location: Enjoying my little miracles............

Re: Re: PNM in Gov't

Postby De Dragon » December 24th, 2020, 11:25 am

^^
Could hardly have been put better. JUHN Scarfy and Goebbels have uniquely crippled energy in T&T through their ill advised actions. Yet they persist in doing sheit like solely financing Train 1's "turnaround", despite being the minority, non-voting shareholder.

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widdyphuck
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Joined: July 23rd, 2017, 2:24 pm

*** Official 2021 under the PNM Thread***

Postby widdyphuck » December 31st, 2020, 11:41 am

What do trinis have to look forward to in 2021 under the PNM?
-Increased Gas prices.
-Property taxes.
-Increase in Water rates.
-Increase in prices for vehicles.
-Increase apple prices. (Drink apple j instead).
-Same salary for those who still have there jobs.
What are you looking forward to?
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