The Acting Editor of the The Trinidad Guardian, Anthony Wilson, has responded to a Gleaner editorial of February 25 headlined "Myopic <SPAN class=kLink style="FONT-WEIGHT: 700; COLOR: orange! important; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; POSITION: relative">economic</SPAN> nationalism" in which the Patrick Manning government was chided for reneging on its agreement with the Jamaican government to supply liquefied natural gas (LNG) and The Guardian's support for that decision.
Mr. Wilson's reply is published below.
"We feel that your readers would be able to make more informed judgements on the issue of intra-regional trade if The Gleaner were to quote from the Guardian's February 15 editorial.
"For ease of reference, I have provided the relevant excerpt of The Guardian editorial.
"The editorial speaks for itself and makes it clear whose interest The Gleaner is defending.
"As well, the excerpt hints at the huge amount of revenue that Trinidad is being asked to forego given "conjoined interests" that advocate two sets of natural gas subsidies (for the production of alumina in Jamaica and the production of aluminium in <SPAN class=kLink style="FONT-WEIGHT: 400; COLOR: orange! important; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; POSITION: relative">Trinidad</SPAN>) in favour of a publicly-held U.S. multinational in which neither Trinidad nor Jamaica have a shareholding.
EXCERPT
At the centre of the potential dispute between the two Caricom neighbours is the American aluminium giant Alcoa, which proposes to build an aluminium smelter in Trinidad.
Reports out of Jamaica indicate that Alcoa is proposing to double the capacity of the 1.5 million tonne alumina refinery it now owns 50/50 with the Jamaican Government.
As a result of Jamaica's huge foreign debts, Alcoa is undertaking the refinery upgrade by itself, rather than in partnership with Jamaica, which means that at the end of the project, Alcoa will own about 80 per cent of the equity in the three-million tonne per annum alumina refinery.
Jamaica looked to Trinidad and Tobago (T&T) for LNG because one of the conditions of Alcoa's proposed US$1.6 billion investment in Jamaica was that Kingston should secure a cheap source of energy at a predictable price to operate the alumina refinery. Cheap, predictable energy would make the refinery more globally competitive, it is felt.
Jamaica is insisting that it should not pay the United States market price for the LNG, arguing instead that it should pay the same price that T&T domestic users pay for natural gas, plus liquefaction and transportation.
The Jamaican argument assumes that T&T's domestic users of natural gas all pay the same price, whereas the truth is that the local market for the commodity is segmented according to size.
Additionally, Jamaica's position seems to assume that T&T has control o
Mr. Wilson's reply is published below.
"We feel that your readers would be able to make more informed judgements on the issue of intra-regional trade if The Gleaner were to quote from the Guardian's February 15 editorial.
"For ease of reference, I have provided the relevant excerpt of The Guardian editorial.
"The editorial speaks for itself and makes it clear whose interest The Gleaner is defending.
"As well, the excerpt hints at the huge amount of revenue that Trinidad is being asked to forego given "conjoined interests" that advocate two sets of natural gas subsidies (for the production of alumina in Jamaica and the production of aluminium in <SPAN class=kLink style="FONT-WEIGHT: 400; COLOR: orange! important; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; POSITION: relative">Trinidad</SPAN>) in favour of a publicly-held U.S. multinational in which neither Trinidad nor Jamaica have a shareholding.
EXCERPT
At the centre of the potential dispute between the two Caricom neighbours is the American aluminium giant Alcoa, which proposes to build an aluminium smelter in Trinidad.
Reports out of Jamaica indicate that Alcoa is proposing to double the capacity of the 1.5 million tonne alumina refinery it now owns 50/50 with the Jamaican Government.
As a result of Jamaica's huge foreign debts, Alcoa is undertaking the refinery upgrade by itself, rather than in partnership with Jamaica, which means that at the end of the project, Alcoa will own about 80 per cent of the equity in the three-million tonne per annum alumina refinery.
Jamaica looked to Trinidad and Tobago (T&T) for LNG because one of the conditions of Alcoa's proposed US$1.6 billion investment in Jamaica was that Kingston should secure a cheap source of energy at a predictable price to operate the alumina refinery. Cheap, predictable energy would make the refinery more globally competitive, it is felt.
Jamaica is insisting that it should not pay the United States market price for the LNG, arguing instead that it should pay the same price that T&T domestic users pay for natural gas, plus liquefaction and transportation.
The Jamaican argument assumes that T&T's domestic users of natural gas all pay the same price, whereas the truth is that the local market for the commodity is segmented according to size.
Additionally, Jamaica's position seems to assume that T&T has control o
Comment