RBSC

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Observer EDITORIAL: That Sterling (Asset Management)...

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Observer EDITORIAL: That Sterling (Asset Management)...

    That Sterling (Asset Management) approach


    Thursday, October 10, 2013

    THERE are still far too many Jamaicans who clearly just don't get it. Nobody owes us anything and foreign investors are not lining up to pump money into our economy!


    The onus is entirely on us to make ourselves attractive to investors, meaning that they must be convinced that it is worth spending their money here, and not in any of the countless other countries which are all jostling to get their attention.




    Representatives of Azurest-Cambridge Joint Venture Association with Waller Marine Inc (from left) Kenneth Allen, managing director; CS Roderick Heaven, consultant; and Leonard Enriquez, Cambridge Project Development Inc, speaking with the press after the announcement that they were chosen preferred bidder for the 360-megawatt project at the Office of Utilities Regulation in Kingston on September 18. (PHOTO: GARFIELD ROBINSON)

    We are quite dismayed by the asininity of the views being openly expressed before and after the implosion of preferred bid status by US-based consortium Azurest-Cambridge to build the proposed US$690 million 360-megawatt power plant here, and the alleged challenges being faced by Energy World International, the second in line. Even people widely held up as sensible analysts are implying with great enthusiasm that Jamaica has some kind of a right to expect investors to be falling over each other to find money to invest in our energy project.

    We find it quite worrisome that more of the most established traditional international investors in energy systems production are not among the bidders. What is it that they know about us? Perhaps more worrisome is that not more Jamaican entities are stepping forward, even as joint venture partnerships.

    In our view, it makes eminent sense that Jamaican investors should own a piece of this potentially lucrative energy plant. It would also show that we are partners in our own salvation by putting our money where our mouth is.
    That is why we salute local investment outfit Sterling Asset Management for its proactive plan to raise US$50 million in equity and debt from the Jamaica Stock Exchange for the 360-megawatt project. That is only a small part of the overall cost but, even at that, it represents a significant outlay in the context of our small economy.

    And just in case there are not enough local takers, we note that Sterling boss Mr Charles Ross said the entity had intended to seek to raise the funds throughout the Caribbean, also a very sensible idea for which we commend them. We hope that the Azurest-Cambridge fallout would not scuttle the Sterling initiative. Quite apart from the dollars and cents value of the plan, there is great symbolism in what it does for advancing regional economic integration.

    It may be that Jamaican companies don't have the kind of capital outlay that is necessary, but we have got to stop behaving as if there is manna waiting to drop from heaven. Investors will be turned off by the way we conduct our discourse, fearing that they could be caught up in it.

    These are not the kind of issues that are resolved on talk shows or in newspaper columns. It's past time to reach for our thinking caps.



    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/edito...#ixzz2hK1exzWa
    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

  • #2
    EPOC knocks 'missteps' in 360-megawatt project

    EPOC knocks 'missteps' in 360-megawatt project

    BY VERNON DAVIDSON Executive editor — publications davidsonv@jamaicaobserver.com
    Wednesday, October 09, 2013

    THE Government-appointed Economic Programme Oversight Committee (EPOC) yesterday expressed disappointment with what it called "missteps" in the 360-megawatt project.


    The committee's position was outlined in its fifth communiqué and explained further by EPOC chair Richard Byles at an afternoon news conference at his Sagicor headquarters in New Kingston.




    BYLES... what’s going on here?

    "Something is wrong in the way we proceed that we could end up with a successful bidder that can't come up with the deposit," Byles said, adding that the project is one of the largest single investments in Jamaica.

    Controversy has dogged the bid process ever since Contractor General Dirk Harrison accused Energy Minister Phillip Paulwell of intervening in the process after a bid from Hong Kong-based firm Energy World International (EWI) was accepted in late April, more than a month after the bid closed.

    Harrison recommended that EWI be excluded from the bid process as the intervention was improper and the consequent acceptance of the proposal by the Office of Utilities Regulation (OUR) was unfair and compromised the integrity of the process.

    Paulwell, however, has said that the decision to admit EWI was that of the Cabinet and not his.

    On September 18, the OUR announced United States firm Azurest-Cambridge as the preferred bidder and gave the company 15 days to deposit a bid security of one per cent of its proposed US$690-million investment in the energy facility.

    But at midnight on October 3, when the deadline expired, Azurest was unable to produce the security and requested another 15 days, saying that its efforts to secure the funds were affected by a number of negative statements after its preferred bidder status
    was announced.

    The OUR, however, rejected the request and promoted EWI as the new preferred bidder.

    However, that decision has plunged the project deeper into controversy as the country's three main private sector groups have urged the prime minister to appoint an EPOC-type group to monitor the
    energy project.

    Yesterday, Byles suggested that the developments
    have raised eyebrows in his group.

    "EPOC is saying, what's going on here? This should be a very slick, well-organised, well-run, well-managed process, because the investment is so crucial; and yet still we have these missteps," he said, being made by "the persons evaluating the bids and ranking them".

    Added Byles: "For a project as important as this you'd expect that some of our best resources and our best analysts would be put to use in determining who are these bidders and how they are ranked.

    "If you choose a bidder, and that bidder can't even come up with the deposit, what does it say about your evaluation of their capability? They may have put a good price on the table, but that can't be the only criterion, and I'm sure the OUR is smarter and also looked at capability, but it proved to be the Achilles heel of that bidder," he said.



    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/...#ixzz2hK4BHVXT
    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

    Comment

    Working...
    X