Showing posts with label Antigua. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Antigua. Show all posts

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Antigua and Barbuda"s fiscal deficit surpasses US$100m

NEW YORK, USA

The Antigua and Barbuda government is projecting a fiscal deficit of more than US$100 million for this year.

Addressing a town hall meeting here over the weekend, Prime Minister Gaston Browne said the deficit “of about 130 million US dollars is due to overspending.

“Now, one would expect that when you have a government that would have borrowed extensively, they would have borrowed about two and a half billion dollars over the 10-year period that at least they would run a fiscally tight budget to make they have capacity tp pay the debts.”

The former administration during the presentation of the last fiscal package had projected a surplus of EC$10 million (US$3.7 million) for 2014.

But Browne told Antigua and Barbuda nationals residing here that national borrowing surpasses what the country earns annually.

“These are issues we will have to address and we have estimated that based on the debts that we actually left out of the national debt calculation that our debt to GDP (gross domestic product) is perhaps in the region of 125 to 130 per cent”.

Browne said that the figure is “extremist high” when compared to the global benchmark estimated at no more than 60 per cent.

“So it is about twice what it ought to be,” Browne told the town hall meeting.

Browne led his Antigua and Barbuda Labour Party (ABLP) to victory in the June 12 general elections, removing the United Progressive Party (UPP) headed by Baldwin Spencer that had been in office for the past 10 years.

— CMC


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Antigua and Barbuda"s fiscal deficit surpasses US$100m

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Antigua weighs high cost of fossil fuels

petrotrin-740 The Petrotrin Oil Refinery in Trinidad and Tobago which has significant, proven fossil fuel reserves. (Credit: Desmond Brown/IPS)

Desmond Brown

ST. JOHN’S, Antigua, Monday July 28, 2014, IPS - Caught between its quest to grow the economy, create jobs and cut electricity costs, and the negative impacts associated with building an oil refinery, the Antigua and Barbuda government is looking to a mix of clean energy and fossil fuels to address its energy needs.Venezuela’s ambassador to Antigua, Carlos Perez, announced last week that Caracas was at an advanced stage of negotiations with the government in St. John’s to build an oil refinery on the tiny 108-square-mile island.

“The pending negotiations for the oil refinery I believe are well advanced and we’re hoping with this new administration of Prime Minister [Gaston] Browne we will advance to conclude that project that will be beneficial for Antigua and for Venezuela too,” Perez said.

Brown’s Antigua and Barbuda Labour Party won General Elections on Jun. 12 after 10 years in opposition.

Environmentalists, including Dominican Arthurton Martin, oppose the move and say it’s the worst possible time to make an announcement like this.

“The United Nations Inter-Governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) just released its 2014 report presenting evidence that not only can we expect a two degree centigrade rise in global temperatures but [possibly] a four degree centigrade rise, which will result in significant increases in coastal damage from sea level rise for countries like Antigua that are relatively flat,” Martin told IPS.

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“This will in fact result in significant extension of periods of drought as a result of fluctuations in temperature. This is also happening at a time when there are so many options that could deal with part of the energy challenge,” he added.

Martin said the refinery was a bad choice not only because of the global movement to avert catastrophic climate change, but because cleaner alternatives are readily available.

He suggested instead that government look into sources like biofuel, solar and wind energy to reduce reliance on crude oil. These sources of energy have already been developed and financing exists to explore these options.

“These technologies are off the shelf. You can purchase them right now. You don’t even have to do R&D to develop them,” he said.

“This is the first time in the history of the international financial community that they have in fact made grants and concessionary loan financing available to actually reduce the dependence on fossil fuel for energy.”

Environmentalists stress that oil refineries are a major source of greenhouse gas emissions and other pollutants.

Oil refineries also emit methane and nitrous oxide, which are more potent greenhouse gases than carbon dioxide, as well as several other air contaminants that pose risks to human health and the environment such as hydrogen sulfide, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, particulate matter, and volatile organic compounds.

Chante Codrington, director of Wadadli Industrial Renewable Energy Ltd, who is in negotiations with the government of Antigua and Barbuda to build a wind farm here, is of the view that wind energy is the most efficient and affordable energy source for the island.

“No good can come from the oil refinery. The environmental concerns associated with the burning of fossil fuel in a country whose main industry is tourism are many,” he told IPS.

“There is an odor that comes from the oil refinery, air pollution, water contamination concerns, fire, explosions, noise pollution, health effects – these are all the disadvantages.”

Clean energy advocate John Burke agrees with Codrington, telling IPS it would benefit the island’s poor more if the country goes green.

“The price of oil is going to go up. The last time I heard the price of sun and wind had not gone up. Currently, every kilowatt hour we’re generating we’re spending about 80 or 90 cents EC on fuel. If they put together a programme to finance and install solar systems for the poor and the middle class that would in effect be financed by the amount of money we save from importing oil.”

According to a report by the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), energy demand in the region is expected to double in the next 20 years, at a 3.7 per cent average annual rate of increase.

Currently, most Caribbean countries are heavily reliant on imported fossil fuels, their energy consumption being based almost solely on oil products, which account for more than 97 per cent of the energy mix.

Trinidad and Tobago, Cuba, the Dominican Republic and Barbados cover part of their fuel requirements from their own reserves of oil and natural gas. Nevertheless, only Trinidad and Tobago has significant, proven fossil fuel reserves.

Several Caribbean countries spend 15 to 30 percent of their export earnings, inclusive of revenues from tourism, on oil products. This results in electricity prices of between 20 and 35 cents per kWh, much higher than in the United States or Europe.

Peter Lewis, managing director of the Bermuda-based Carib Energy Solutions, said the government should consider the environmental factors associated with an oil refinery.

“If the global trend of a mixed-bag approach is the best option for the pursuit of an energy agenda…you would be able to attract more entrepreneurs to the business sector and get the economy going,” he told IPS.

Martin also agrees with the mixed-bag approach.

“No single source of power should be allowed to deal with your entire energy bill. That is a bad thing to do,” he said.

“We had our banana experience in Dominica when we placed all our bets on one crop. My advice is no country should place all its bets on any one source of power. Even Venezuela is understanding that right now.

“So if solar can contribute three per cent, if wind can give you 15 per cent, if biomass conversion can give you 20 per cent, what you are doing is effectively reducing your dependence on the dirtiest form of energy which is fossil fuel driven energy,” Martin added.

In early 2007, the government of Dominica announced plans for Venezuela to construct an oil refinery on the island but after a barrage of objections was raised by environmentalists, plans for the plant were placed on hold in 2008.


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Antigua weighs high cost of fossil fuels

Monday, July 21, 2014

Chris Gayle ‘sexist’ comment draws ire of Antigua women’s group

Chris Gayle is deep in thought at Wednesday Chris Gayle is deep in thought at Wednesday’s media conference in Antigua.

ST JOHN’S, Antigua, Friday July 18, 2014, CMC – A women’s rights group in Antigua has condemned as “sexist”, remarks made by Jamaica Tallawahs captain Chris Gayle to a female journalist, at a media conference here Wednesday.

And the group, Women Against Rape (WAR) headed by gender equity advocate Alexandrina Wong, has also criticised the response by the Caribbean Premier League to the incident.

Gayle, a former West Indies Test skipper, was asked by the journalist: “How does the pitch feel so far in terms of the training (and) the weather?”, ahead of Thursday’s Caribbean Premier League clash here between Tallawahs and Antigua Hawksbills.

The 34-year-old Gayle responded: “Well I haven’t touched yours yet so I don’t know how it feels”, before adding “I like your smile; that’s nice.”

However, the CPL downplayed the incident, saying that Gayle was just sharing a light moment with the female journalist.

“Chris is excited for the tournament and was having a laugh with a journalist, who had a laugh back; there was no malice intended,” the Antigua Observer quoted a CPL spokesman as saying.

“The lady in question had a jovial goodbye chat with him and we don’t believe this was the action of someone who was offended.”

Wong slammed Gayle’s statement and also called on the CPL to elicit an apology from the Twenty20 star.

“What it’s implying is one person’s power over another in the use of the language and so we can either say it’s sexist and hegemonic,” Wong said, adding that the response from the reporter “indicates that she obviously doesn’t know her right to autonomy.”

“She obviously doesn’t know her right when it comes to agency of body so that she can identify certain types of language, how they allude to her biology and what its saying about her as a person,” Wong continued.

“CPL should demand [an apology] from him because as senior officials they ought to know and to behave better when it comes to gender equality.”


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Chris Gayle ‘sexist’ comment draws ire of Antigua women’s group

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Antigua government denies purchasing new fleet of vehicles following election victory

anu-licenceST. JOHN’S, Antigua, Friday Jul 4, 2014, CMC – The Antigua and Barbuda government Thursday denied a media report that said the fleet of vehicles used by the newly elected Prime Minister Gaston Browne was being replaced.

In a brief statement, the Office of the Permanent Secretary within the Office of the Prime Minister said it had been made aware of the incorrect report carried on a radio station here and that it wanted “to place on record that this assertion is incorrect and can only be viewed as an effort to mislead the public.

It said that following the June 12 general election, “as is customary and in accordance with internationally accepted protocols, in the interest of the Prime Minister’s health and safety, an assessment was made of the current fleet of vehicles available for his use.

“A number of the vehicles were discovered to be defective with inoperable windows, air conditioning, steering, shocks and suspension systems and infested with pests including ants and cockroaches.”

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The statement said that preparations were put in place to have the defective vehicles replaced with vehicles already in use by the Transport Board, which would not have incurred any additional expenditure by the government, insisting “no new vehicles would have been acquired”

The statement noted that Prime Minister Browne after he was informed of the issues with the vehicles “instructed the Permanent Secretary that it is his desire not to have the defective vehicles replaced, therefore reducing the fleet of vehicles used by the former prime minister from six to three vehicles.

“The decision of Prime Minister Browne to decrease his fleet of vehicles is in keeping with his administration’s policy of reducing the excesses of government including the use of police officers as personal aides of ministers including the Prime Minister.”

The statement said that it is “unfortunate” that the media house “did not seek clarification from the Office of the Permanent Secretary in the Prime Minister’s Office on the matter before conveying inaccurate information to the public.

“This is not only irresponsible journalism …but also places the Prime Minister and his protective team’s security at risk,” the statement added.


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Antigua government denies purchasing new fleet of vehicles following election victory

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Antigua coast guard detains Jamaicans in multi-million dollar drug bust

Antigua_drugs_876269286

ST. JOHN’S, Antigua, Friday June 27, 2014, CMC – Law enforcement authorities say they have intercepted a vessel originating from Jamaica with more than 2,300 pounds of marijuana worth more than EC$30 million (One EC dollar = US$0.37 cents).

A statement from the Office of National Drug and Money Laundering Control Policy (ONDCP) said it participated in a joint operation involving the Antigua and Barbuda Defence Force (Coast Guard) in intercepting the 65ft vessel on Wednesday.

It said the vessel, which it did not name originated from Jamaica and “was being operated by six Jamaican men whose ages range from 38 years old to 67 years old.

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“The Captain and his crew are assisting the officers with their investigations,” the statement said, noting that the drugs had a street value of over EC$37 million.

The ONDCP said that the seizure is the third successful interdiction during this week and that law enforcement authorities have embarked on a programme specifically targeting young people about the consequences of illegal drugs.


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Antigua coast guard detains Jamaicans in multi-million dollar drug bust

Monday, February 3, 2014

Antigua Attorney General ‘stable’ in hospital after collapse

Sunday, February 02, 2014 | 12:18 PM    


ST JOHN’S, Antigua (CMC) — Antigua and Barbuda’s Attorney General, Justin Simon QC, remained in hospital late Saturday in stable condition after collapsing at a restaurant, an official source has said.


Simon, said to be in his fifties, reportedly collapsed around 4.30 pm, while out with friends at Big Banana, a popular eatery in downtown St Johns.


He was rushed to the Mount St John’s Medical Centre, the main state hospital about a kilometre away.


A senior government official who said he was receiving regular updates on the attorney general’s health but asked not to be identified, told the Caribbean Media Corporation that Simon was conscious, alert and in stable condition.


Key figures in government could not be reached for details of Simon’s illness and condition.


The Dominica-born Simon was appointed as Minister of Legal Affairs and Attorney General in the original cabinet of Prime Minister Baldwin Spencer when his United Progressive Party (UPP) swept to power in March 2004, ending the 28-year rule of the Antigua Labour Party (ALP).


Simon, who had originally told Spencer he intended to serve one-term as the government’s principal legal adviser, has stayed on past the UPP’s election to a second term in office in 2009.


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Antigua Attorney General ‘stable’ in hospital after collapse

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

World Bank to loan US$10 million to Antigua

Business

Friday, August 16, 2013

THE World Bank is providing a US$10- million loan to Antigua and Barbuda to finance the public and social sector reform activities for the next five years.Finance Minister Harold Lovell and World Bank Country Director for the Caribbean Sophie Sirtaine signed the loan agreement.In 2012, the World Bank granted a Project Preparation Advance of US$980,000 to start the groundwork for the Public and Social Sector Transformation (PSST) project and earlier this year it approved the loan for the five-year project.A government statement said that the Baldwin Spencer administration “can now intensify implementation of the PSST Project having formally executed the loan agreement with the World Bank”.It said the project supports the National Economic and Social Transformation (NEST) Plan, the country’s 2010-2014 strategic response to the global economic and financial crisis and the 2010- 2013 Public Sector Transformation Strategy.“Antigua and Barbuda demonstrated its commitment to improve macro-economic management with the development of the NEST Plan and, in particular, by implementing its fiscal consolidation programme with financial assistance from the International Monetary Fund, the Caribbean Development Bank (CDB) and other development partners,” the statement said.It said the island’s successful implementation of its fiscal consolidation programme and the government’s adoption of public financial management reforms cleared the way for the World Bank to provide much needed assistance for public and social sector initiatives.Under the loan agreement, just over four million US dollars is designated to support the introduction of Active Labour Market Programmes to increase employment opportunities, skills and earnings of citizens between the ages of 17 to 50 years.Under this project component, the One Stop Employment Centre (OSEC) will be fully operationalised to offer employment services to job seekers.Funds will also be allocated to strengthen public institutions for the strategic management of government policies as well as to “fundamentally modernise human resource management to improve capacity, systems, legislation and policies for the management of an integrated public service”.The US$10-million loan is to be repaid over 30 years with a five-year moratorium on principal payments.— CMCThe World Bank headquarters in Washington, DC

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World Bank to loan US$10 million to Antigua

Friday, August 9, 2013

CPL: Rain interrupts Antigua Hawksbills/Jamaica Tallawahs match

Latest News

Sunday, August 04, 2013 | 3:10 PM

GEORGETOWN, Guyana — Play has resumed after a short interruption for rain in the Caribbean Premier League (CPL) match between the Antigua Hawksbills and Jamaica Tallawahs at Guyana’s Providence Stadium.Antigua Hawksbills won the toss and decided to bat reaching 31-1 after four overs at the interruption. Kieran Powell was 20 not out and Ricky Ponting two not-out. TEAMS:Antigua Hawksbills  –  Johnson Charles, Kieran Powell,  Ricky Ponting, Marlon Samuels, Devon Thomas, Rahkeem Cornwall, Justin Kemp, David Mohammed, Kemar Roach, Sheldon Cotterrell, Anthony Martin.Jamaica Tallawahs — Ahmed Shehzad, Chris Gayle, Nkrumah Bonner, Danza Hyatt, Jacques Rudolph, +Carlton Baugh Jnr., Dave Bernard Jnr., Andre Russell, Vernon Philander, Nikita Miller, Muttiah Muralitharan.Umpires Colin Alfred, Nigel Dugid.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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CPL: Rain interrupts Antigua Hawksbills/Jamaica Tallawahs match

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Antigua and Barbuda profile

31 January 2013 Last updated at 10:45 ET Map of Antigua and Barbuda Antigua and Barbuda is one of the Caribbean’s most prosperous nations, thanks to its tourism industry and offshore financial services.


The country’s strength lies in its tropical climate and good beaches, which have made it popular as a stop-off point for US cruise ships and have attracted large investments in infrastructure.


Antigua is the main population centre and the focus for business and tourism. Relatively-undeveloped Barbuda is home to smaller, exclusive resorts and a sanctuary for frigate birds.

Continue reading the main story Politics: Prime Minister Baldwin Spencer and his United Progressive Party won elections in 2009Economy: Tourism and banking are key sectors in the services-based economy. Both were hit hard by the 2008 global economic crisis

Country profiles compiled by BBC Monitoring

But a reliance on tourism makes the nation vulnerable to downturns in the world market. Internet gambling sites based in the country are an alternative source of revenue. However, Antigua and the US have been locked in a trade dispute over American restrictions on online gaming. In 2013 Antigua upped the stakes by applying to the World Trade Organisation for a permission to run what amounts to a pirate website circumventing copyright law.

For decades Antigua and Barbuda’s politics was dominated by the Bird family, with Vere Bird being the country’s prime minister from independence in 1981 until 1994, when he was succeeded by his son, Lester, who spent a decade in office.


Underlying this stability was a succession of scandals, including allegations of corruption. The Bird family was also accused of abuse of authority.


Antigua and Barbuda, once described by the US as a centre for money laundering, was recognised by an international task force in 2001 as being “fully cooperative” in the fight against the activity.


In 2009, the country’s economy – and the reputation of its financial regulatory system – was rocked by news that its single biggest investor, Texan billionaire Allen Stanford, had been charged with massive fraud by the US authorities.


Antigua harbour Tourism is the islands’ biggest source of income

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Antigua and Barbuda profile

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Former Antigua cops freed on drug charges

Latest News

Friday, July 26, 2013 | 8:49 AM

ST JOHN’S, Antigua (CMC) – Lawyers for two former police officers say they will probably seek legal redress from the state after a magistrate dismissed five drug related charges against their clients.Police had claimed that Arleigh Byer and Cosbert Sergeant, who faced joint charges of possession, possession with intent, drug trafficking, possession with intent to sell, and conspiracy to traffic 35 kilos cocaine, were also allegedly custodians of the house in which 34-year-old Alwin Robin and Dermoth Alix Riviere, 32, both of Dominica, were found shot dead execution style with wounds to the head.The drugs had a street value of one million dollars (One EC dollar = US$0.37 cents).But on Thursday, Chief Magistrate Joanne Walsh dismissed the five indictable drug charges against the former cops.The dismissal of the charges followed a no-case submission. Attorney Steadroy Benjamin described the charges as malicious prosecution.“The defendants had no case to answer because there was no evidence to support any charge laid against them by the prosecution. This clearly shows that the prosecution knew from the get go there was no basis to lay the charges,” defence attorney Lawrence Daniel said.The two former police officers now face 15 allegations of money laundering and remain on EC$800,000 bail.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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Former Antigua cops freed on drug charges

Former Antigua cops freed on drug charges

News

Friday, July 26, 2013 | 8:49 AM

ST JOHN’S, Antigua (CMC) – Lawyers for two former police officers say they will probably seek legal redress from the state after a magistrate dismissed five drug related charges against their clients.Police had claimed that Arleigh Byer and Cosbert Sergeant, who faced joint charges of possession, possession with intent, drug trafficking, possession with intent to sell, and conspiracy to traffic 35 kilos cocaine, were also allegedly custodians of the house in which 34-year-old Alwin Robin and Dermoth Alix Riviere, 32, both of Dominica, were found shot dead execution style with wounds to the head.The drugs had a street value of one million dollars (One EC dollar = US$0.37 cents).But on Thursday, Chief Magistrate Joanne Walsh dismissed the five indictable drug charges against the former cops.The dismissal of the charges followed a no-case submission. Attorney Steadroy Benjamin described the charges as malicious prosecution.“The defendants had no case to answer because there was no evidence to support any charge laid against them by the prosecution. This clearly shows that the prosecution knew from the get go there was no basis to lay the charges,” defence attorney Lawrence Daniel said.The two former police officers now face 15 allegations of money laundering and remain on EC$800,000 bail.

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Former Antigua cops freed on drug charges

Friday, July 12, 2013

Officials still assessing Antigua tornado damage

News

Friday, July 12, 2013

ST JOHN’S, Antigua (CMC) — Antigua and Barbuda authorities were yesterday still assessing the damage caused by a tornado that touched down in the north-east of the island.Director of the National Office of Disaster Services, Philmore Mullin, said it was still too early to determine the cost of the damage caused by the weather system late Tuesday close to Long Island, located about two miles off the north-east coast of Antigua.“Whatever was in its way got scratched so it uprooted trees, downed power lines, damaged vehicles, damaged buildings, and removed things considered to be heavy out of its path,” Mullin told the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC).Commanding Officer Major Randolph Best said about half of the buildings at the Antigua and Barbuda Defence Force had been affected.While tornadoes, known as waterspouts here, have occurred in the past they have primarily uprooted trees or remained at sea.Residents believe that the system may have been linked to the passage of Tropical Storm Chantal through the Lesser Antilles on Tuesday, and Mullen said “I could say that weather conditions were correct for that type of development and it just took place”.

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Officials still assessing Antigua tornado damage