JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Thursday, May 29, 2025

IDB loan gives WASA more options

by

610 days ago
20230928
Public Utilities Minister  Marvin Gonzales

Public Utilities Minister Marvin Gonzales

NICOLE DRAYTON

Last week in the Busi­ness Guardian, Min­is­ter of Pub­lic Util­i­ties, Mar­vin Gon­za­les out­lined an am­bi­tious pro­gramme of work to be un­der­tak­en by his Min­istry and Wa­ter and Sew­er­age Au­thor­i­ty (WASA), which would in­clude the re­fur­bish­ment and up­grade of ex­ist­ing wa­ter treat­ment plants at Gua­napo, Navet and North Oropouche.

The projects al­so in­clude new wa­ter treat­ment plants in Golds­bor­ough in To­ba­go and Green Mead­ows in San­ta Cruz and new wells, with as­so­ci­at­ed pipelines, pro­posed for the Clarke Road area in Pe­nal and for Tuck­er Val­ley in Ch­aguara­mas.

The in­fra­struc­tur­al up­grade of the wa­ter sup­ply in T&T is be­ing fund­ed by a US$80 mil­lion ($544 mil­lion) loan from the In­ter-Amer­i­can De­vel­op­ment Bank (IDB). That loan is the first tranche of a US$315 mil­lion ($2.14 bil­lion) con­di­tion­al cred­it line from the IDB.

Pub­lic Util­i­ties Min­is­ter, Mar­vin Gon­za­les said when the IDB-fund­ed projects are com­plet­ed by the end of next year, he ex­pects T&T to be less de­pen­dent on wa­ter from the de­sali­na­tion plant on the Point Lisas In­dus­tri­al Es­tate.

“Au­to­mat­i­cal­ly, the coun­try will not be that re­liant on De­sal­cott. Even though there is a take-or-pay con­tract to 2030 or 2035, as the case may be, the ad­di­tion­al vol­umes of wa­ter that we are go­ing to be pro­duc­ing would make the coun­try less de­pen­dent on de­sali­nat­ed wa­ter. So any dis­rup­tion of the De­sal­cott plant would not have the kind of im­pact that it is hav­ing on our do­mes­tic cus­tomers,” said Gon­za­les.

He said De­sal­cott now pro­duces about 40 mil­lion gal­lons of wa­ter a day. Of that amount, 15 mil­lion gal­lons of wa­ter go to the plants at Point Lisas and 25 mil­lion gal­lons go to do­mes­tic cus­tomers.

Once the in­fra­struc­tur­al projects are com­plet­ed, WASA’s con­tract with De­sal­cott would al­low the util­i­ty to re­dis­trib­ute wa­ter to ar­eas that are cur­rent­ly be­ing un­der­served. This would al­low the util­i­ty to pro­vide more days of wa­ter to res­i­dents who may be re­ceiv­ing wa­ter one or two days of the week.

The projects would al­so al­low WASA to store wa­ter in tanks, which the min­is­ter says is some­thing that is sad­ly lack­ing in the lo­cal wa­ter sec­tor.

“So if there is a dis­rup­tion at the Ca­roni Are­na Wa­ter Treat­ment Plant now, im­me­di­ate­ly the cus­tomers feel the im­pact be­cause wa­ter does not go in­to a stor­age fa­cil­i­ty where it can main­tain sup­ply for a day or two,” Gon­za­les said, adding the Min­istry has plans to re­fur­bish a five-mil­lion gal­lon stor­age tank at Mount Hope and the 10 mil­lion gal­lon tank at Pic­ton in Laven­tille.

He said once the min­istry gets a good al­lo­ca­tion in next Mon­day’s 2024 bud­get, it in­tends to con­struct a small, mod­u­lar wa­ter treat­ment plant in Ravine Sable in Cen­tral Trinidad.

“There is a huge lake of wa­ter (ac­quifer) that the Wa­ter Re­source Agency and the Uni­ver­si­ty of T&T con­duct­ed hy­dro­log­i­cal re­search on and they ad­vised me that we can ex­tract ap­prox­i­mate­ly two mil­lion gal­lons of wa­ter per day there,” said Gon­za­les.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored