Senior Political Reporter
The foreign exchange”drought” has been caused by energy sector production declines and the shortage of US dollars will not improve over 2025/26 but will get worse, says former People’s Partnership (PP) energy minister Kevin Ramnarine.
Ramnarine gave the projection at Thursday’s UNC economic consultation at the La Joya Complex Auditorium in St Joseph.
He said the economy’s state is one of the two big issues in the April 28 General Election.
“The other issue is crime. Both are interrelated. A weak economy fuels crime and crime weakens the economy—a vicious cycle...,” he said.
“The Rowley/Young Government has presided over the worst contraction in the economy since the 1980s. Under their watch, T&T’s economy contracted by over 17 per cent and economic confidence was lost to the extent that our largest private sector companies are now investing heavily outside of this country, buying assets in other Caricom countries and in the United States.
“IMF data indicate that ours is the seventh worst performing economy in the world for 2016 to 2024. Topping us are countries like Venezuela, Yemen and eighth is Ukraine.”
Ramnarine said at the heart of this decline is a massive 31 per cent decline in the energy sector since 2015 because of huge declines in natural gas production and oil production.
“These declines have led to plant closures, job losses and the closure of companies. The evidence is overwhelming. In 2015, there were 20,500 people with jobs in the energy sector. In 2024, that number came down to an estimated 12,500. In 2015, we exported 231 cargoes of LNG and by 2024 that number collapsed to 131. If you want to know what caused the forex drought, look no further.”
Ramnarine claimed the forex shortage is a direct consequence of lower natural gas, oil and petrochemical production, which is a direct consequence of a significant collapse in drilling activity since 2015.
“Less drilling means less production. It’s either you ‘drill, baby, drill’ or pack up and go home ... We need to wake up the energy sector and the economy and we need to move quickly. The country is facing difficult years ahead because of natural gas production issues. UNC’s political leader said so in many of her Budget responses and more recently, Keith Rowley and Colm Imbert said so,” he added.
He questioned what the People’s National Movement (PNM) could tell voters it would do differently if T&T’s economy isn’t yet back to pre-Covid levels.
“A central political issue in this election is the Dragon deal, touted as one of the great achievements of the Rowley/Young decade. The former prime minister likened the Dragon deal to the Golden Fleece of Greek Mythology. They afforded great primacy to this deal and went so far as to say if it didn’t happen ‘we coo coo cooked’.”
Noting more US pressure on Venezuela would make the natural gas quest more complex and uncertain, Ramnarine added, “This country cannot plan its economic future on the hopes of getting Venezuelan gas. Those hopes rise and fall on the ebb and flow of geopolitical currents ... We must look within and develop with speed our own deepwater hydrocarbon resources, which Mrs Persad-Bissessar’s government unlocked from 2010 to 2015.”
Ramnarine said the way forward is to resuscitate the energy sector as quickly as possible.
“Make the best use of idle assets and make them generate forex as soon as possible. This includes idle oil-bearing acreage under the control of Heritage Petroleum and the closed-down refinery.”
He also advocated making it easier to do business, accelerating the development of deepwater gas assets, reducing taxation on non-energy sector companies to regain investment and aligning T&T to economic expansion in Guyana and Suriname.