Newsgathering Editor
kejan.haynes@guardian.co.tt
Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley says he finds it strange that the same people who continuously chastise his Government for not generating enough direct foreign investment are now the ones who have a problem with Indian businessman Naveen Jindal expressing interest in the mothballed Petrotrin refinery at Pointe-a-Pierre refinery.
The PM made the comment while speaking to attendees of his $1,200-a-plate Breakfast with the Prime Minister at the Hyatt Regency, Port-of-Spain, yesterday.
His statement seemed to be a direct response to the Opposition and Oilfields Workers’ Trade Union challenge of Government engaging Indian businessman Naveen Jindal, who has expressed an interest in the Petrotrin refinery.
Rowley said at this time, the expressions of interest in the refinery are just that but the Government has not yet looked at the expressions.
During the PNM’s Sports and Family Day in San Fernando on Sunday, Rowley said Cabinet will soon form a committee to evaluate the proposals. The committee will report to the country at the end of August.
“But there seems to be an attempt to dissuade foreigners from investing in Trinidad and Tobago,” Dr Rowley said yesterday.
“Interestingly enough, it’s coming from the same people who would say from time to time there is not enough direct foreign investment. One of the failures of the Government is that we need more direct foreign investment. Are we not getting it? And lo and behold, we now have the potential for foreign investment from a place where there are people who want to invest abroad and who are investing abroad, and we are saying, well, if you’re investing in Oman and Qatar and Dubai and staying wherever you are, consider Trinidad and Tobago. And that seems to be upsetting some people.”
UNC leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar has alleged that Jindal is working as a proxy for the Venezuelan government to refine its oil here in Trinidad and Tobago.
Persad-Bissessar made the claim at the UNC’s Monday Night Report, noting that if this is the case, the Government would be taking T&T down a dangerous path, as Venezuela is still under heavy US sanctions.
Rowley directly thanked T&T’s High Commissioner to India, Roger Gopaul, for his influence in introducing Jindal to the Government.
He also thanked the honorary council in Ghana, whom he said has worked “very hard towards getting Ghanaian proposals from Ghanaian business” to look at the refinery.
Responding indirectly to accusations he overstepped the procurement process, the Prime Minister said there were previous proposals for the refinery, including that of the OWTU’s Patriotic Energies and Technologies Company which were evaluated but rejected.
“We had one local proposal which said to the Government we are interested, we want the refinery. But the way we going to get the refinery is the Government must give us 500 million US dollars of bonds that are tradable, and we will use that to buy the refinery and to operate it,” Rowley explained.
“So you want taxpayers to give you taxpayers’ money that is tradable bonds, which you could just convert into cash as you please, and use the taxpayer money to buy the taxpayer refinery for your benefit. That is the kind of foolishness that some people advance to the Government.”
Rowley said another proposal received required the Government to sign a contract to buy whatever was produced.
Rowley said, “If those are the proposals, the answer could obviously only be no thanks.”
The Prime Minister stressed the country is positioning itself as a place of production and onward access to markets in North America, Central America or South America, to be able to grow out of a possible declining revenue stream in the hydrocarbon sector.