Senior Reporter
elizabeth.gonzales@guardian.co.tt
Environmental activist Dr Wayne Kublalsingh and Movement for Social Justice leader David Abdulah have supported the proposed restart of the former ArcelorMittal steel plant at Point Lisas, but warn that the Government must disclose the cost, terms and strategic implications of the project.
Their call comes after Government announced on the weekend that it had signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Pinnacle Steel and Vanadium Corporation to begin discussions on refurbishing, recommissioning and operating the plant.
It said the project could also position Trinidad and Tobago as a producer of vanadium, a strategic metal used in aerospace and defence products, including military aircraft. The Government estimates the country could eventually supply up to 50 per cent of total United States demand if the project proceeds. It added that the Point Lisas Industrial Port Development Corporation (Plipdeco), which owns the property and lands where the plant is located, is also a party to the agreement.
Contacted yesterday, Kublalsingh, who led protests against proposed aluminium smelters and other heavy industrial projects several years ago, said he had no objection to restarting steel production.
“I don’t have any problems with the restart of the steel mill. I think it needs to be restarted, so I think that’s a very good venture,” he said.
However, he said the Government must disclose the price the company will pay for natural gas, electricity and water, as well as the benefits T&T will receive.
Kublalsingh said the environmental review must also examine particulate matter, dust and effluent from the plant. He said the public must know whether the investor will receive favourable utility prices while local manufacturers and consumers face higher costs.
“We hide all the costs associated with the projects, and we bear all the costs, and the foreigners and investors bear all the profits,” Kublalsingh said.
“We bear all the social costs, the economic costs, the financial costs, the ecological costs, the costs of electricity and water, and then they end up with the profits. That is the major fear facing Trinidad and Tobago with these projects.”
Abdulah also described the plant’s restart as positive, but said the Government must release more information about the MoU, any concessions being offered and the reason the US company was selected.
He also supported the Steel Workers Union of Trinidad and Tobago’s position that it should be consulted and that former ArcelorMittal workers who are still able and willing to work should receive priority for employment.
Asked whether supplying a strategic material used by the US defence sector could make Point Lisas or the country a target during a major conflict, Abdulah said the possibility could not be dismissed.
“Yes, it becomes a concern if there is a global military development that is located in this part of the world. Then yes, it could become a target. That’s always a possibility,” he said.
However, Abdulah questioned the basis for Government’s estimate. He said it was unclear whether the plant can produce vanadium or whether the US would depend on a foreign producer for such a large share of a strategic material.
He said safeguards should include union representation, priority employment for former workers, proper safety standards, respect for labour laws and fair prices for the country’s gas, electricity and water.
“The country must get a fair share,” he said.
