Wednesday, September 4, 2013
EDITOR, The Tribune.
Executive Chairman of the Bahamas Electricity Corporation (BEC) Leslie Miller and the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) government are both determined to follow through with their pledge to offer a 10 per cent discount in their light bills to BEC customers in the not-too-distant future. The chairman has also vowed to reconnect 7,000 disconnected customers.
According to Miller, 50 per cent of these customers owed less than $2,000. Earlier in the year, Miller projected a loss of a staggering $50 million for the current year to end September 2013 for the struggling government owned corporation after announcing that BEC had lost $12 million in the first quarter. However, he has since then revised that figure to $22 million, which in my view is still a massive loss. BEC suffered a net loss of $18 million in 2012.
Miller has announced several initiatives that his government hopes will save BEC tens of millions of dollars annually. It is hoped that these cost saving measures will then be passed on to the consumers. Not surprisingly, BEC imports 99 per cent of its petroleum products. The government will exempt BEC from Excise Tax payments on its fuel imports, which is projected to save the corporation in the neighbourhood of $35 million a year. Miller has locked horns with the Bahamas Electrical Workers Union over the government’s decision to implement a shift system for BEC workers in order to decrease the huge overtime payments workers were raking in for years.
In 2012, BEC paid out over $11.8 million in overtime alone. Clearly, there will be inevitable factors beyond the government’s control with respect to the price of oil on the international market, notwithstanding Miller’s pledge to reduce the electricity bills of consumers. As of July 28, 2013, the price of a barrel of crude oil is pegged at $104.70.
The Organisation of Petroleum Expecting Countries, better known as OPEC, has been accused of manipulating oil prices.
In 2012, OPEC countries earned $982 billion in oil export revenues in 2012. That’s a mere $18 billion short of $1 trillion. For what it’s worth, the world has become an oil glutton in the past several decades. Currently, the government owes Shell West $86 million. In 2012 alone, the government spent a whopping $386 million on fuel. As a classical capitalist, I am opposed to the state meddling in the affairs of the private sector. I don’t believe governments were meant to be competing with its citizens in the private sector. When you look at it, the government has lost hundreds of millions in corporations such as BEC, Water and Sewerage and ZNS.
The government will never recoup the money it has lost on these corporations. Sooner or later, the government must bite the bullet and sell these unprofitable corporations. In the meantime, the government should give serious consideration to the outstanding proposal of FOCOL Holdings and its main principal, noted businessman Franklyn Wilson.
According to the July 25 edition of Tribune Business, FOCOL along with the Canadian electricity giant EMERA and the Finnish engine and turbine manufacturer Wartsila have proposed to construct a 100 Mega Watts multi-fuel power plant in New Providence, on land owned by FOCOL. Wilson says that this plant, which will be managed and controlled by Bahamians, will save the government in an excess of $100 million annually.
The plant will be able to utilise a variety of fuel, which will be a crucial factor in reducing the cost of electricity for consumers. According to Wilson, the trio of aforementioned companies will construct the plant at no cost to the government, under a build/own/operate arrangement. Wilson views this proposal as a win-win for everybody. I agree. FOCOL Holdings, in my view, has given the government an offer it just cannot refuse. Under such a generous proposal, the government cannot lose. If this venture fails, the government will suffer no loss, as it is not being asked to contribute one farthing towards the proposal. On the other hand, if it succeeds, the government will save at least $100 million annually.
Think about it: This means that the state would save $1 billion in a mere decade. The government could then used those savings and service its $5 billion national debt.
I think it was Albert Einstein who once said that insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. Successive governments have tried the same thing over and over again at BEC, and look where it has gotten us? The Christie administration should by all means accept the proposal that has been put on the table by FOCOL and its two partners and run with it. After all, what does it have to lose?
KEVIN EVANS
Freeport, Grand Bahama.
July 28, 2013
Comments
ThisIsOurs says...
And will complete the circle for the cabal. Oh if only Lime would give up that 2%
Posted 5 September 2013, 4:12 p.m. Suggest removal
Reality_Check says...
Bahamians have been paying a fortune at the gas pump ever since Frankie Wilson aka Snake got into that business through his control of FOCOL and that company's favourable treatment under the PLP. Letting Frankie aka Snake and crew have a monopoly in the supply of our country's electrical power needs would nothing short of economic suicide.....our already exorbitant electricity bills would double overnight! Christie really needs to have his head examined!!!!
Posted 5 September 2013, 4:13 p.m. Suggest removal
scarletplum says...
I know we are a small country and its hard not to be connected somehow politically, but the political connection with this proposal just reeks. And I want to know WHERE exactly is this land FOCOL owns in New Providence- Ain't much open land left in New Providence. What kind of environmental/health impact will it have on the thousands of households no doubt in its immediate surroundings and down wind? Since Wilson lives in the east- my guess is that its in the south or west.
Posted 5 September 2013, 4:36 p.m. Suggest removal
concernedcitizen says...
they get the profitable part making the power w/ the lastest equipment ,we get the costly part ,the employees ,their pension and an old distribution network ,,,
Posted 5 September 2013, 7:02 p.m. Suggest removal
242realtalk says...
They all ready have BEC, Bahamas air, etc, etc. Give someone else a chance. Anytime, some other Bahamian group attempts this mafia like group just uses its political influence to squeeze every other Bahamian group out.
Hogs, I say!
Posted 5 September 2013, 6:18 p.m. Suggest removal
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