Davis defends BPL and new hospital plans

By JADE RUSSELL 

Tribune Staff Reporter 

jrussell@tribunemedia.net

PRIME Minister Philip “Brave” Davis defended his administration’s energy reform initiatives and plans to build a new hospital in New Providence when he wrapped up the budget debate in the House of Assembly yesterday.

Last week, the Davis administration unveiled its planned reforms for the country’s energy sector, outlining how it will modernise the electricity grid and adjust tariffs.

Yesterday, Mr Davis said the opposition had spewed misinformation about the government’s energy reform plan.

“At this point, we are facing the prospect of an energy crisis as crucial parts of our ageing power grid are in danger of collapse, which would literally leave us in the dark,” Mr Davis said. “Let’s be honest. There’s a reason that governments have kicked the can down the road, hoping and praying that band-aids and patches could hold our electricity grid together, declining to do the hard and challenging work of comprehensive reform.”

Mr Davis said fixing BPL is not a task for the “faint at heart” but is something his administration will do. He said the government is still paying for the Minnis administration’s $90m acquisition of seven Wartsila generation engines.

He said the government’s entire capital expenditure budget for the upcoming fiscal year, which is spread across all ministries, would not make up one-third of the amount needed to fix BPL, which requires $1bn.

The government has partnered with many companies involved with solar, LNG, and large-scale infrastructure projects to overhaul the energy system. It has also partnered with local solar providers.

Mr Davis said the government has made it clear who it is partnering with to transform BPL but that the opposition had failed to be transparent about BPL in the past.

He said in 2021, consultants hired by the FNM voiced concerns about the former administration’s lack of transparency.

“If members opposite want to see a lack of transparency, they can even look beyond BPL at the Dorian relief supplies that never made it to the people of Abaco and Grand Bahama,” he said. “They can look at their pandemic food relief programme where shoddy records were kept, and money is still missing that can’t be accounted for.”

Mr Davis gave a reassurance that due to the government’s partnerships with Island Grid and other entities, BPL will not become privatised. He said that through the partnerships, BPL will be stronger and that there will be no staff termination.

He also reiterated that his administration would facilitate the first new public hospital in New Providence in over 70 years and the first new hospital in Grand Bahama since independence.

“The side opposite initially said building new hospitals was a pipe dream that could not be accomplished,” he said. “Their former leader, the member for Killarney, just last year was quoted as saying it would cost over $1.2bn to build, which made it impossible to be launched within this term.”

“When we announced the plans to build the new hospitals, unsurprisingly, when they realised we were making it happen, they then tried to say we shouldn’t build the new hospitals. The member for Killarney had to eat his words and start singing a different song. They’re not saying it’s impossible anymore. Their chairman said we should just slap some repairs on what was already there. They want us to just put another expansion on PMH.”

Comments

Dawes says...

Yawn, give it a rest Davies. We all know this is a money grab for certain people. You keep mentioning the $1 billion needed and yet the party being brought in is only funding $130 million. And over time they will fund more using revenue generated. This could be BPL doing this. I have always wanted BPL to be private but stop misinforming people that this is a necessity and then making sure it is only certain people getting it and not fully open to all.

Posted 18 June 2024, 9:07 a.m. Suggest removal

bahamianson says...

Brave worked under christie when we voted "No" to the gambling boys Flowers,Fox,and Sebas. Brave and Christie did not respect the Bahamian populace enough to honor the vote. Now, you want the dumb populace to trust you? Remarkable, just remarkable.

Posted 18 June 2024, 10:20 a.m. Suggest removal

ExposedU2C says...

This most corrupt privatisation of our nation's entire energy sector will need to be quickly undone by the next government as it wreaks to high heaven of outright corruption of the worst possible kind.

Bahamians and their businesses (even the wealthier ones) will not be able to afford electricity under an arrangement that effectively gives the greedy Snake and his local and foreign cronies the absolute power to set electricity rates, with no oversight whatsoever by URCA and with a corrupt and daft minister of transport and energy, namely Jobeth Davis, being all too willing to rubber stamp whatever the greedy crooks want to do.

Posted 18 June 2024, 1 p.m. Suggest removal

DWW says...

said too well

Posted 19 June 2024, 2:54 p.m. Suggest removal

Porcupine says...

Time to ban all lawyers from government.
They can't own up to any mistakes and do not want any transparency.
They will be borrowing more and more money at compound interest.
This country is doomed. All one has to do is to look at the math.
We are going to be borrowing more money for a hospital?
Privatization will reduce our electricity costs?
2.5 million dollars for a new airplane for this government while the infrastructure of this country collapses?
Are these people serious?
Obviously, they take the Bahamian public for absolute fools.
And, we will vote them back in again in the near future.
Kids will go abroad to get educated and return to what?
The PLP is an honest administration?
Ha ha ha ha ha.

Posted 18 June 2024, 2:29 p.m. Suggest removal

birdiestrachan says...

It is to bad that what is written here was not written about the cruise port the shipping port or the post office,

Posted 18 June 2024, 7:17 p.m. Suggest removal

ExposedU2C says...

Refreshing to have you supporting and proving my point with the examples you have provided. But I suspect you're too damn dumb an Chicom ai troller of this website to realise you're doing just that. LOL

Posted 19 June 2024, 2:21 p.m. Suggest removal

birdiestrachan says...

Is the word snake used for black Bahamians and not for those of a different hue, the man has run a profitable company he knows what he is doing calling him snake does not change the facts

Posted 18 June 2024, 7:26 p.m. Suggest removal

ThisIsOurs says...

I often wonder why noone was ever held to account for Pinewood Gardens. Its criminal what happened to those people

Posted 19 June 2024, 2:03 a.m. Suggest removal

DWW says...

and there is wonder where the nickname came from. LOL

Posted 19 June 2024, 2:56 p.m. Suggest removal

DWW says...

ever heard the term snake oil salesman? But we all know which basket your eggs are in.

Posted 19 June 2024, 2:57 p.m. Suggest removal

ExposedU2C says...

And to think you (@birdie) say the same thing about the Symonette Family. LMAO

Posted 19 June 2024, 3:06 p.m. Suggest removal

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