By
Stabroek
staff | 41
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Archives | Wednesday,
June 23, 2010
President Bharrat Jagdeo and Trinidad & Tobago
Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar are expected to meet
today in the Twin-Island republic to discuss several
issues including the possibility of an aluminium
smelter
originally proposed for the southwestern Trinidad town of
La Brea being built here.

(Your lund
cannot generate enough power
to operate the
aluminium smelter)
A report in yesterday’s Trinidad Express stated that
Jagdeo was expected in Trinidad last evening and that he
would be meeting with Persad-Bissessar today at 3 pm. The
discussions were expected to revolve around the aluminium
smelter, ethanol and hydro-electricity, the article said.
The article quoted sources as saying that Persad-Bissessar
wants to examine the feasibility of relocating the
aluminium smelter plant to Guyana, during her meeting with
Jagdeo.
The US$400 million project has been stalled in Trinidad
& Tobago pending the outcome of an appeal. The High
Court found that the Certificate of Environmental
Clearance given by the Environmental Management Authority
(EMA) was deficient because it failed to consider several
things. According to the article, the EMA has
appealed this judgment and the decision by the Appeal
court is pending.
A senior government official confirmed yesterday that a
meeting between the President and the recently elected
Trinidadian Prime Minister is scheduled for today. The
official said that the President would visit while on his
way back from Canada and said that the meeting would be
“wide-ranging”. The source also confirmed that
the possible establishment of the aluminium smelter plant
would be one of the things on the agenda. Stabroek
News also understands that the Head of State also intends
to raise issues related to agriculture with
Persad-Bissessar.
The article in the Express noted that Guyana has vast
amounts of land space and that the country produces
bauxite, the raw material from which aluminum is made.
The article noted that it was because Trinidad &
Tobago possessed natural gas, a key ingredient in the
process of aluminium production, that it first embarked on
this process. There has been a very vocal
anti-smelter lobby in Trinidad and Tobago, which has been
resolute in its opposition to the establishing of such a
plant in the country, the article noted.
The current government in the Twin-Island republic,
during the election campaign, had pledged not to go ahead
with the establishment of the plant in the country. The
Express quoted the Housing Minister Roodal Moonilal as
saying that there would be no smelter until all the
parties involved in the dispute could arrive at a
consensus on the need for such a development policy and
assure the nation on the health and safety issues
involved.
The Express in their article pointed to sources who
said that the cancellation of the project would cost the
country dearly. The previous Manning-led
administration had entered into several agreements,
including a loan agreement with the Exim Bank of China
worth US$400 million to facilitate the construction of the
project.
The government of Guyana has long spoken about
developing a new smelter in the country and had encouraged
overseas investors to pursue such projects.
Chinese company Bosai Minerals Group has previously
signalled its intention to invest US$1 billion in an
alumina refinery and aluminium smelter.
In November 2008, the government and the head of Bosai
Minerals Group signed an agreement, to permit Bosai to
conclude a feasibility study to determine the financial
and economic attractiveness of establishing a one-million-tonne
per year alumina plant in Linden.
Previously in January 2007, the administration had
entered into a Letter of Intent (LOI) with the Russian
bauxite giant RUSAL to pursue the development of an
alumina plant and smelter. A release from the
Privatisation Unit noted that these projects were subject
to feasibility studies and that favourable results could
see the construction starting by 2011.