Editorial Staff
22/01/25 15:20

Editorial Staff
22/01/25 15:20

Antigua Spent Millions to Feed Sheep? | Editorial

You can now listen to Antigua News articles!

By Kieron Murdoch | Opinion Contributor

The government should offer an update on the status of the solar farm adjacent to the airport. Yes, the one inaugurated in 2016 that we all pass daily if we drive on Sir George Walter Highway (Airport Road) with the damaged fence and the sheep grazing to keep the vegetation from interfering with the panels.

The question is, is the facility online? From looking, one cannot tell. But from the damaged fence, hanging signage and general look of neglect, we might be forgiven for assuming it is not.

We know there was a fallout over the solar farm and its operation was at one point in limbo. In 2021, we recall there was talk about the government suing PV Energy Ltd over meeting its obligations about the ongoing operation of the site. PV Energy was the principal company involved in the project brokered under then-Energy Minister, the late Asot Michael.

In May 2021, then Utilities Minister, Sir Robin Yearwood told the Observer that the government and PV Energy Ltd were in a dispute over batteries the government says the company hadn’t supplied. He said: “The Prime Minister and them had a chat and they were supposed to start doing everything but from the time the meeting was finished we haven’t heard nothing from them and I honestly and personally feel that is heading towards the courts.”

So, what is the status three years and several months later? According to information published by the government back in 2016, the 3-megawatt plant at the airport was part of a total 10-megawatt solar project. Overall, it would be beneficial for the sake of transparency for the government to clarify how much of the installed solar capacity created under this project is operating at present, where there are faults if any, and what are the ongoing strategies for remedying them.

If the government is in court with PV Energy, what is the update? If that effort has fallen through, what other options are there? There is no reason why, despite whatever obstacles may have presented themselves, the infrastructure should not be put to proper use and its potential benefit maximised. Otherwise, we would have spent millions merely to provide a shady space to graze a few sheep.

The controversy of the battery dispute between the government and PV Energy Ltd was not an only child as far as the overall project was concerned. The late Ast Michael was taped by foreign law enforcement demanding bribes from the company’s owner, British Businessman Peter Virdee. This revelation created a national scandal in late 2017.

Many would recall Michael was momentarily fired from the Cabinet by Prime Minister Gaston Browne before being reappointed to the Cabinet by Browne after a general election in March 2018, only to resign some months later under pressure from Browne some months later over the same scandal. It would later be revealed in May 2018 that an employee of PV Energy, Dieter Trutschler, had been accused in 2003 of misappropriating funds from an energy project in Europe.

Alongside PV Energy, a company known as the Meeco Group was also linked to the solar project. It was revealed that this entity was owned by Trutschler’s wife. The entire thing left the government with egg on its face, pointing to an alarmingly weak or ineffective level of diligence done on the investors before contracting them for the project.

Of course, it was no surprise to some that such characters would have been sought out by Michael who was himself a highly controversial politician dogged throughout his career by a litany of corruption scandals and scandals surrounding his personal conduct, such as his drunken tirade inside Caribbean Union Bank (CUB) in the run-up to the 2023 general election.

Still, clean renewable energy is a policy priority for every government in the world at the moment, so it is essential that as a nation, we take the push toward renewables seriously. The completion and recent handover of the Green Barbuda Solar Hybrid Electricity Plant in March 2024 demonstrates that when we work with credible partners or donors, much can be achieved sustainably.

So, in an age of destructive climate change when we are at every international forum sounding the alarm for the major polluters of the world to adhere to carbon-cutting pledges, why have we spent several million dollars on a solar farm to leave it non-operational? At this rate, the only thing that will come of this project is the most underpriced mutton ever sold.

About the writer:

Kieron Murdoch is an opinion contributor at antigua.news. He worked as a journalist and later as a radio presenter in Antigua and Barbuda for eight years, covering politics and governance especially. If you have an opinion on the issues raised in this editorial and you would like to submit a response by email to be considered for publication, please email staff@antigua.news

7 Comments

  1. Commenting from the distance

    Valid comment, how many other mega projects are rotting away now the creative enrichment minister involved has lined their pockets?

    Keep digging!

    Reply
  2. Faithful National #1

    Kieron, if only you showed a quarter of the interest you now show in the 32 acres of land at Diamonds Estate being pissed on daily by MP Watts, one might be more inclined to bother to read your crap. Your filthy tail is exposed, but you deserve pity and understanding. You really can’t help. It’s in your DNA. Ah wha’ Vere do Hilson? Hahaha

    Reply
    • Unfaithful non-national

      Seems like you read it in its entirety though. 🤣🤣🤣🤣

      Reply
    • Henderson G

      Lol. Faithful National (Red) is brooding because nothing said in this editorial was incorrect or unfair. He didn’t criticise anything the writer said at all. Not one line.

      He just attacked the writer then deflected to a UPP MP and said “go and pay attention to them instead”. Sad state of affairs in this country that these are the kinds of citizens we have here. Yall are rabid

      Sad.

      Yall are a real example for the future generation. Anyway. Long time me stop vote Labour.

      Reply
    • Jacqueline

      What got you so upset @Faithfull National? You done call the author “filthy” and the article “crap”. You a sad sack of something man. And you parading under a nickname. Find your balls one of these days and write a letter to the editor in response.

      Reply
  3. George aboeid

    3 mega what???
    As an electrical engineer specialized in solar energy systems i can tell that system can not be 3 megawatt .

    Reply
  4. Goat Family

    Always messy on Antigua news. Uncivilized band of infants. Let us critique this properly instead of cussing one another. Now the writter i don’t care two hoots about but the content is acurate. My question is when will the government stop wasting people’s money with these silly projects that goes absolutley nowhere?

    Reply

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