The Tobago airport terminal, the proposed inter-island regional ferry and the Forensic Science Centre remain unfinished or under review, Works and Infrastructure Minister Jearlean John said today.
Speaking at a United National Congress media conference, John addressed the status of the projects which featured prominently in government announcements before the April election.
The Tobago ANR Robinson Airport terminal, originally slated for completion by July last year, has yet to be handed over to the Airports Authority. John said work on the project was continuing, with runway paving still under way.
“Well, we had our first quarter, and we’re still in the first quarter. That is NIDCO. They were paving the runway, as I heard last. NIDCO’s chairman was up there last week,” she said.
John added she expected to visit Tobago later this month.
“And I will go at the end of this month with the expectation that one could say this airport has achieved practical completion and hand it over to the Airports Authority, to the Ministry,” she said.
Questions were also raised about the proposed regional ferry service between Trinidad and Tobago, discussions on which began in 2024. John confirmed the project had not been abandoned but said it was not currently under active consideration.
“Our first order of business is to get that sea bridge between Trinidad and Tobago as right as we can get it. I think we’d love to do the regional ferry, but that is not before the Cabinet at this time, or even before the Board of the Port Authority,” she said.
Asked whether the ferry had been scrapped, John replied: “No, not at all, not at all.”
Attention then turned to the Forensic Science Centre, a project announced more than a decade ago and formally launched in December 2023. The facility was to be funded through a grant from the Chinese government at an estimated cost of $95 million.
John said the project remained separate from plans to consolidate national security facilities at Tamana and confirmed it had been revalidated by the new Cabinet.
Chairman of the Urban Development Corporation of Trinidad and Tobago Shankar Bidaisee said discussions were ongoing with the Government of the People’s Republic of China.
“So right now, UDeCott is engaging in discussions with the government of the Republic of China, People’s Republic. And the next step is to, once they form a contract, do due diligence. And once they conduct that, then we hit the ground running,” he said.
Asked whether the project was still alive, Bidaisee replied: “Yes, absolutely.”
He said a final start date was expected within months.
“Well, we suspect it should be in about three to four months. We should have a final date by which the project should start,” he said, adding the timeline depended on the Chinese government.
