Senior Multimedia Reporter
joshua.seemungal@guardian.co.tt
Of all that has changed in the 166 years since Trinidad’s first oil well was drilled near La Brea’s Pitch Lake, the importance of petrochemicals to the country’s development remains constant. As Southerners will proudly tell you, the association between the South and the sector is one steeped in a history as rich as the black gold that has flowed from its reserves for more than a century.
From the first export cargo of crude oil from Brighton in 1910 to the discovery of the High Seas Well 1 in 1954 to the Government’s acquisition of Shell Trinidad Limited in 1974 to the formation of Petrotrin in 1993, the list of historical highs is a lengthy one, but so too is the list of dramas. The Uriah Butler-led oilfield riots of 1937, sparked by cries of exploitation by the British against oilfield employees come to mind. And Petrotrin’s November 2018 closure marks the latest major chapter.
With the company losing billions annually, the Government shut the Pointe-a-Pierre oil refinery down, leaving more than 3,500 permanent and 1,200 non-permanent workers unemployed. And while Heritage Petroleum Company and Paria Fuel Trading Company (the two companies coming out of the defunct state enterprise) recorded combined profits of more than $1.3 billion in fiscal 2022, it’s undeniable that South’s petro-communities have forever been changed. Close to five years after the Petrotrin shutdown, Guardian Media’s investigative desk visited some of those communities to explore how life has changed.
Holding a deep
anxious breath
As one drives through Pointe-a-Pierre and Claxton Bay, there is a feeling as though everyone and everything is holding a deep anxious breath, waiting to exhale. Many of the people driving by in cars or the few walking the roads seem preoccupied, as if they are carrying the world on their shoulders. Rather, it is the weight of Petrotrin’s shadow, some residents said. They said the fuel that once kept the communities alight was cut off in November 2018 with the refinery’s closure. Left in its wake, they said, is a pain that people are still struggling to come to terms with, and an uncertainty that it will ever be overcome.
“Yeah, it worse since Petrotrin closed down. It’s a chain reaction because when Petrotrin was around, it used to trickle down, but you’re not getting anything again.
“I will say it is like there is no community because nothing is happening. Even though people help as a community, only certain people will get help. It’s not like it’s for all. You help family and friends,” laments Sheppard, a Tulip Avenue resident in his late 50s.
Sheppard and two Cepep workers—Leston and Aleem—are having a conversation in the front of his yellow one-storey concrete house near a WASA station. Leston, in his mid-30s, is a former part-time Petrotrin worker living in Claxton Bay. The father of two young children lost his job with the company’s closure.
“Look where I working now. I working at Cepep. It has no opportunities or anything like that around here. Things get real slow. I didn’t get any money like people who were (permanent) inside of there,” Leston says with a defeated, nervous chuckle.
Leston said many young people in Pointe-a-Pierre, Marabella and Claxton Bay are desperate for decent-paying, honest work. He lamented that people can’t survive on a minimum wage, given the increasing cost of living in recent years.
“The minimum wage stays at $17.50 (this was done before Finance Minister Colm Imbert raised it to $20.50 for fiscal 2024) for too many years. What are you getting with that? $100 is nothing. That’s two things in the grocery.
“When prices go up, people with money paying it, you know. They not organising any protests and saying prices going up. People with the money, they going and buy it, and encourage the stupidness that going on,” he says.
It is not by chance crime is on the rise in the South and seemingly everywhere else in the country, he said.
“It have a lot of youth men breaking into places and thieving and robbing to live. Because you work a hard day and they want to pay a labourer $200 because the Venezuelans are working for that.
“The older people in government need to step down and let some younger heads go and see what they could do. Those old heads only spinning top in mud. They looking to fatten their pocket,” Leston says.
Listening to Leston, Sheppard recalled the days of raising his children. He said the milk that he used to pay $17.50 for now costs $100.
“What we talking about here, you feel it different if you go to Claxton Bay? Or let us go further if you go to Port-of-Spain? So it seems like we just fooling ourselves. We have to be real–all over is the same thing. It’s Trinidad and Tobago, people bawling, and the poor people will always be bawling and just keep bawling. We will always feel it because they not doing anything for the poor people. The rich will be rich and the poor will get poorer. At some point, you are gonna have to take from the rich and give to the poor.
“It’s too many things happening with this Government and they have no explanations. The elections are a racial thing and if you put it aside, the real things will happen,” Sheppard says.
A five-minute drive away, along the Southern Main Road, Jeffrey is selling fruit and vegetables at a stall pieced together with wooden planks. The area is devoid of activity. The bar opposite does not have a single customer. The buildings are desperately in need of a new coat of paint. Bareback and his chest covered in tattoos, Jeffrey is well-spoken and friendly. When he hears what Guardian is asking about, he springs out of a jaded malaise to tell his story.
“Joshua, me being here is a result of Petrotrin closing. I used to work for a company that used to go along the tankers that would come out of Petrotrin and take their bilge water from the sumps and all of that—a downstream service. I was there for 22 months. Because of Petrotrin, the company crashed.
“This area was built by Texaco. My father, who is now deceased, worked at Texaco, and Trintoc and I think he worked one or two years at Petrotrin before he retired. All the land was awarded to Texaco workers but since that, a lot of people who used to work in the refinery moved on to do certain things,” Jeffrey says, putting up a brave face, but visibly bothered by the recollection.
Jeffrey said while NiQuan’s GTL plant started up afterwards, it has not had anything close to the same sort of impact. Petrotrin, he said, had a generational legacy in southern communities where sons would often replace their fathers in the company upon retirement.
“Totally, my life has changed. Even though I never worked a day for the company, having been in a downstream company, it impacted my life immensely. Now I have to work seven days a week just to make ends meet.
“Normally this place was pumping with activity. People would run by the groceries, run by the food place, but unfortunately, all that done. At the end of the day, what they gonna say, Petrotrin closed down, look for other avenues, but they ain’t put nothing in place for other people,” Jeffrey laments before servicing a customer.
‘They kill everybody’
Across the road from Jeffrey’s stall is a small orange building at the entrance to Plaisance Park. While the shop is closed until further notice, it was once owned by a resident–Gary (not his real name)–a former Petrotrin worker. He worked for 14 years as a permanent employee and 19 years as a contract worker. After being laid off, he opened a food outlet there, but it closed recently. The cost of rent became too high. Now, he sells soup from home.
“I used to load ships. I was an operator out in the sea right there where all the tankers come in.
“It’s really hard boy. Petrotrin wasn’t a shop, so when I signed up for Petrotrin, I did it hoping I would make the 60-year-old to access pension and other benefits. I tried to go and take a big loan and when the closure happened, it cost me real money, even the money they give me for my 14 years of service wasn’t equivalent to cover that loan,” Gary says from inside his vehicle, thick beads of sweat pouring from his face.
The inside of his minivan has seen better days, the fabric is torn and stained, and its interior reeks of stale cigarettes. Gary is clearly in a rush to do something but the opportunity to tell his story is enough to put those plans on pause. He said emphatically what the Government did to Petrotrin employees was ‘murder’.
“Business got slow. Men lost their lives. Men under pressure still paying for whatever they had. They promised the fellas and them they would get back their work. Most of the fellas didn’t get back their job.
“I have a wife and family. I have things to pay for–mortgage, this, that. Right now, I am a hustler. I trying, but it hard. I still survive, but some kill themself because they can’t take it again. That was an unjust thing they did. I told myself they had another way to do it and what I didn’t like, I remember the Prime Minister came out and said we are not going to close down Petrotrin. He made that statement to the public that he was just going to close the refinery. They didn’t just close the refinery. They take the whole of Petrotrin, so they mash up everybody,” Gary says, sweat still pouring profusely down his face.
According to the former Petrotrin worker, no matter what the government does in the future, it can never make up for what it did. They may be saving money, he said, but they killed off communities and with it, the futures of multiple generations.
“They tell themselves they do good, but they do a bad. Petrotrin is a company that no chance in the world you would expect to close down. They never informed brothers that they going to close, so men were still taking loans. So when you do something like that and go boop and hit men, and then gone in the public and say we give them X amount of money, yeah, the men on top get big money. The managers, millons. Small men down there, get nothing or a small pension. What that could do with this cost of living here now?” he says before driving off to collect some groceries.
‘The move was necessary’
One of Gary’s neighbours acknowledges there is suffering brought about by Petrotrin’s closure, but believes the move was necessary. He blames the Oilfield Workers’ Trade Union for what took place.
“You see the last two or three per cent that they give them in the industrial court, that was the nail in the coffin. Everyone fighting for more money. I give you $10 more, you not giving me $10 more work. And that is what happened there. Everybody wants more money, but they not giving you worth for what you’re working for. And that is why it closed down. If a business running without a union, watch how it progresses,” the resident says.
The resident said the unions played politics with the people, all while its leaders took home huge salaries. He said for decades stories of the unproductivity of Petrotrin workers were shared.
“Workers weren’t working. You working and you leaving your job and you going to drink. Imagine a man on sick leave and drinking in the sports club and he is offering the manager a beer,” he says.
Another Plaisance Park resident stopped his vehicle to add his voice to the conversation. He says, “Things running good. They were right to close Petrotrin. They were destroying the country financially. Anyone with common sense would tell you the unions destroy there. Greed. All the years of contributions, what do they have? Do you have a parlour? Do you have a grocery? What do you have for your members with their contributions? What you give them boots and a uniform?” he says before driving off.
No jobs
Outside of an abandoned building in Claxton Bay, a known drug block, three men are conversing. Two of them are marijuana dealers. The area is in urgent need of a washdown. Its buildings are stained by gang graffiti.
“It’s F****d up. F****d up. The people who are on top, staying on top and the people who are underneath, they keeping them underneath.
“It got plenty worse since Petrotrin closed down. I used to be able to make a dollar or two dollars here and there. Now you can’t go anywhere and make anything. It have nothing. When you come there, I thought you coming to say you want a little $40 or a $50 in marijuana or something,” one of the dealers says.
He said many young people from Marabella, Point and Claxton Bay used to make an honest living as part-time Petrotrin workers or working in the downstream industries but now opportunities are scarce.
“Right now, it’s pressure. What opportunities does it have? Just imagine they telling you they want five, seven or ten subjects to do petty things that any man out here could do.
“The Government selling out everything. They sell out Petrotrin. They sell out the pitch lake. It’s the politicians who have us here because Trinidad has enough resources. Poverty is getting way worse. The youths have no jobs. A man could stay hungry, you know, but a man cannot sit down and watch his children be hungry. He will kill you to feed the children,” he says.
A woman in her 40s liming with another dealer nearby said this was the worst she had seen Claxton Bay and Pointe-a-Pierre in her life. She describes it as dilapidated and disgusting.
“That is the worst thing they could have ever done in my life. Did that make any kind of sense? Do you know how many people used to live because of the refinery? People are really under pressure now. Real pressure. This was the capital of south Trinidad. People used to come down here to look for a living … All Moruga, Maloney ...
“The bandit rate is getting higher because people can’t get a living. Home invasions getting more prominent. It is the most prominent thing right now,” she says.
As I leave, one of the dealers says, “You can’t leave a little $20, brother?”
I say, “I don’t have anything on me. I’ll try to come back.”
He says with a laugh, “You sound like them politician there boy. You eh coming back.”