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Friday, June 6, 2025

OWTU blames closure of Petrotrin for T&T’s forex issues

by

KEVON FELMINE
218 days ago
20241031
Oilfields Workers’ Trade Union chief education and research officer  Ozzi Warwick during the CCLCS panel discussion.

Oilfields Workers’ Trade Union chief education and research officer Ozzi Warwick during the CCLCS panel discussion.

KRISTIAN DE SILVA

KEVON FELMINE

Se­nior Re­porter

kevon.felmine@guardian.co.tt

Oil­fields Work­ers’ Trade Union (OW­TU) chief ed­u­ca­tion and re­search of­fi­cer Ozzi War­wick has blamed the 2018 clo­sure of Petrotrin for T&T’s for­eign ex­change woes.

Speak­ing at a Cipri­ani Col­lege of Labour and Co-op­er­a­tive Stud­ies (CCLCS) pan­el dis­cus­sion ti­tled What’s in it for Labour, War­wick ar­gued that Petrotrin’s shut­down se­vere­ly im­pact­ed the coun­try’s for­eign ex­change and rev­enue gen­er­a­tion, trig­ger­ing the on­go­ing forex short­age.

This week, busi­ness­men com­plained about is­sues ac­cess­ing for­eign ex­change to pay for es­sen­tial goods. The own­er of Ram­saran Dairy Prod­ucts Ra­j­nanan Ram­saran wrote to the IMF and oth­er agen­cies over the is­sue.

War­wick claimed the clo­sure was “the worst eco­nom­ic de­ci­sion of any gov­ern­ment,” not­ing that Petrotrin, a ma­jor for­eign ex­change earn­er, had not been rec­om­mend­ed for clo­sure by any of­fi­cial eval­u­a­tion com­mit­tees.

Gov­ern­ment, how­ev­er, has main­tained that Petrotrin was not shut down but re­struc­tured, with­draw­ing from the re­fin­ing busi­ness. Trinidad Pe­tro­le­um Hold­ings Ltd is cur­rent­ly ne­go­ti­at­ing with three bid­ders in­ter­est­ed in the for­mer Petrotrin re­fin­ery at Pointe-a-Pierre.

War­wick high­light­ed the pro­duc­tion de­cline since Petrotrin’s clo­sure, which he said has been detri­men­tal to the oil and gas in­dus­tries and the broad­er econ­o­my. Oil pro­duc­tion fell by 18.2 per cent from Jan­u­ary to De­cem­ber 2023, and gas pro­duc­tion de­creased from 2.7 bil­lion cu­bic feet (BCF) per day in Jan­u­ary 2023 to 2.5 BCF in De­cem­ber. By June, nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion had dropped be­low two BCF per day for the first time in over two decades, a sta­tis­tic he at­trib­uted to “a failed en­er­gy pol­i­cy and lax reg­u­la­to­ry over­sight.”

“These loss­es, un­for­tu­nate­ly, are now be­ing borne by or­di­nary peo­ple, who are treat­ed with con­tempt and dis­dain,” War­wick said. He stressed that Petrotrin’s clo­sure ex­ac­er­bat­ed the for­eign ex­change cri­sis, now one of the biggest is­sues im­pact­ing the work­ing class. Ac­cord­ing to War­wick, Min­is­ter of Fi­nance Colm Im­bert’s re­cent $54.2 bil­lion fis­cal pre­sen­ta­tion con­veyed a dis­mis­sive tone to­wards State ser­vices, as though cit­i­zens should feel priv­i­leged to re­ceive gov­ern­ment as­sis­tance.

“This is the Gov­ern­ment’s men­tal­i­ty. They do not be­lieve that or­di­nary peo­ple should ben­e­fit from the coun­try’s re­sources.”

CCLCS lec­tur­er Trevor John­son crit­i­cised the Gov­ern­ment’s re­cent five per cent wage pro­pos­al for pub­lic sec­tor work­ers, not­ing that many are sur­viv­ing on 2013 wages. He not­ed a few set­tle­ments ex­tend­ing as far back as 2019. With 2025 ap­proach­ing, John­son ar­gued, work­ers faced prices from 2024 mar­kets with out­dat­ed salaries.

“We are ex­pect­ing those work­ers to find mon­ey to come to work, pay their bills, and af­ford gov­ern­ment charges that have in­creased over the years,” John­son said.

Joint Trade Union Move­ment (JTUM) as­sis­tant gen­er­al sec­re­tary Ake­ba Wil­son crit­i­cised the re­cent in­crease in the min­i­mum wage for pub­lic sec­tor work­ers. A $2 per hour hike means a work­er now earns around $3,600 month­ly, which, she point­ed out, bare­ly cov­ers rent for sin­gle par­ents with mul­ti­ple chil­dren.


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