ENERGY Minister Stuart Young and Public Utilities Minister Marvin Gonzales have rejected claims by Opposition Senator Wade Mark about planned retrenchment at the Water and Sewerage Authority (WASA), energy claims filed against the National Gas Company (NGC) and fuel exports from TT, respectively.
Mark made these claims at United National Congress (UNC) weekly news conference at the Opposition Leader's office in Port of Spain on Sunday.
Reiterating allegations made by Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar in the House of Representatives on September 30 about plans to retrench 2,500 workers at WASA, Mark showed a copy of a document which, he said, supported those allegations.
[caption id="attachment_978504" align="alignnone" width="837"] Opposition Senator Wade Mark. -[/caption]
"This came in our mailbox."
Mark claimed the document was a copy of a draft business plan sent by WASA to the Regulated Industries Commission (RIC), and Public Utilities Minister Marvin Gonzales was misleading the public about no plans to retrench workers at WASA.
Mark then dismissed statements made by Young in the House on Saturday, that the NGC had claims amounting to US$1.3 billion because of the former UNC-led People's Partnership (PP) coalition government failing to sign any new gas-supply contracts with upstream producers between 2010 to 2015.
Mark insisted, "No claims were filed to the NGC before September 2015. He called on Young to show where in NGC's financial reports was there information to support his statements in the House. Mark wanted Young to identify the companies which made claims against the NGC.
Mark claimed Paria Fuel Trading Company was exporting 1.3 billion in fuel products out of TT.
"Where are these products going? Which country? Is this a fuel-laundering scandal?"
He demanded that a criminal forensic probe be done.
Contacted by Newsday, Young responded to Mark's comments on claims against the NGC and fuel exports.
On the former, Young said, “NGC has settled over US$1.1 billion worth of claims made against it owing to the gas shortages between 2010 and 2015. These claims were settled, including, but not limited to, during the negotiations of new gas supply contracts."
He added that the UNC remains unable "to respond to the facts that have been laid out showing how they never negotiated new gas-supply contracts for NGC."
Young reiterated that the PP's failure to do this led to "significant gas curtailment issues that led to petrochemical plants being entitled to claims against NGC."
On the latter, Young said, "Paria Fuels has always sold fuel to other jurisdictions including Guyana and the Eastern Caribbean."
"All their false and misleading narratives do is expose their incompetence and show how their lack of understanding led to the mismanagement of the energy sector between 2010 and 2015.”
Gonzales later responded to Mark's WASA claims.
[caption id="attachment_978503" align="alignnone" width="1024"] Public Utilities Minister Marvin Gonzales. -[/caption]
"The population know