Nevis, West Indies. ?A Non-Tourist-Trap? Blog About Nevis.

May 16th, 2012

St. Kitts – Nevis Well Represented At Sustainable Energy Conference

Nevis Energy Minister - Carlisle Powell

Nevis Energy Minister – Carlisle Powell

Basseterre, St. Kitts – Nevis
MAY 16, 2012 (CUOPM)

Nevis Junior Minister responsible for Energy, Hon. Carlisle Powell, represented the Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis at a sustainable energy conference in Barbados at which new actions were announced to reduce dependence on fossil fuels and end poverty.

Mr. Powell, who was accompanied by the Assistant Secretary in the Federal Ministry of Energy, Mr. Paul Lloyd, attended the sustainable energy conference in Barbados, organized by the United Nations and the Government of Barbados last week.

The Barbados Declaration calls for universal access to modern and affordable renewable energy services, while protecting the environment, ending poverty and creating new opportunities for economic growth.

According to the declaration – adopted ahead of next month’s UN Conference on Sustainable Development 20 years after the landmark Rio Earth Summit – 20 Small Island developing States (SIDS) gave voluntary commitments to providing universal access to energy, switching to renewable energy and reducing dependence on fossil fuels.

The meeting also came 18 years after an historic UN summit in Bridgetown first prompted international attention that the world’s environmental challenges, from water scarcity to rising sea levels, were felt first, and hardest, in small island and low-lying coastal developing states, from the Caribbean Sea to the Indian and Pacific Oceans.

The two-day conference brought together more than 100 government leaders, development experts, civil society activists, business executives and UN officials from 39 small island developing states (SIDS).

While stressing there are “commercially feasible options” in many SIDS for providing energy such as wind, solar, geothermal, and oceans energy, the global collection of island and low-lying coastal states called for greater access to clean energy technology.

“However, these technologies must be made accessible, affordable and adaptable to the needs and particular circumstances of SIDS communities,” the Barbados Declaration said.

“In this regard, we strongly urge the international community, particularly developed countries, to ensure the provision of financial resources, technology transfer and capacity building to SIDS,” it added.

The declaration follows the Sustainable Energy for All initiative, launched by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon last September. The initiative seeks to ensure universal access to modern energy services, double the rate of improvement in energy efficiency and double the share of renewable energy in the global energy mix, all by 2030.

Related posts:

  1. PM Douglas To Attend Conference On Sustainable Development In Rio
  2. St. Kitts – Nevis Sustainable Energy Policy
  3. Nevis’ Energy Minister Stresses Importance Of National Energy Policy
  4. Nevis Represented At US Geothermal Energy Reverse Trade Mission
  5. Nevis Energy Minister Thanks OAS for Help With Renewable Energy Development


May 15th, 2012

Nevis Fisheries Project Gets The Nod From Former Director

An Artist's Rendetion of The Fisheries Complex

An Artist’s Rendetion of The Fisheries Complex

Charlestown, Nevis
May 15, 2012

Former Director of Fisheries in the Nevis Island Administration (NIA) Captain Arthur Anlsyn, continued to give his blessings to the construction of the new Charlestown Community Fisheries Complex at Gallows Bay, years after the project he was initially a part of has started to bear fruit.

Mr. Anslyn also an avid fish enthusiast and one of Nevis’ most experienced Fishers, told the Department of Information in an interview on May 10, 2012, that the site of the million dollar project which would be paid for through a grant from the Government of Japan, was ideally situated and would greatly benefit the people of Nevis.

“The Fisheries Complex Development at Gallows Bay when you weigh the benefits against the impacts, I can assure you that the benefits closely outweigh the negative impacts. The benefits are tremendous, the island will benefit the Fishers will benefit everybody concerned with the project will be convinced in the end that the doubts they had will be addressed and we will all be happy that this project came through.

“When one sees the construction phase or what the end result will be I am sure that the doubts they have now or the misleading they have had from certain elements or certain angles of the people who might have their own agenda, I am sure that they will be sorry that they had doubts in the beginning,” he said.

According to Mr. Anslyn, the project was first initiated while he served as Director of Fisheries in the Concerned Citizens Movement-led Administration and if he had not thought it beneficial to the people of Nevis and in particular the Fishers, he would certainly not have associated himself with the project.

He also shed light on the selection then for the construction of a fisheries complex at Gallows Bay and not at the New Castle, Jessups of Indian Castle fish landing sites.

“In the initial stages when the donor agencies were looking at the projects on the island…they actually chose the Galllows Bay Project to fund and they did not think the others were important as the Gallows Bay Project.  After they did their surveys they choose to put it in the metropolis because of the activities that goes on in Charlestown. They thought it beneficial for the island that they should come into town do their shopping buy their fish vegetables groceries etc. all in the same area and then go back out of town with everything.

“Also the one in Newcastle that we had planned for, that it was turned down because of the objection of the Aviation Authorities. They thought that it was too close to the runway and the building itself was too high so we had to scrap that one. The others we could not get funding for but the Charlestown one-that came through,” he explained.

However, on the contentious issue of the facility’s effect on the Gallows Bay beach Mr. Anslyn stated categorically that the new fisheries complex would not affect the beach.

“I was involved in the initial putting together of the first project document and the use of the whole of Gallows Bay was not in the question. The area that would be used is just a corner which is currently being eroded. In fact to actively participate in the area earmarked for the structure that is intended to be put down there will have to be an amount of backfilling done, reclamation to actually get the area required to put the facility down.

“Where it is going to be reclaimed had actually existed in the past but due to erosion it is now claimed by the sea. So that little area that we are putting back into Nevis so to speak, building back the land from the sea, is only a little area of the corner where Prince William Street meets the Bay Front and also the whole of Gallows Bay will not be utilised. It is just that little area and access to the beach for swimming will still be maintained,” he said.

The Former Director of Fisheries added that in his view the project would help to protect against the heavy sea erosion that had been taking place in the area.

“Taking into consideration what has occurred in the past with regards to erosion, that area is subject to heavy erosion. From what I have seen in my lifetime 2/3rds of the area has gone to the ocean already. It won’t be long before the other 1/3rd goes and the properties in the area will be no less in the sea.

“The construction of that facility will stop the erosion in that particular area. You will observe that the other areas further south of the project in Gallows Bay will be eroded. You won’t be surprised to find that sooner than later the sea will be in the Bogs because this is what has been happening over the years and it’s not going to be long, depending on how many ground swells we have, that the sea will end up in the Bogs. When that happens it will be unfortunate and this is something we can’t stop. This is the work of Mother Nature and we just have to go along with it,” he said.

With regards to concerns of unsavoury odours emitted from the fisheries complex during processing, Mr. Anslyn said based on his knowledge and his experience with facilities of that nature it was highly unlikely.

“We will observe that the predominant winds the prevailing Trade Winds are from the east. Now there is no building west of that facility, the only thing west of that facility is the ocean.

“If one is concerned about smell, and there will be none, the wind will take that smell out to sea [and] if there is any smell which there should not be, the waste disposal plans that are in place will guarantee that there will be no smell,” he said.

Mr. Anslyn also added that the facility had to be constructed on the coast to ensure the best quality fish. The fear of waste disposal he said though it should be of concern to the populace was an non issue since that had been adequately addressed in the planning stages and there would be no smell or waste disposal that would in any way impact the health or hygienic standards of the residents of the area.

He said too that construction of the Fisheries Complex had always been designed to provide continued accessibility to the beach for members of the public and surrounding land owners.

Related posts:

  1. Nevis Fishermen Welcome New Fisheries Complex
  2. Nevis To Build Fisheries Complex With Help From Japan
  3. Nevis Government Pledges Continued Support For Fisheries Sector
  4. Nevis Fisheries Complex Part Of Sustainable Growth Program
  5. Gallows Bay Best Site For Fisheries Complex


May 14th, 2012

Jurors In St. Kitts – Nevis To Be Paid By Employers For Jury Duty

Jury Duty

Jurors No Longer To Be Out Of Pocket

Basseterre, St. Kitts – Nevis
May 14, 2012 (CUOPM)

The Labour Party led St. Kitts – Nevis Government is moving to ensure that persons who are employed and who perform duties as jurors do not suffer financial hardship.

Legislation going to the St. Kitts and Nevis National Assembly this week will make it mandatory for employers to pay the wages or salary of employees who perform jury duties.

Attorney General and Minister of Justice and Legal Affairs, the Hon. Patrice Nisbett will introduce and pilot through the lawmaking body on Thursday The Jury (Amendment) Bill 2012.

The proposed amendment inserts a new section 39A which states: “Where a person is selected as a juror, the employer of that person shall be required, whilst the person is acting as a juror, to pay that person the wages or salary that would normally due to that person, as if the person were carrying out his or her regular duties, in relation to that employment.”

Another proposed amendment states: “An employer who acts in contravention of subsection (1) by refusing to pay the employee or by deducting from the wages or salary of that person for the time that he or she is selected for jury duty, commits an offence and is liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding EC $10,000.

A third amendment states that an employer who is convicted of not paying an employee or deducting from the wage or salary of an employee who served as a juror, shall be required to remunerate the employee in question in respect of any prior non-payment or deduction from the employee’s salary or wages.

Related posts:

  1. No Duty On Personal Food Packages Up To 440 Pounds
  2. Nearly 900 Jurors Selected For 2009-2010
  3. St. Kitts – Nevis To Discuss Duty Free Policy
  4. St. Kitts – Nevis National Assembly To Debate 8 Bills
  5. St. Kitts – Nevis Welcomes CARICOM’s Duty Reduction


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