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FM
Former Member

PPP/C says all funds accounted for 

PetroCaribe Fund

The People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) has lashed back at the A Partnership for National Unity/Alliance For Change (APNU/AFC) Government’s statements that the PetroCaribe Fund was left bankrupt, calling it a clear misrepresentation of the truth.

Finance Minister, Winston Jordan

Finance Minister, Winston Jordan

According to the former administration, contrary to Minister of State, Joseph Harmon’s misrepresentation, no money whatsoever is missing from the PetroCaribe Fund. Even if it was, the fund has limited balances in it, and that does not mean in any way that any money is missing from it.

“As his colleague in the Finance Ministry can no doubt tell him, detailed records exist and can be made public on every single inflow into the Fund and every single outflow from the Fund. These details will account fully for the operations of the fund and can withstand any degree of scrutiny. Put simply, monies are deposited into the fund when Guyana imports oil from Venezuela under the PetroCaribe Arrangement. Those monies are managed by the Bank of Guyana. The monies are utilised for only two purposes; firstly, to fund projects that are included in the National Budget and submitted to Parliament for approval,” the Party said.

It noted that over the years these projects have included the new Guyana Power and Light power plants at Kingston in Georgetown and Vreed-en-Hoop on the West Coast of Demerara, and the Hope Canal on the East Coast of Demerara, while the funds were utilised to purchase rice and paddy for export to Venezuela under the PetroCaribe Arrangement.

“At any time, the balance available in the fund is the total of all inflows deposited from oil imports, minus sums disbursed on projects and sums disbursed to GRDB (Guyana Rice Development Board) for rice and paddy purchases. In addition, periodically, Guyana and Venezuela conclude a debt reduction agreement under which Venezuela cancels an amount of PetroCaribe debt previously owed by Guyana and equivalent to the value of rice and paddy shipped in the immediately preceding period,” the previous administration explained.

The Party posited that while this is indeed clear for all Guyanese to see, Minister of State Joseph Harmon has “deliberately set about to create a misleading impression that somehow, something untoward may have occurred in the management of the fund.”

The PPP/C posited that the plain and simple truth is that “for years the inflows and outflows of the fund were managed optimally and transparently by the PPP/C Government, and within one month the APNU/AFC Government has displayed its incompetence in being unable to manage the fund’s operations properly, resulting in hardship to the rice farmers and millers.”

Former Finance Minister, Dr Ashni Singh

Former Finance Minister, Dr Ashni Singh

The statement comes on the backdrop of Minister Harmon stating that the PetroCaribe Fund, which was in place for rice farmers, is bankrupt and the Government will now have to source some US$15 million to pay off rice farmers. According to Harmon, while the current Finance Minister, Winston Jordan, had indicated that the states’ funds were vastly misused, it was an understatement.

To this end, he had noted that the fund was used for projects such as the Hope Canal and others which it should not have been. The Minister noted that the fund was for rice and rice farmers but yet monies, which were not even there, were used leading to the current state of bankruptcy of that fund. PetroCaribe is an agreement which is intended to promote trade among member countries, and Guyana has been supplying rice to Venezuela under the initiative. Under the current trade agreement, Guyana is expected to supply 210,000 tons of paddy and polished rice annually to Venezuela. The value of this supply amounts to US$130 million.

“The fact of the matter is based on the very casual and, in some cases, very callous manner in which the previous administration dealt with the proceeds from that arrangement that the fund was almost bankrupt.  There is nothing in it. You had been told by the honourable Minister of Finance that there are sums of money that were utilised for the construction of the Hope Canal, among other things. So as it stands right now, the situation with the exports of rice to Venezuela is that we are actually going to have to find approximately US$15 million to basically pay our farmers when they ship the next set of rice to Venezuela,” he disclosed.

In the meantime, Harmon disclosed that the Cabinet has decided to commission a subcommittee which will be tasked at looking at and sourcing markets to accommodate the level of production which is being recorded. “The money has to be found because we don’t believe that there is no fault on our farmers, but it has to do with the way the previous administration managed that fund. Additionally, the Cabinet approved of the setting up of the subcommittee to examine and to aggressively look at markets for our rice. Based on the current production by October/November, we will have a great production of rice that the markets available will not be able to sustain it,” Harmon disclosed.

This, he said, will be done by the Foreign Affairs and Agriculture Ministries to ensure new markets are found so that the rice can be sold. He further shared that the level of bankruptcy in the fund can also see the payback period significantly decreased.

“The monies that came in, we spent more that came in. It is even grimmer than Mr Jordan had said. It is a very serious situation which we face. The Minister has said that we had a long payback period, but what we have done is reduce the payback period. So if we had 20 or 40 years we may have to pay back in 2015 or 2020,” the Minister of State told media operatives.

Minister of State, Joseph Harmon

Minister of State, Joseph Harmon

This was even as he noted that the governance systems in the rice sector are on the agenda to be examined to ensure transparency in appointment of boards and entities in that sector.

In the meantime, Harmon told reporters that with the ongoing investigations into the state agencies, it is definite that persons will be held culpable if found to have acted criminally with the country’s money.

Former Finance Minister Dr Ashni Singh declined to comment on the matter.

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Coalition needs to provide evidence of the assertions or innuendoes of wrong doing.

 

We are not admirers of the PPP and believe they can do wrong, but we need the evidence, not assertion.

 

Petrocaribe fund is empty because PPP stole the money, or fund is empty because they were spent out on various projects?  Give the evidence.

 

These are the fellows who created many different ministries, then found out they can't be funded as is.

FM
Originally Posted by Jay Bharrat:

Coalition needs to provide evidence of the assertions or innuendoes of wrong doing.

 

We are not admirers of the PPP and believe they can do wrong, but we need the evidence, not assertion.

 

Petrocaribe fund is empty because PPP stole the money, or fund is empty because they were spent out on various projects?  Give the evidence.

 

These are the fellows who created many different ministries, then found out they can't be funded as is.

That will come out. The Fund had to have money if Jagdeo was planning to use it to repay CLICO debt. The reality is the PPP are not credible. They were never transparent. One has not seen any of the audits of NICIL and they were ten years behind filing required disclosure. The PetroCarbide fun and the Lotto Fund, And Guyana Gold and mine fund were the PPP slush fund. There is no getting over they left the entire economy in a bankrupt state.

 

The ministries have new names and sub ministries and that while confusing is not administratively inefficient. It is in fact devolutionary.

FM
Last edited by Former Member

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PetroCaribe fund…PPP/C explanation about PetroCaribe funds ‘pathetic’ – Doerga

June 14, 2015 | By | Filed Under News 

General Secretary of the People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C), Clement Rohee, recently offered an explanation why the PetroCaribe fund is not there.

Dr. Turhane Doerga, GRPA

Dr. Turhane Doerga, GRPA

But rice industry experts have come out in strong condemnation of Rohee’s explanation. They now say that only two months ago the PPP/C had offered a completely different explanation of how the PetroCaribe funds were used. On Thursday, Minister of State Joseph Harmon made the shocking revelation that the PetroCaribe fund was bankrupt. His announcement caused the PPP/C to fire back by accusing the current administration of “managing to empty the PetroCaribe fund”. The PPP/C had also declared that the funds were used for projects such as the new Guyana Power and Light (GPL) power plants in Kingston and Vreed-En-Hoop and the Hope Canal. Chairman of the Rice Producers’ Action Committee Dr. Turhane Doerga labeled Rohee’s efforts to explain away the missing funds as “pathetic”. He said that former President and central committee executive of the PPP/C Bharrat Jagdeo clearly stated that only US$15M was used from the PetroCaribe fund by the previous administration and that this money was used in the construction of the Hope canal. According to Doerga, Rohee’s declaration is clearly contrary to what Jagdeo declared on the campaign trail,

PPP/C General Secretary, Clement Rohee

PPP/C General Secretary, Clement Rohee

in an effort to assuage farmers of the existence of the money to pay them. Payment is in keeping with the PetroCaribe agreement, which stipulates that Guyana imports oil from Venezuela at a reduced cost, in exchange for the provision of rice to Venezuela. This arrangement has led to Venezuela becoming Guyana’s single largest foreign market for rice. For 2015, it was in fact expected that Venezuela would account for 30 per cent of rice exports. On Friday the PPP/C, in a statement issued in response to Harmon’s declaration had said, “The Fund was managed optimally and transparently by the PPP/C government and within one month the APNU+AFC government has displayed its incompetence in being unable to manage the fund’s operations properly, resulting in hardship to the rice farmers and millers.” The PPP/C on Friday also declared that “absolutely no money was missing from the PetroCaribe fund and even if the fund has a limited balance that does not mean in any way that money is missing.” The party had also asserted that detailed records reflecting the inflow and outflow from the fund could be had and would furthermore withstand scrutiny. But the PPP/C’s latest statements that the monies fund projects included in the national budget and submitted to parliament for approval are startling and fly in the face of what the PPP/C had been saying along the campaign trail. Doerga also went on to remind the current administration of their responsibilities to the rice industry in order to find alternate markets. According to him, contrary to what the PPP/C would have taken credit for, many markets were brokered as a result of private rice producers.

FM

No money is missing.  It's the figment of PNC imagination, because they know how to steal and move the money to offshore banks. Let them prove that money is missing and how much. They already claimed that money was move from one account to another.  The problem is that there is no problem.

R

Missing PetroCaribe Money

June 13, 2015 | By | Filed Under Editorial 
 

EACH day there is some revelation about unexplained happenings in the public treasury, and each day, the public is becoming more and more convinced that financial irregularities were the order of the day. The most shocking appears to be the money that should have formed the PetroCaribe fund initiated by Venezuela. This was money that should have accrued from the purchase of fuel from Venezuela. The neighbouring country, recognizing that it had a lot of oil that could help the economies of countries like ours, opted to make concessionary loans by way of fuel to Guyana and other countries in the region. Indeed this was a boon. Guyana Power and Light, the country’s electricity company was using US$120 million per year in fuel. Then there were the other users of fuel like the petrol stations and the various other entities that retail fuel. Guyana imports fuel from other sources but the chance to save on fuel imports must have been a giant-sized magnet. PetroCaribe is an oil alliance of many Caribbean states with Venezuela to purchase oil on conditions of preferential payment. The alliance was launched on June 29, 2005 in Puerto La Cruz, Venezuela. The payment system allows for purchase of oil at market value for five per cent to 50 per cent up front with a grace period of one to two years; the remainder can be paid through a 17-year to 25-year financing agreement with one per cent interest if oil prices are above US$40 per barrel. Needless to say, oil prices have been higher than US$40 per barrel for more than a decade. Poor countries already cash strapped were glad for every bit of additional income to pursue their individual development. Indeed, Guyana was not the only beneficiary of the PetroCaribe deal. Other Caribbean countries grasped the opportunity but it was not all plain sailing.  Countries that relied almost exclusively on the United States were advised against the deal because the United States and Venezuela were at each other’s throats. Guyana had no such problem so it agreed to the conditions that the money saved from the PetroCaribe deal would be used to help the agriculture sector. It was a lot of money that went into the Central Bank over the ten years that Guyana signed the deal. We now hear that the fund is bankrupt, that somehow, the previous administration ensured that it spent every cent in the fund. We know that some of the money went to construct a home for senior citizens in West Berbice. We then learnt that money from the PetroCaribe agreement went into the Hope Canal. Former President Bharrat Jagdeo was so excited at the available cash that he decided to make even more money. He later told the press that he had invested the PetroCaribe money. So he would have no problem in paying the one per cent per annum interest. Now the new government says that there is no money in the fund, that it is bankrupt. We do not know where the money went or if indeed it has been reinvested. If the money is not there then where has it gone? Certainly the previous government was not playing fast and loose with the public treasury. There is evidence that money was no problem when it had to be dispensed by the government. How else could one explain a $16 million payout to a Canada-based Guyanese for no known reason? We are not at a stage where we would have expected that the PetroCaribe funds would have brought benefits to the nation. It has brought none. In addition, we have to pay Venezuela for what we have no knowledge of. For sure, the government took the people of Guyana for granted and therefore did not deign to tell the nation of the plans for national development. Even the parliamentarians were not told everything about public spending. So money was spent and we must now try to find out on what.

FM

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