博客

  • BOG start bespuitingscampagne tegen chikungunya in Blauwgrond

    BOG start bespuitingscampagne tegen chikungunya in Blauwgrond

    Public health authorities in Suriname have kicked off an aggressive targeted mosquito spraying campaign to combat the spread of chikungunya and address growing public nuisance from mosquito populations, with official operations launching Friday in the Blauwgrond district. The initiative represents a core component of a nationwide public health strategy designed to halt further transmission of the mosquito-borne viral infection.

    Starting at 5:00 p.m. on the opening day, the specially adapted mosquito control vehicle, known locally as the denguewagen, traversed multiple streets and residential neighborhoods across Blauwgrond to carry out targeted insecticide applications. This proactive preventative measure is a joint effort by the country’s Ministry of Public Health, Welfare and Labor and the Bureau for Public Health (Bureau voor Openbare Gezondheidszorg, BOG), with two overarching goals: cutting down local mosquito populations and safeguarding community-wide public health.

    According to statements from the Ministry of Public Health, all spraying operations are being conducted exclusively by BOG teams that have undergone specialized training for vector control work. At the same time, public health officials have emphasized that successful chikungunya control cannot be achieved through government spraying alone. Active participation and cooperation from local residents are critical to long-term success in reducing mosquito breeding grounds.

    To this end, authorities have issued an urgent call for Blauwgrond residents to eliminate all sources of standing water around their homes and properties. Common spaces that act as ideal breeding grounds for mosquitoes include water collected in buckets, discarded bottles, plant pots, old tires, and clogged rain gutters, all of which can be easily removed or drained to stop new mosquito eggs from hatching.

    In addition to eliminating standing water, BOG has outlined a series of key precautionary measures for residents to follow while spraying is taking place in their neighborhood. These guidelines advise residents to keep windows and exterior doors open to allow insecticide to reach outdoor-adjacent mosquito resting spaces; cover all food and drinking water containers securely to avoid contamination; relocate pets and caged birds to protected areas away from sprayed zones; keep infants and individuals with pre-existing respiratory conditions in closed, unsprayed spaces during treatment hours; and store all loose clothing items indoors to prevent exposure to spray residue.

    Spraying operations will continue across different zones of Blauwgrond from Monday, May 18 through Friday, May 22, with all daily treatments scheduled to run between 5:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. The daily route breaks down as follows: May 18 will cover the Morgenstondstraat corridor, Anton Dragtenweg, Powisistraat, Kleinestraat, Verlengde Gompertstraat, Surivillage 1, 2 and 4, and all connecting inner roads; May 19 will include Powisistraat, Anton Dragtenweg, Bonistraat, Basitostraat, Abonestraat, Kristalstraat, and all linked inner streets; May 20 will treat the Bonistraat to Anton Dragtenweg corridor, Tweekinderweg/Mr. R.W. Thurkowstraat, Basitostraat, and connecting inner roads; May 21 will focus on Tweekinderweg, Anton Dragtenweg, Jan Steenstraat, Mr. R.W. Thurkowstraat, and adjacent inner roads; and May 22 will cover Copernicusstraat, Anton Dragtenweg, Plutostraat, and Mr. R.W. Thurkowstraat, including all connecting inner roads.

    BOG has also added a key caveat to the schedule: no spraying operations will be conducted during periods of heavy rainfall, as precipitation renders insecticide treatments ineffective against mosquito populations.

  • Selected Community Clinics Continue Extended Operating Hours, Ministry Reminds Public

    Selected Community Clinics Continue Extended Operating Hours, Ministry Reminds Public

    Residents of Antigua and Barbuda now have greater flexibility to access routine and urgent medical care after standard work hours, as the country’s Ministry of Health has confirmed that extended operating hours are already in place at two primary care facilities: the Grays Farm Health Centre and the Clare Hall Health Centre. This policy adjustment is part of a broader government push to upgrade public healthcare access and reduce systemic strain on emergency departments across the nation.

    Under the new permanent extended schedule, both health centers open their doors to patients at 8 a.m. daily and remain operational until 9 p.m., adding three extra hours of service beyond the traditional 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. primary care timetable. Ministry officials emphasized that this expansion addresses a long-standing gap for working residents who struggle to attend clinic appointments during standard business hours, eliminating the need for many to take unpaid time off work to access necessary care.

    A full range of general and urgent care services are available during the extended operating window. These include routine general medical consultations, acute wound management, care for lacerations, and treatment for common urgent conditions such as sudden asthma flare-ups, dehydration, viral and bacterial gastroenteritis. The facilities also provide urgent care for unmanaged chronic conditions, including uncontrolled hypertension and blood sugar spikes related to diabetes, helping patients avoid unnecessary trips to hospital emergency rooms.

    The rollout of extended hours is not stopping at these two locations. The Ministry of Health has announced that similar extended operating schedules are planned for two additional facilities — the Brownes Avenue Health Center and the Villa Polyclinic — with a launch date set for a future phase of the healthcare improvement initiative.

    In a statement, ministry leaders reaffirmed the government’s ongoing commitment to expanding equitable access to high-quality healthcare services for all communities across Antigua and Barbuda, framing extended primary care hours as a critical step toward strengthening the country’s overall public health system.

  • Simons wil structureel plan voor Paramaribo na aanhoudende wateroverlast

    Simons wil structureel plan voor Paramaribo na aanhoudende wateroverlast

    Recurring severe flooding driven by prolonged heavy rainfall has prompted Suriname President Jennifer Simons to outline a dual strategy combining immediate disaster relief for affected households and long-term structural reform to address the root causes of recurrent waterlogging across the country, particularly in the capital Paramaribo.

    Simons extended her deepest condolences to families and communities impacted by floodwaters that have swamped multiple regions of Suriname, including remote southern villages. With ongoing downpours threatening to wipe out entire crops across agricultural areas, national authorities are currently conducting a full needs assessment to determine whether large-scale food aid distributions will be required to support vulnerable communities.

    The president emphasized that flooding in Paramaribo is not a new crisis, but years of mismanagement and unregulated urban development have significantly worsened its impact. Past experience has shown that consistent maintenance of drainage canals and fully operational water pumping systems are critical to keeping flood levels manageable, a standard that has not been met in recent years. Simons noted that irresponsible urban expansion has seen large numbers of residential plots and homes constructed in low-lying, naturally flood-prone areas of the capital — a mistake the government will prohibit going forward.

    To address the immediate emergency, Simons has ordered the National Coordination Center for Disaster Management (NCCR) to deploy rapid aid to regions facing acute flood-related hardship. She has also called on civil society and local communities to remain vigilant, support vulnerable neighbors, and prepare for potential worsening conditions as the rainy season continues. The NCCR will maintain ongoing public communication about flood developments and is preparing to launch a dedicated flood support hotline, while severely affected households are advised to contact their district commissioners or local community leaders to register for assistance.

    Simons acknowledged that the Minister of Public Works and Spatial Planning inherited an unprecedented backlog of neglected drainage infrastructure, with roughly five years of deferred maintenance leaving the system underfunded, underequipped, and non-functional in key areas. Many pieces of heavy maintenance equipment were missing or unaccounted for when the current ministry leadership took office, requiring a full-scale effort to rebuild operational capacity. Even so, the president praised the progress the ministry has made in recent months, noting that the Directorate of Public Green and Waste Management has performed admirably with limited resources amid the record rainfall the country is currently experiencing.

    In a move to speed up response efforts, the government will streamline administrative procedures to allow faster deployment of additional heavy equipment to flood mitigation works, as the rainy season is far from over. Simons added that neighboring countries are also facing severe flood crises, highlighting the regional scale of the current extreme weather event. To build a more resilient capital for the future, the president announced that the government will develop a 15-year long-term development plan for Paramaribo, drawing on expertise from both international specialists and local Surinamese technical experts.

  • Guyana launches mathematics task force

    Guyana launches mathematics task force

    On Saturday, May 16, 2026, Guyana’s Ministry of Education announced the launch of a new 20-member national mathematics task force, an initiative designed to reverse longstanding underperformance in mathematics education across all school levels of the South American nation.

    Heading the interdisciplinary panel is Chief Education Officer Saddam Hussain, with a deliberately diverse membership that brings together stakeholders from every corner of Guyana’s education sector. The body includes specialists drawn from each of the country’s 10 administrative regions, all Regional Education Officers, prominent academics from the University of Guyana including Mohandatt Goolsarran and Dr. Troy Brown, international educator Zamal Odeen, mathematics experts from the capital Georgetown and beyond, and representatives from Guyana’s primary teacher training institution, the Cyril Potter College of Education (CPCE). The task force held its inaugural session recently at the auditorium of the National Centre for Education and Research Development (NCERD) in Kingston, Georgetown.

    Education Minister Sonia Parag, who formally established the task force, laid out its core mandate in opening remarks: to analyze current student performance trends across primary, secondary and tertiary education, then develop a holistic, long-lasting strategy to lift learning outcomes. A core requirement Parag imposed is full collaborative input from grassroots education workers across the country. Before any policy is finalized, the task force will travel to every administrative region to hold extensive consultations with frontline mathematics teachers and school headteachers, ensuring local buy-in and on-the-ground insight shapes the final plan.

    “They have to be engaged and I want them to be in agreement with the final plan before anything is implemented,” Parag said, emphasizing that top-down policy cannot deliver meaningful change without the backing of the educators who will implement it.

    Parag highlighted a critical gap that the new strategy will address: a disconnect between content expertise and instructional skill among many current mathematics educators. Many teachers hold deep knowledge of mathematics but lack the training to translate that knowledge into accessible, effective classroom learning, while others have strong teaching skills but lack sufficient mastery of advanced mathematical content, she explained. To close this gap, Parag instructed the task force to center its review on foundational teacher training and ongoing professional development, starting with reforming how trainee teachers are prepared at CPCE.

    “You have teachers who have the knowledge, but they don’t know how to deliver; you have teachers who can deliver, but they don’t have the knowledge. So, we still have to align those things so that you have more teachers who have the knowledge and can also deliver in the classroom,” Parag said, clarifying that the assessment is not a criticism of working teachers, but a call for systemic improvement from the Ministry of Education itself. “It’s just saying that perhaps we at the Ministry of Education need to improve the way we are training our teachers.”

    Beyond teacher training, Parag pushed for a fundamental shift in teaching philosophy, moving away from a culture focused on rote memorization and exam cramming toward deep, conceptual understanding of mathematics. True comprehension, she argued, equips students to tackle unexpected, complex problems that often appear on high-stakes assessments, rather than being thrown off course by unfamiliar question formats.

    “We need to rethink whether we’re teaching children to understand mathematics or teaching them to memorize just to pass an exam. It’s something very serious because if you prepare them to understand mathematics, then even if a curveball is thrown, it’s not going to throw them off, and that is what we should be aiming for now,” she said.

    The task force has also been directed to address two often-overlooked barriers to math success: student math anxiety and low foundational literacy. Parag noted that many students develop a psychological block against mathematics before they even begin learning, a mindset that teachers must actively overcome to drive progress. Additionally, literacy skills are a prerequisite for solving math problems: students cannot correctly answer a question they cannot read and interpret.

    To address the literacy-math link, the Ministry of Education has already rolled out new early intervention measures, integrating literacy development into early childhood math readiness starting at the nursery school level. National literacy assessments will now be administered to students in Grades Two and Four, to identify learning gaps early and deliver targeted support before poor literacy derails math progress. “By Grade Four, all of our children must know how to read properly and comprehend well. If they can’t do that, it means they can’t answer exam questions. It means they cannot reason, which is what mathematics is – reasoning,” Parag explained.

    During the inaugural meeting, task force members put forward a range of actionable proposals to boost engagement and outcomes. Suggestions included a national reward and recognition program for outstanding math students and teachers, a national mathematics competition, dedicated math clubs in every school, standardized weekly formative assessments to track student progress, classroom “math walls” displaying key formulas and concepts, and interactive, game-based learning activities aligned with current curriculum topics.

    Parag acknowledged that Guyana has made incremental gains in math performance in recent years, but stressed that more urgent action is needed. She noted that poor math outcomes are a global challenge, not unique to Guyana, but that the country is committed to turning the tide locally. The minister committed to ongoing collaboration with the task force, noting that the group’s on-the-ground expertise is critical to developing a viable long-term solution.

    Parag also emphasized that national investments in education infrastructure, learning resources and teacher training must be matched by strong leadership at the school level, with headteachers taking responsibility for monitoring and supporting quality classroom instruction. She also highlighted the underutilized role of Parent-Teacher Associations (PTAs) in building a supportive learning ecosystem that connects home and school, noting that she is traveling across the country to meet with PTAs to boost parental engagement at all education levels.

    “The ministry cannot do it alone, the teachers cannot do it alone and our children cannot do it alone. Their development requires the best of all of us,” she said.

    Closing the inaugural session, Parag framed the task force’s work as a definitive new starting point for mathematics education across Guyana, calling on members to craft a strategy that will chart a brighter future for generations of learners. “I want this to be a new beginning for mathematics,” she said.

  • Renewed push to revive Oistins Fish Festival

    Renewed push to revive Oistins Fish Festival

    Barbados’ long-running Oistins Fish Festival is poised for a major revitalization, as local leaders, vendors, residents and community representatives have launched a collaborative consultation process to reverse years of stagnation and set the event up for long-term growth ahead of its 50th anniversary in 2027.

    The first public town hall meeting focused on the festival’s revival took place Thursday evening in the car park of the Berinda Cox Fish Market, drawing a large crowd of Oistins-based vendors, fishing community members, local residents and other invested stakeholders eager to share their ideas for improvement. Officers from the Oistins Police Station also attended the session, pledging to uphold a secure, welcoming environment for both local attendees and out-of-town visitors at all future festival events.

    Leading the revitalization effort is Dr. Shantal Munro-Knight, Member of Parliament for Christ Church South and Barbados’ Agriculture Minister, who has pledged that under her leadership, the historic festival will not only survive, but emerge stronger than ever. Munro-Knight emphasized that the planning process will center the needs and voices of the local fishing and vendor communities that form the core of the event’s identity.

    During the meeting, organizers compiled a range of actionable concerns and proposals from attendees. Many long-time participants called for formal recognition of the founding members who built the festival from its early days, a request Munro-Knight described as an easy, high-priority win for the revitalization team. Vendor Sue Ann Gilkes-Smith put forward two key suggestions: reconfiguring vendor stalls into a single continuous stretch along the event route, rather than the current fragmented layout, and boosting safety measures to encourage older patrons, who have historically been core spenders at the festival, to return comfortably.

    Kemar Harris, Chairman of the Oistins Bay Garden Board, explained that the series of town hall meetings was launched to address a years-long breakdown in communication between festival organizers and local stakeholders, which had gradually eroded the event’s quality. “What leads to breakdowns is a lack of communication,” Harris told attendees. “Over the years, people have been complaining, so there will be a series of these meetings to hear you, see you and feel you. Consultation is paramount, and this MP believes in that, so when consultations stop, you cannot say no stone has been left unturned.”

    Edwin Warner, Deputy Chairman of the Oistins Bay Garden Board and owner of local food stall Crazy Eddies, shared harsh criticism of the most recent festival held over the 2024 Easter weekend, calling it one of the worst iterations in recent memory. Warner argued that the previous organizing committee had grown stagnant after years in charge, failed to consult local Oistins Bay Garden stakeholders, and brought in outside participants without centering the community that anchors the event. He also put forward a series of proposals to expand the festival, including cleaning up the local boatyard to create additional space for vendor stalls, involving fishing communities from across Barbados, and adopting a regional approach that invites fisherfolk from neighboring Caribbean countries such as St. Lucia and Grenada to participate.

    Harris confirmed that the series of public consultation meetings will continue in the coming months, with all discussions centered on supporting local vendors and strengthening the festival’s roots in the Oistins community ahead of its milestone 50th anniversary in 2027.

  • Police investigate stabbing incident at Market Hill

    Police investigate stabbing incident at Market Hill

    Authorities in Grenada have launched an active criminal investigation into a violent altercation that left one woman with multiple stab wounds in the island’s capital district. The incident took place on 15 May 2026 in the Market Hill neighborhood of St George’s, according to official updates from the Royal Grenada Police Force.

    Early findings from the investigation confirm the injured victim was engaged in a confrontation with a second woman when the attack unfolded. During the dispute, the victim suffered cutting and stabbing injuries across multiple areas of her body, requiring urgent emergency medical intervention.

    Following the attack, first responders moved the injured woman to Grenada’s General Hospital for urgent treatment. Hospital officials admitted her for ongoing care, and as of the latest police update, her medical status has been listed as stable, giving investigators room to continue building their case.

    Law enforcement has confirmed that no further details about the identities of the parties involved or the possible motive for the altercation have been released to the public at this stage. Investigations into the circumstances of the incident remain active, with detectives working to piece together a full account of what led to the violence. This update was officially released through the Office of the Commissioner of Police in Grenada.

    NOW Grenada, the platform distributing this official update, has noted that it does not take responsibility for contributor-supplied content or statements included in public official updates, and provides a reporting pathway for users to flag any abusive content associated with the posting.

  • Temporary suspension – Decal sticker collection at Galleria Mall

    Temporary suspension – Decal sticker collection at Galleria Mall

    Residents and motorists across Grenada have been notified of an unexpected service disruption by the Royal Grenada Police Force (RGPF). Technical issues have forced the immediate temporary halt to all license decal sticker (also referred to as license disc) distribution operations at the RGPF’s service outlet located inside Galleria Mall, a popular commercial hub in Grand Anse, St George. Until an official update is issued to resolve the technical problems, the RGPF has directed all people seeking new or renewed decal stickers to two alternative collection points. The first alternate location is the main office of the Inland Revenue Department, situated on Young Street in central St George’s. The second option for collectors is the service desk at the Kirani James Athletics Stadium, a prominent local venue that has been arranged to accommodate additional decal pickup requests. In an official statement released through the Office of the Commissioner of Police, the RGPF extended a sincere apology to all motorists and community members for the disruption to routine services. The law enforcement agency also expressed gratitude for the public’s patience, understanding, and cooperation as it works to address the underlying technical difficulties that prompted the service suspension. This notice comes as a routine administrative adjustment to ensure motorists can still complete required vehicle licensing processes without extended delays, even with the temporary closure of the Galleria Mall location. Any further updates on the resumption of services at the mall outlet will be shared with the public as soon as they become available.

  • Traffic Arrangements – Spicemas Carnival Build-up Road Show

    Traffic Arrangements – Spicemas Carnival Build-up Road Show

    The Traffic Division of the Royal Grenada Police Force (RGPF) has issued an official public advisory outlining adjusted traffic rules for the upcoming Spicemas Carnival Build-up Road Show, a key pre-carnival event scheduled to take place on Port Highway in St George’s on Saturday, 16 May 2026. The temporary restrictions will run from 5:00 p.m. local time through to midnight, impacting all motorists traveling through the central St George’s area during the event window.

    To accommodate the large-scale public event and ensure attendee safety, the RGPF has implemented adjusted through-traffic rules for Port Highway. For vehicles heading toward Grand Anse along Port Highway, travel will only be permitted up to the Port entrance, which also marks the entry point to Angel Harps Pan Yard, with no access beyond this point for the duration of the restrictions. Motorists traveling in the opposite direction toward downtown St George’s will only be allowed to travel as far as the Grenada Yacht Club entrance, with no through passage past this checkpoint.

    Parking arrangements have also been restructured to support event operations. Designated parking for event performers, official sponsors, and Spicemas organizing staff has been allocated at the Old Trafford lot. For general attendees and members of the public driving to the event, public parking spaces will be available along The Carenage.

    A temporary no-parking zone will be enforced along Tanteen public road for the full stretch between Burns Point and the Sir Eric Matthew Gairy Roundabout. For the entire duration of the event restrictions, no vehicles will be permitted to park on either side of this road segment, and any unauthorized parked vehicles may be subject to enforcement action.

    The RGPF has called on all road users, local residents, and event attendees to familiarize themselves with the new traffic arrangements ahead of the event and cooperate with on-site law enforcement personnel to ensure the event runs smoothly and safely. The advisory was formally released via the Office of the Commissioner of Police in Grenada.

  • How Much Longer Can Tourism Absorb Sargassum’s Hit?

    How Much Longer Can Tourism Absorb Sargassum’s Hit?

    As peak tourism season kicks off in Belize, a persistent, growing environmental threat is putting the nation’s most critical economic sector at risk: massive accumulations of sargassum, a brown seaweed, that choke the country’s pristine shorelines just when travelers flock to its tropical beaches. For more than a decade, veteran tourism industry insider Eugene Baptist has tracked the steady escalation of the sargassum crisis. As co-founder of newly launched coastal cleanup venture Coastal Green Horizon, Baptist has seen the problem transform from a manageable nuisance into a potentially existential challenge for Belize’s tourism-dependent economy.

    Ten years ago, Baptist estimates the total volume of sargassum washing onto Belize’s coasts each year was less than a third of what the nation confronts today. And with climate change amplifying the conditions that drive massive sargassum blooms in the Atlantic, he sees no signs of the problem reversing on its own. The annual invasion lines up perfectly with Belize’s peak tourism window, when coastal communities and hospitality businesses depend on clean, attractive beaches to draw international visitors. For an industry already recovering from past economic shocks, this annual hit is one that many businesses can no longer absorb.

    Baptist warns that without urgent action, the damage will soon show up in hard numbers: resort occupancy rates, the key metric of tourism industry health. Currently, top Belizean resorts regularly hit 90 to 100 percent capacity during peak season, but Baptist projects that could drop sharply within five years. International travelers from Europe and Canada, core markets for Belize tourism, have no shortage of alternative tropical destinations that do not face widespread sargassum contamination. Why would visitors choose a sargassum-choked Belizean beach, he asks, when they can visit other tropical locations with clean, unspoiled shorelines?

    Comparing the crisis to the COVID-19 pandemic that crippled global tourism, Baptist notes a critical difference: unlike the public health crisis, sargassum is not a temporary shock that will fade on its own. “We thought we were affected by COVID. Sargassum is not going away. And we need to take it seriously,” he says. While root causes of the growing sargassum blooms are tied to global climate change that cannot be reversed overnight, Baptist argues that Belize cannot afford to wait for a perfect, large-scale solution. Too many businesses have already suffered substantial revenue losses, he says, and inaction will only make the damage worse. “We need to stop talking and start doing,” he emphasizes.

    For their part, Baptist and his business partner Dana Meeks have already taken action. They launched Coastal Green Horizon in December 2025, just ahead of the 2026 sargassum season, to run targeted cleanup operations in two popular coastal areas: Hopkins and Maya Beach. Rather than just hauling the collected sargassum to landfills, the pair is working to repurpose the seaweed into value-added usable products, including construction bricks, paving stones, and garden planters. For Belizeans, Baptist says, running from the crisis is not an option. “So, it’s just best to tackle it head-on and just do your small part,” he says.

  • Surinaamse studenten behalen 3e plek op internationale PetroBowl-competitie in Argentinië

    Surinaamse studenten behalen 3e plek op internationale PetroBowl-competitie in Argentinië

    A team of petroleum engineering students from Suriname has earned international recognition by claiming an impressive third-place finish at the 2026 SPE Latin America and Caribbean Regional PetroBowl Championship, held in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The competition, which took place on May 15 as a flagship feature of the regional Latin America and Caribbean Student Symposium, brought together 21 top university teams from across the region to test their expertise in the oil and gas sector.

    Organized by the Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE), the PetroBowl is a globally recognized academic quiz competition that centers on petroleum technology, emerging industry trends, and modern developments across the oil and gas space. This year’s event drew talented student competitors from eight regional nations, including Argentina, Brazil, Ecuador, Colombia, Guyana, Venezuela, and Suriname, all vying for the top podium spot in a fast-paced, intense series of knowledge challenges.

    The Surinamese delegation, representing the SPE Student Chapter Suriname at Anton de Kom University of Suriname (AdeKUS), was made up of team captain Rishano Hapdoel and members Altaaf Sultan, Latusca Reboe, and Ariantxa Djojodikromo. The team was coached and mentored by academic advisors Manisha Ori and Shaïza Simons, with participation made possible through financial and logistical support from SPE Suriname and multiple industry partners.

    Against a stacked field of elite regional competitors, the young Surinamese team outperformed most expectations to secure a spot in the top three, finishing behind first-place winners Universidad de Buenos Aires and second-place holders Instituto Tecnológica de Buenos Aires. This result marks another major milestone for the AdeKUS student chapter, building on its historic 2024 regional championship win that first put Surinamese energy talent on the international map.

    Beyond the podium finish, the result underscores Suriname’s rapidly growing standing in the regional oil and gas sector, as the nation continues to expand its domestic energy industry and develop a new generation of skilled petroleum professionals. For the students, the competition delivered far more than an award: it provided a valuable opportunity to test their academic knowledge in a global arena, gain hands-on international experience, and build professional connections with peers and industry leaders across the region. As a long-standing initiative of SPE, the PetroBowl remains dedicated to nurturing academic growth and preparing the next generation of experts to lead the evolving global energy sector.