Jamaica’s Energy Minister Daryl Vaz presented a robust justification for the Government’s contentious US$150-million loan to the Jamaica Public Service Company (JPS) during a parliamentary session on Tuesday. Vaz asserted that post-Hurricane Melissa restoration statistics demonstrate the wisdom of this financial decision, revealing that 491,000 of the original 542,000 affected customers have regained electricity—representing approximately 92-93% national restoration.
Minister Vaz elaborated that the remaining 51,000 disconnected customers include approximately 21,000 households unable to safely receive power due to severe infrastructure damage. He outlined a comprehensive multi-agency strategy involving the Jamaica Social Investment Fund and the Ministry of Labour and Social Security to address these cases through electrical rewiring, housing support, and social assistance programs.
The Minister projected that 96% restoration would be achieved by January’s end, with February dedicated to addressing the most severely impacted communities. Vaz emphasized that Jamaica’s recovery pace outperforms regional counterparts and approaches ‘best in class’ status.
Opposition representatives delivered scathing critiques of both the restoration progress and loan transparency. MP Dayton Campbell of Westmoreland Eastern contradicted official statistics, stating unequivocally that ‘not one single, solitary’ JPS customer in his constituency currently has electricity. He described devastating impacts on families and businesses, with over 10,000 of his constituents among the disconnected.
Opposition energy spokesman Phillip Paulwell challenged the loan’s adequacy, noting previous grid restoration estimates of US$350 million and demanding full parliamentary access to the loan agreement terms. Despite heated exchanges, Minister Vaz maintained his commitment to factual accuracy, pledging to correct any verified misinformation while emphasizing results over political point-scoring.
