Business View Magazine
        
        
          
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          motorsports team for whom Edoo himself drag races
        
        
          motorcycles, both in the country and at tracks across
        
        
          the Caribbean region.
        
        
          A simple online search, in fact, yields a vast collection
        
        
          of still images and videos of him speeding past.
        
        
          “It’s pretty good. I’m the best in the country, I guess,”
        
        
          he said. “It is a big sport here, but we have a lot of red
        
        
          tape in terms of the government building tracks. We
        
        
          have one track, but it’s like an old airstrip. It’s nothing
        
        
          really solid. They don’t invest much into the sport –
        
        
          they invest in other sports like cricket and football – so
        
        
          all the enthusiasts have to travel to Grenada, St. Lucia
        
        
          and even some go to Florida.
        
        
          “It’s pretty costly to be involved in the sport in Trini-
        
        
          dad.”
        
        
          The cadre of companies are run separately and don’t
        
        
          operate under the same roof, Edoo said, those his
        
        
          executive position with the overarching Edoo’s Group
        
        
          means an across-the-board oversight role.
        
        
          The welding operation has 60 employees across two
        
        
          branches in Trinidad and another on Tobago. There
        
        
          are no physical locations outside the country, but busi-
        
        
          ness is done with off-island clients in St. Lucia, Barba-
        
        
          dos, St. Vincent and Grenada. Trinidad is the largest
        
        
          welding market in the region, due both to its own sig-
        
        
          nificant energy business and the comparative lack of
        
        
          activity in other regional locations.
        
        
          Most of Edoo’s customers come in the form of domes-
        
        
          tic manufacturing businesses, and the company also
        
        
          holds a weekly in-house training session so vocational
        
        
          students can get a hands-on feel for the sorts of equip-