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38 September 2016 - Business View Caribbean

Business View Caribbean - September 2016 39

nue water (NRW). One reason is due to the country’s

aging infrastructure and another is because of non-

payment of bills and/or pilfering of water resources by

segments of the population. “That is what we are now

grappling with,” says Barnett, ruefully. “We have high

physical losses in our network – we have infrastruc-

ture that is probably more than a hundred years old

- coupled with the fact that we have dispersed commu-

nities that are socially and economically challenged,

creating its own challenges for the enterprise to bill

and collect for water that we produce and distribute in

some of those areas.”

Regarding the NWC’s infrastructure, Barnett admits

that the level of investment undertaken when it was

first formed was far below what it should have been,

based on the system’s expected utilization. “When

we were established in 1980, there was no real capi-

talization of the enterprise to renew its assets,” he

states. “And, therefore, we were only able to invest as

the resources came available. So, investment in the

early stage was very low. We did not invest as much as

we should.”

Barnett believes that controlling water loss is one of

the NWC’s main challenges, and that solving that

problem will lower the agency’s costs, considerably. “I

consider the reduction of water loss as a new supply,”

he says. “Meaning, if I can reduce my losses from the

water that I already produced and distributed, then I’ll

be able to add more customers and encourage more

development because more water is readily available.

And the agency can become more efficient just by

tackling one major problem. So, that is where my main

focus is, because there is a direct correlation between

high NRW and high energy costs.”

Barnett’s spotlight on saving money is based on his

desire that the NWC could become, someday, profit-

able enough to be a contributor to the government’s