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FAO Seeking Solutions To Sargassum Algae In The Caribbean – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Sargassum has been washing up in growing numbers on the shores of the Caribbean Sea for more than a decade.

Easily identified by its brown colour and a powerful stench, this algae in such increased volumes is seriously damaging tourism in island communities, catches in fishing industries and economies in general.

Coastlines stretching from Trinidad and Tobago to Anguilla, as well as beaches in Belize and southern Mexico, have been affected by the influx. Even worse, no one knows when the sargassum will arrive in any given year or what amount might wash ashore.

Sargassum floats in a large mass on the ocean’s surface. It can provide food and refuge for fish, birds, crabs, shrimp and other marine organisms.

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In limited amounts, washed-ashore sargassum also plays a role in maintaining Atlantic and Caribbean coastal ecosystems, providing vital nutrients such as carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus to coastal ecosystems and decreasing coastal erosion.

However, since 2011, up to three times the normal amount of sargassum has been washing ashore in the Caribbean, with this algae sometimes up to a metre deep.

Massive seaweed blooms damage fishing gear, boat engines and other fishing assets and have clogged fishing harbours and mooring sites across the eastern Caribbean. That impacts fisheries directly, decreasing the landings of important species because fishers simply cannot access their normal catches.

“Sargassum plagues our ocean and our shoreline every year,” says Roger Kennedy, a fisher from Delaford Bay on the island of Tobago. Roger, like many fishers in his community, has fished all his life and is now finding that the huge and unpredictable increase in sargassum is affecting his life and livelihood.

“Whenever it washes ashore in large quantities the other fishers and I are prevented from accessing our boats. When we are at sea, my fishing lines get entangled with it and that badly affects my catch for that day.”

Now through the Climate Change Adaptation in the Eastern Caribbean Fisheries Sector Project (CC4FISH), FAO is working with fisherfolk, policymakers and scientists from the University of the West Indies’ Centre for Resource Management and Environmental Studies to increase the resilience of coastal communities and reduce their vulnerability to the deleterious effects of sargassum.

“Sargassum has been around forever. Christopher Columbus saw it in the Sargasso Sea, which was named after sargassum, when he crossed the Atlantic,” says Iris Monnereau, FAO fisheries expert based in Barbados. “It used to be confined to that area, but since 2011 it has been coming from a new area between Africa and Brazil and affecting the Caribbean region.”

The incidence and size of algal blooms in the Caribbean and West Africa has been growing due to rising water temperatures, fertilizer release into the ocean and increased Sahara dust clouds, which stimulate algal growth.

The sargassum influxes are causing increasing damage to the environment, biodiversity and coastal ecosystems. For example, decaying sargassum can smother coral reefs and restrict vital oxygen to fish in coastal areas. Marine mammals and turtles often drown when they become entangled in the algae.

It can additionally be damaging for human health. “Apart from its critical impact on fishers’ livelihoods, sargassum can cause headaches, nausea and breathing difficulties because it releases toxic gases when it decays along the shore,” says Monnereau.

Barbados, Belize, and Trinidad and Tobago are among the worst affected countries. Fishers have been forced to change their fishing techniques and their target species in years when there is an abundance of sargassum.

Antonio Horsford, a 44-year-old fisher from the coastal community of Buccoo in Tobago, has been fishing for more than 20 years. “Sargassum is a pest. I catch flying fish for a living, and it drives them away. I have had to change two engines because the sargassum seeds flooded the engine. It’s costly for a fisherman.”

According to FAO’s research, the numbers of flying fish are down by 50 percent in Barbados alone, while mahi mahi has fallen by 37 percent.  Fewer fish means fewer jobs throughout the value chain.

“That obviously impacts the fishers, but it also impacts everyone down the line because if there’s less fish, the prices go up and there is less work,” says Monnereau. “So it impacts the consumer, but also the market vendors because they have less fish to sell.”

Through CC4Fish, FAO is supporting communities across several Caribbean islands with adaptive management.

That means helping them to improve the forecasting, monitoring and detection of sargassum, as well as building capacity and providing equipment and advice to assist with beach cleanups when an influx occurs.

Suzan Lakhan-Baptiste, Managing Director of the non-profit Nature Seekers organization, says support and equipment provided by FAO enabled her group to remove layers of sargassum and prepare a clean nesting space for sea turtles, which are a popular draw for tourists in Trinidad in Tobago.

But she says the algae remains a huge problem.

Improving sargassum management is essential. FAO not only supports best practices for sargassum cleanup and removal but is also working with governments and communities to develop policies, standards and incentives to protect public and environmental health.

Through the development of a sargassum uses guide, FAO is additionally promoting ways to repurpose sargassum, turning it into commercially viable products to provide additional employment and income.

In fact, sargassum is already being used by small and medium businesses to produce bricks, shoe soles, soaps, plant stimulants and paper. Larger enterprises are looking at converting sargassum into renewable energy, bioplastics and compost.

Significant strides have already been made in helping fishers to better detect and adapt to sargassum in the Caribbean. Now initiatives to turn the algal blooms into an asset may create new employment opportunities and sustainable value chains in the future.

SOURCE: Food and Agriculture Organization 

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NBA: C’est reparti pour Portland, qui se rapproche de Utah

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Stoppés samedi dernier à Phoenix, les Portland Trail Blazers viennent de signer leur troisième succès d’affilée cette semaine, à chaque fois sur le parquet de l’adversaire, en allant battre la…

Stoppés samedi dernier à Phoenix, les Portland Trail Blazers viennent de signer leur troisième succès d’affilée cette semaine, à chaque fois sur le parquet de l’adversaire, en allant battre la Nouvelle-Orléans 106 à 95, jeudi en NBA.

Cette nouvelle victoire, la neuvième en douze matches depuis l’ouverture de la saison, rapproche l’équipe de l’Oregon de la première place de la conférence Ouest, détenue par le Utah Jazz, défaits également trois fois depuis le début de cet exercice.

Toujours privés de Damian Lillard, qui a déjà manqué quatre matches cette saison, les Trail Blazers ont cloué le bec aux Pelicans, grâce notamment aux 27 points de Jerami Grant, qui a en outre pris huit rebonds.

“Je savais que je devais monter d’un cran et faire encore plus que ce que fais habituellement”, a déclaré Grant, qui a aussi délivré quatre passes décisives et réussi quatre interceptions.

Dans une équipe de la Nouvelle-Orléans maladroite (41,8% de réussite seulement aux tirs), Zion Williamson s’est démené comme il l’a pu en inscrivant 29 points.

A Washington, les Wizards, malgré un petit retard à l’allumage — premier quart-temps perdu –, ont maîtrisé les Dallas Mavericks 113 à 105, et consolident leur sixième place au classement de la conférence Est.

Kyle Kuzma s’est particulièrement distingué dans cette partie, en inscrivant 36 points à 53,8% de réussite aux tirs, agrémentés de onze rebonds et six passes décisives.

Miami en prolongation

Dans les rangs des Mavericks, Spencer Dinwiddle a fait un peu moins bien avec 33 points, tandis que la star de l’équipe, Luka Doncic, peu en verve avec huit paniers réussis sur 21 tentatives pour un piètre 38,1 % de réussite, n’a pû faire mieux que 22 points.

Dallas, qui avait mieux attaqué ce match en remportant le premier quart-temps, menait encore 80-78 à la fin du troisième quart-temps. Une bourrasque s’est alors abattue sur l’équipe texane, à laquelle Kuzma et sa bande ont infligé un cinglant 21-6, fatal aux Mavericks.

Le Miami Heat, qui restait sur deux revers, s’est un peu réchauffé en battant les Charlotte Hornets, qui n’ont cependant cédé qu’en prolongation 117 à 112.

Miami a débuté le quatrième quart-temps avec une avance de douze points (85-73). Mais Charlotte a comblé tout son retard dans le quatrième, avant de rendre les armes en prolongation.

C’est la septième défaite consécutive des Hornets, derniers de la conférence Est.

Jimmy Butler pour le Heat a frôlé le “triple double” (trois lignes statistiques à dix unités et plus), avec 35 points, dix rebonds et huit passes décisives.

bb/bgs/chc

Luka Doncic N.77 des Dallas Mavericks lors du match contre les Washington Wizards dans la Capital One Arena de Washington D.C. le 10 novembre 2022
• Rob Carr

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Assises : les accusés prennent la parole

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Benoît de La Salle
b.delasalle@agmedias.fr

Cédric Chaillot est formel, il était armé, mais il n’est pas responsable de la mort de Daniel Duville. • CROQUIS D’AUDIENCE STÉPHANIE DESTIN/FRANCE-ANTILLES

Hier, les accusés ont livré leur version à la barre de la cour d’assises de Martinique. Ils ne reconnaissent pas les faits qui leur sont reprochés. 

Cette journée était particulière pour Cédric
Chaillot. Hier, jeudi 10 novembre il a passé son 38e anniversaire
devant la cour d’assises de Martinique. Dans l’après-midi les
accusés ont été entendus. Cédric Chaillot affirme à la barre avoir
entendu des coups de feu avant qu’il n’arrive. Il suppose que la
victime était déjà blessée, mais debout quand il s’est interposé.
Il dit avoir également pensé que le tireur était toujours présent
et que c’est l’une des raisons pour laquelle il a sorti son arme.
Cédric Chaillot est formel, il était armé, mais il n’est pas
responsable de la mort de Daniel Duville.

Pourtant le président lui rappelle qu’il n’a pas
eu ce discours.

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Les auto-entrepreneurs cherchent à prendre la lumière

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

LE GOSIER

Sur le stand de Fond’an moi, fabrication de bougies et cires artisanales et Karube Fabrication de produits cosmétiques artisanaux. • DR

Dans un esprit collaboratif, trente auto-entrepreneurs se sont réunis dimanche, afin de faire découvrir leurs activités et savoirs- faire.

Malgré le mauvais temps annoncé dimanche dernier,
il faisait plutôt soleil du côté de la section Pliane où se tenait
la première édition de la Journée découverte des auto-entrepreneurs
(JDA). Trente jeunes dans des domaines de compétences aussi
créatifs que variés ont présenté au public de passage leurs
produits ainsi que leur métier. Ces entrepreneu

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Deux importants chantiers de construction immobilière sont en cours

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Baie-Mahault

Par Anthony BASSIEN-CAPSA
a.bassien-capsa@agmedias.fr

Chantier d’un équipement d’ordre collectif sur le Morne Bernard. • ANTHONY BASSIEN-CAPSA

Deux opérations immobilières sont en cours de réalisation sur le territoire baie-mahaultien, à la Jaille et au morne Bernard. Respectent-elles vraiment les lois d’urbanisme ?

La ville de Baie-Mahault accueille actuellement
deux opérations immobilières en cours de réalisation sur son
territoire ayant des fonctions différentes. Voici leur
présentation.

Un équipement public préfigurant la future
technopôle Audacia 

La Société d’Économie Mixte et d’Aménagement de la
Guadeloupe (SEMAG) est le maître d’oeuvre d’un équipement collectif
d’intérêt public actuellement en construction au Morne Bernard, non
loin des studios de Guadeloupe La 1ère. Ce projet qui occupe deux
lots à bâtir a vu sa déclaration préalable délivrée par la SEMAG le
17 décembre 2021 et la ville de Baie-Mahault en est la
bénéficiaire. Le permis de construire n° PC 971 103 21R1 147 a été
délivré par la Direction de l’urbanisme et du patrimoine de la
commune le 10 mars dernier et le bénéficiaire est l’entreprise
immobilière SCI Imagine, basée à Jarry. Celui-ci fait partie du
vaste projet de la future technopôle Audacia (considérée comme la
« Silicon Valley guadeloupéenne ») dont la Ville a confié
le projet à la SEMAG. Celui-ci consiste à créer un quartier à haute
valeur ajoutée de développement dédié aux activités suivantes :

– NTIC (nouvelles technologies de l’information et
de la communication)

– Énergies renouvelables

– Transformation agro-alimentaire, R&D
(recherche et développement)

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Les villages de la Route du Rhum se préparent à accueillir les visiteurs

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Marie VANDEWOESTYNE

Le service technique s’active avant l’arrivée des visiteurs. • M.V.

Depuis 2018, le Mémorial ACTe est devenu le décor des arrivées de l’ensemble des marins de la Route du Rhum. À quelques jours de l’ouverture du village, le personnel technique s’affaire autour du Mémorial ACTe. Mais à Sainte-Anne, à la marina de Pointe-à-Pitre et à Basse-Terre, techniciens et organisateurs s’activent pour monter les stands. 

Malgré le report du départ des bateaux,
l’ouverture du Village n’a pas été décalée et le personnel des
services techniques s’affaire devant le Mémorial ACTe. La course
arrive à cet endroit et le village sera ouvert dès le 12 novembre
et celajusqu’au 4 décembre. Le musée, quant à lui, est actuellement
fermé pour travaux, la réouverture est prévue en même temps que
l’ouverture du village.

L’aménagement des installations est en
cours

Le temps presse, de nombreux chapiteaux et 
tentes  sont en train d’être mo

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Imbert outlines Clico Investment Fund distribution

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Finance Minister Colm Imbert. – COURTESY OFFICE OF THE PARLIAMENT

Finance Minister Colm Imbert said distribution of shares and bonds to Clico unitholders will begin in January 2022, after the termination of the Clico Investment Fund (CIF) on January 2, 2023.

In the Senate on Tuesday, Imbert gave a breakdown of the status of the fund, which was established by the government in 2012 to redeem the 11-to-20-year series of bonds issued to holders of short-term investment products sold by Colonial Life Insurance Company (Clico) and British American Insurance Company.

“The Clico Trust Corporation, established as a wholly-owned state enterprise, is the trustee of the CIF and is governed by a trust deed. The CIF is a closed end fund comprising of 204 million units which is traded on the TT Stock Exchange. The fund has a life of ten years with a redemption date of January 2, 2023. The CIF consists of a mix of 40,072,299 RBL Financial Holdings Ltd shares and government bonds with a face value of $702,867,000 with a coupon of 4.25 per cent and a term of 25 years.”

He outlined how the distribution would take place as defined under clause 19 of the Clico Investment Trust Deed. Clause 19.2 says after the trust is terminated, the trustee shall distribute the RBL Financial Holdings shares, any other assets comprising the deposited property and the fund income in specie (a Latin term meaning in actual form), to the unitholders.

“The trustee shall be entitled to retain out of any monies in its hands, any part of the deposited property full provision for all costs, debts, liabilities, charges, expenses, etc., in accordance with the termination of the fund. As at September 30, 2022, the CIF had 6,227 unit holders. In accordance with the trust deed, the deposited property, less costs of winding up, is to be distributed in specie, which means in actual form, to the unit holders and will be allocated as follows.

“Unitholders will receive 0.1964 Republic Bank Financial Holdings Ltd shares for each unit held, calculated as 40,072,299 shares divided by 204,000,000 CIF units. Clause 19.2.1 states where the distribution in specie of the shares would result in fractional shares being distributed, the number of shares shall be rounded down to avoid any absurd result. The bonds will be similarly pro-rated and unitholders will be entitled to 3.445 bonds per unit held. Any residual amount due to unitholders resulting from the above distribution will be paid in cash.”

Imbert outlined the timeline over which the property would be distributed and the actions leading up to the termination of the fund.

“The last date for trading of CIF units on the Stock Exchange will be December 30, 2022, and the transfer of shares and bonds will commence from the week of January 2023. Once transfers have been made and expenses paid, CIF will be de-registered from the Stock Exchange and wound up.

“During November 2022, the trustee Clico Trust Corporation will place ads in the newspapers advising of the closure of the fund, letters will be issued to the Stock Exchange and the Securities and Exchange Commission formally advising of the closing of the fund on January 2, 2023, and the lead broker will hold discussions with the brokers of the unitholders in the transfer of shares.”

Imbert was responding to a question by Opposition Senator Wade Mark prior to the adjournment of the Senate. Mark asked for clarification as to how the fund would be terminated and distributed, and what value unitholders would receive.

“There’s a need for government to give an idea to unit holders what they are going to do with the units which we understand amount to 204 million, because the value of these units has fallen the from time issued to $27 per unit, so if you have to convert that into shares, it would be cheaper than when it was originally purchased at $31 per unit. I looked at the share price of Republic Bank Ltd and I saw about three or four weeks ago it was at $140 a share, and a couple days ago it was at $133 so there is some uncertainty from the market so the government needs to clear the air.”

Imbert said Mark’s information was wrong, as the units were given a face value of $25 when the fund was first established, not $27 or $31.

“The value at which the CIF units trading most recently is $28.54, so the units are now worth more than when they were first issued under the CIF declaration of trust on October 31, 2012, which is when Senator Mark was associated with a former government. There have been a series of distributions since then, dividend payments on the CIF units from 2012 to now, so I don’t think it’s fair to even insinuate that CIF holders have lost out over the period.”

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Floods distress families in Penal/ Debe

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

These children sit outside a flooded home at Molly Street, Debe, on Thursday morning, while furniture is placed on a roof to dry. – Marvin Hamilton

Although the heavy rains had stopped on Thursday, flood waters continued to rise in the Penal, Debe, and Woodland, cutting off communities and distressing many families.

At Molly Street, Debe, residents said they began putting sandbags on the roadside at the front of their homes on Wednesday night. The efforts were not enough to save them from flooding. The road is near the bank of the South Oropouche River.

Water from a river to the back of their homes flooded the streets. Almost all the houses along the road were surrounded by murky water.

Families at Molly Street, Debe, cook outside while waiting for floods to recede on Thursday. – Marvin Hamilton

A member of the Marcano family of Venezuela told Newsday that around 1 am on Thursday, the family tried to save a couch set from the flood waters. They put the set on top of the roof, but rain fell early and wet it.

The Nowrang family said water flooded their homes on Wednesday night within minutes. A total of ten relatives, including four children, live in two houses that are joined.

The family complained about the water being rat-invested. The children spent the night in cars in the driveway. Neil Nowrang and other relatives tried to save toys and other items by putting them on the rooftop.

One of the homes at Molly Street, Debe, which was still surrounded by floodwater on Thursday. – Marvin Hamilton

With their homes flooded and items destroyed, the family pitched a tent in the yard and began cooking outdoors.

“We do not have money to buy food for everyone, so we are cooking. Things are hard right now. My brother recently lost his work and has two children to take care of. We would be happy to get help from anyone. No one has helped us with anything,” a relative said.

Livestock farmer Vinod Lutchman said he, his brother Anil, and other relatives have been monitoring the water level since Wednesday evening.

Lutchman said, “Around 1 am, I got up and saw water all over. My brother took all the children from the house to a relative and left them there. I mind ducks and pigs. Last week we had a flood, and I lost eight piglets. The water got in the pen and drowned them.”

The Keith Khan family was not able to sleep on Wednesday night.

“Nobody slept last night. We put many items on higher ground, but the water keeps rising. We have ducks and chickens at the back, but we cannot go to feed them. This water would take about three to four days to go down and no one is helping us,” a family member said.

The Penal Debe Regional Corporation’s disaster management unit (DMU) visited several affected residents.

A family in Debe on Thursday. – Marvin Hamilton

Part of Debe Trace, Debe, which connects to Suchit Trace, Penal, was impassable. Puzzle Island, a nearby community in Penal, was cut off.

Tulsa Trace was also severely affected. The South Oropouche River burst its bank and was “spewing water into Rahamut Trace.”

People who needs sandbags can collect them at the corporation’s office at SS Erin Road in Debe between 8 am to 4 pm. They can also call the DMU at 647-0961/7012 ext 203.

At Pluck Road, Woodland, rising flood waters made the road impassable.

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No water for thousands as WASA cleans up several flooded plants

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

In this August 2021 file photo, WASA workers do maintenance work at the North Oropouche water treatment plant, off Valencia Road, Valencia. – AYANNA KINSALE

AS MANY citizens have started to realise, heavy rains do not necessarily equate to a better water supply.

TT once again faced the wrath of flooding between Wednesday and Thursday, and thousands were also left without pipe-borne water after surface-water treatment plants started shutting down, particularly in the north, east and in Tobago.

Increasingly often, communities which receive pipe-borne water from treatment plants fed by surface water, especially rivers, are left with flooded yards and dry taps after a few hours of heavy rain.

Intakes at water-treatment plants become clogged when rising river levels increase turbidity (measurement of silt and other debris in water from a river or lake) and can only be cleared when the levels subside.

The Water and Sewerage Authority (WASA) hosted a news conference just after midday on Thursday, at which time the worst of the day’s weather seemed to have passed.

The authority’s chairman, Ravindra Nanga, and acting director of operations, Shaira Ali, gave updates on the affected plants and the communities they service.

Ali said the weather earlier on Thursday presented “significant challenges at the authority with respect to the surface-source treatment facilities.”

In other instances, conditions were improving and WASA was able to restart several plants.

Nanga and Ali expressed optimism about the restoration of service to most of the affected areas within 24 hours if the weather allowed for it.

On November 5, WASA also announced that its Tompire water-treatment plant in north-east Trinidad was similarly affected by high turbidity levels which resulted in clogged screens which left the plant inoperable.

However, while the TT Meteorological Service lowered the severity of its riverine alert from orange to yellow on Thursday afternoon, it also forecast a medium (60 per cent) chance of thunderstorm activity between Thursday afternoon and night, which could affect WASA’s ability to have the treatment plants up and running and water restored on Friday.

Ali said there were a handful of other issues affecting the water supply to some communities.

“Yesterday (Wednesday) we encountered two breaks on the 42-inch transmission main (at Daniel Trace and Pine Settlement, Valencia) that supplies water from the plant to several of the off takes which supply the communities.”

Ali said crews were immediately mobilised to both sites and had been working intensely overnight.

He said because of “the challenges with the weather system, the high levels of rainfall and the river conditions,” WASA was “able to mobilise works last night. Crews were working (continuously) with the weather conditions as they were.”

A crew remains at Daniel Trace where there were several challenges, particularly the terrain, being in a forested area, as well as at Pine Settlement where restoration was hampered on Thursday by the high river levels.

But, Ali said, “We have equipment mobilised. We have the expertise, the engineers, the managers; they are all on site and all efforts are being made at this time to go into the second repair and have that completed over the next several hours.”

She admitted the timeframe for completion of repairs would depend on the weather at the various sites.

Ali said WASA was also engaged in other “major items of works” being co-ordinated in east Trinidad, particularly at the North Oropouche water treatment plant in Valencia, which services over 100,000 customers in the East-West Corridor, from Sangre Grande to Five Rivers, Arouca.

WASA said customers can call its hotlines (800-4420 and 800-4426) to receive truck-borne water, but it added that places such as schools and health centres will get priority.

Communities without water:

Sangre Grande and environs

Guaico Tamana Road

Toco Road

Manzanilla and environs

Cumuto

Wallerfield

Tumpuna Road

Malabar Phase I, III and IV

Brazil

La Horquetta

Carapo

O’Meara (including the industrial estate)

Mausica Road (north and south)

Maloney Gardens; Five Rivers

Bon Air West and surrounding communities.

Affected plants:

Plants out of operation at the time of the news conference included:

Quarry water treatment plant, affecting Valencia and environs

La Pastora/McDavid intakes in Lopinot

North Oropouche water treatment plant

Guanapo water treatment plant, which supplies Arima

Matura and Tompire water treatment plants, which supply Toco, Matura and environs

Blanchisseuse water treatment facility

La Fillette

Rincon

Las Cuevas

Charlotteville (Tobago)

Hillsborough West (Tobago)

Highlands (Tobago)

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Amandala #3601 Friday, November 11, 2022

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

Visit the post for more.

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