Choiseul/Saltibus in Parliament: Energy, Digital Transformation and the Question of Real Benefits
Choiseul on the Move reviewed the contribution made by the Parliamentary Representative for Choiseul/Saltibus during the debate on the financial resolutions before the House.
The speech was serious, technical in parts, and strongly supportive of the government’s borrowing programme. The main argument was clear: there is a difference between borrowing to survive and borrowing to invest.
Renewable Energy: The Strongest Part of the Speech
The representative made the case that Saint Lucia remains too dependent on imported fossil fuels. This leaves electricity prices exposed to global oil markets, international conflicts, and outside shocks.
He explained that solar and wind energy cannot simply be added to the national grid without serious supporting infrastructure. Solar energy changes quickly when clouds pass. That means the country needs stronger transmission lines, upgraded substations, battery storage, and smart grid systems.
He also pointed to projected benefits, including nearly 60 megawatts of renewable energy capacity and more than 100,000 metric tonnes of carbon emissions avoided annually.
Government Must Lead by Example
The speech also addressed the poor energy performance of many public buildings. The representative spoke about old wiring, outdated lighting, inefficient air-conditioning systems, and buildings that waste electricity.
The proposed solution is to retrofit public buildings, install modern energy-efficient systems, and place solar photovoltaic panels on government rooftops.
This is a reasonable argument. Government cannot ask citizens and businesses to save energy while public buildings continue wasting it.
Women in STEM
The representative also highlighted scholarships and apprenticeships for women in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.
That is positive, but the real test will be whether young women from communities like Choiseul/Saltibus can actually access these opportunities.
The Financing Terms
The representative praised the financing terms, including a 10-year grace period, 40 years to repay, and a 0.75% service charge.
If correctly stated, these are favourable terms. However, the public still deserves clear information on the full cost, repayment obligations, implementation schedule, and how success will be measured.
Digital Transformation
The final section of the speech focused on the Caribbean Digital Transformation Project.
The representative said this project would modernize telecommunications regulation, improve government online services, strengthen cybersecurity, and equip young people with digital skills.
For rural communities, this matters. If properly implemented, citizens could access services, file documents, apply for permits, and complete transactions without always travelling into town.
But digital transformation must not leave behind the elderly, the disabled, those without reliable internet, and those who are not comfortable using online systems.
What Was Missing?
While the speech was strong on national energy and digital policy, Choiseul on the Move must ask a fair question: where was the direct connection to Choiseul/Saltibus?
The representative opened with greetings to fathers, students, fishermen, and grieving families. That was appropriate. But when the major policy discussion began, the speech became mostly national and regional.
Choiseul/Saltibus needs to know:
- Will any public buildings in Choiseul/Saltibus be retrofitted?
- Will schools, health centres, community centres, or government offices in the constituency benefit?
- Will young people from Choiseul/Saltibus access the STEM scholarships and apprenticeships?
- Will digital services reduce the burden on rural residents?
- Will fishermen, farmers, small businesses, and elderly citizens see practical benefits?
Final Assessment
The speech made a serious case for investing in renewable energy, energy-efficient public buildings, and digital transformation. The representative showed understanding of the need for battery storage, smart grids, and upgraded infrastructure.
However, the people of Choiseul/Saltibus should not only be asked to applaud national projects. They should be told clearly how these projects will affect their daily lives.
For Choiseul on the Move, the issue is simple: if these resolutions are truly transformational, then transformation must be seen in our villages, schools, public buildings, internet access, young people, and local economy.
No community must be left watching progress from the outside.






