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Ministry of Transport and Works Celebrates Maritime Awareness Week (Message From the Minister)

Minister of Transport and Works, the Hon. L. Michael Henry.
It is perhaps a noteworthy bit of irony that we are
surrounded by the sea, yet we are seemingly unaware of the vast potential this
resource holds in terms of placing us on a platform for economic and social
development.
As we celebrate yet another Maritime Awareness Week, I think
that the time is appropriate for me to focus on what I would like to refer to as
a paradigm shift in how we view maritime matters in
Jamaica. Interestingly, I note the week is
being observed under the theme, “2010: Year of the Seafarer”, and this is
precisely where my thoughts lie!
Since assuming the office as Minister of Transport and Works,
I have spoken extensively on the significant role that the maritime sector plays
at both the micro and macro levels of our nation’s existence. In excess of 20
tonnes of our imported goods arrive here by sea; and we are speaking here about
the proverbial ‘pin to an anchor’. Expand that to take in allied services – the
persons to work on these vessels, those who work in the entities dealing with
regulations, those who work at the ports, those who work with the training of
persons in the industry; look at all these linkages and one begins to see that
this multi-billion dollar sector cannot be ignored.
It is against this background that I wish to laud the efforts
of our maritime Agencies, namely the Port Authority of Jamaica (PAJ), the
Caribbean Maritime Institute (CMI) and the Maritime Authority of Jamaica (MAJ)
for the sterling work they have been doing in championing the maritime cause. In
the case of the CMI, they are currently on a drive to expand their capacity in
order to meet the demands for a steady supply of a skilled workforce to its
global shipping partners. This thrust dovetails beautifully into facilitating
this Ministry’s thrust of a multi-modal, integrated transportation network as we
seek to position Jamaica as the transportation hub of the Caribbean.
In the case of the PAJ, it is involved in various projects
designed to improve the sector; among them, the development of a new cruise pier
and related facilities in Falmouth, Trelawny. These facilities, on
completion, will be able to host the new Genesis Class generation of mega
vessels recently introduced into the cruise industry by Royal Caribbean Cruises
International.
For its part, the MAJ continues to promote the Jamaica Ship
Registry; this being a critical element in galvanizing efforts to develop Jamaica as a shipping centre. To this end, activities of
the offices in Germany and Singapore have been regionalized with
a view to widening the target market in order to obtain new business as well as
to embrace vessels already in operation.
I am very confident that this new positive direction of the
maritime sector will place our Jamaican seafarers in an advantageous position to
access the various opportunities being created; this can only redound to the
benefit of all Jamaicans ultimately.
Hon. L. Michael Henry CD, MP
Minister of Transport and Works
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