Op-Ed: Jamaica, China and Goat Island

By: Caribbean Journal Staff - October 4, 2013 - 11:11 am

By David Rowe
Op-Ed Contributor

PRIOR TO this year very few Jamaicans had ever heard of Goat Island. In fact, if you had mentioned Goat Island to many Jamaicans they would not be able to identify it as a Jamaican district.

Enter the China Harbour Engineering Company and its proposal to construct a transshipment port on that offshore Jamaican Island near Portland Bight and the Goat Island issue has become a matter of national and regional debate.

Environmentalists are concerned that a transshipment port will destroy the mangrove swamp that exists there, which is protected by the Jamaican Natural Resource Conservation Authority.

They also suggest that the construction of a transshipment port will destroy fishing which is currently available and provides a living for hundreds of Jamaican fishermen who visit the Portland Bight area.

The expression “Environmental Impact” has become an important part of the daily media-driven chatter.

People who had never heard of Goat Island and who have never fished there are suddenly seriously concerned about the environmental impact of the proposed Chinese project. Goat Island is thought to have eco-tourism potential as well, although this potential is yet to be identified or exploited.

It is not immediately clear why China wishes to build a massive shipping port on Goat Island, however it is clear that there are over 130 unique species of plant and animal life in the Goat Island Portland Bight protected area which would be fundamentally affected by a major construction project.

The Jamaica Environmental Trust is the most influential of the pro-environmental lobbying groups in Jamaica and is aggressively protecting the Portland Bight area which it says has unique wetlands, game reserves and fish sanctuaries.

Only in the wetlands will you find the Jamaican crocodile, the Jamaican iguana, which is critically endangered and several species of Jamaican birds.

This is, in fact, Jamaica’s largest protected area.

Some have even suggested the United States still controls Goat Island, dating back to a lease from the World War II era.

Was this deal even discussed properly with the US State department? And what does the prospect of a major Chinese port right on the doorstep of the United States mean for bilateral relations?

The prospect of a Chinese Nuclear Submarine nestling under the water off the coast of Ocho Rios is a palpable possibility.

This scenario would not leave the United States with many options. Will the trans-shipment Hub bring jobs for Jamaica and revive the moribund Jamaican economy? It certainly will alleviate the serious unemployment issue in the short term but what will its long-term benefits be?

Will corrupt practices by the Jamaican Government and crime make the trans-shipment hub a dream rather than reality?

And once the Chinese control Jamaica’s ports, will that last forever?

Exciting days are ahead as China elbows its way onto the Caribbean geopolitical platform. Will America revive from its diplomatic slumber in the Caribbean and draw the lines required by the Monroe Doctrine?

David P Rowe is an attorney in Jamaica and Florida and an adjunct law professor at the University of Miami School of Law in Coral Gables, Fla.

Note: the opinions expressed in Caribbean Journal Op-Eds are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Caribbean Journal.

Popular Posts margaritaville all-inclusive roatan

Margaritaville Is Opening a New All-Inclusive Resort on the Caribbean Island of Roatan

A major new resort is coming to one of the Caribbean’s most beloved under-the-radar destinations. The Margaritaville Island Reserve Resort Roatan, an all-inclusive resort from Karisma Hotels and Resorts and Margaritaville, is officially underway, with a projected debut in 2027. […]


Marriott Is Opening a New Barbados Luxury Resort With a Prime Stretch of Beach and Swim-Up Rooms 

marriott barbados luxury resort pond

It’s not a secret that Marriott has been deepening its all-inclusive footprint across the Caribbean in the last few years. One of the centerpieces of this push has been Barbados, a destination where Marriott actually kicked off its all-inclusive foray […]


Royal Caribbean’s New Cruise Ship Has a Rooftop Bar, a Waterpark and the Largest Pool at Sea

star of the seas

You step into a glass dome floating high above the ocean. To your right, divers plunge from platforms. Above, aerialists twist through light. Somewhere behind you, a DJ is spinning beside a suspended infinity pool. This isn’t a dream — […]


Related Posts jamaica all-inclusive runaway bay

Jamaica Is Getting a New All-Inclusive Resort in Runaway Bay 

A white-sand beach. The Caribbean Sea at your doorstep. And an all-new way to experience Runaway Bay. The Grand Muthu Club Caribbean Runaway Bay is opening its doors this summer, bringing a new kind of all-inclusive to Jamaica’s north coast […]


Montego Bay, Jamaica Is Getting Its First-Ever Marriott Hotel

montego bay

A new chapter in Montego Bay’s tourism evolution is set to begin. Sandals Resorts Executive Chairman Adam Stewart has unveiled plans for a new AC Marriott hotel, a 165-room property that will bring a contemporary, European Plan (that is, not […]


This Montego Bay All-Inclusive Is Going (Kind of) Family-Friendly

best hotels in montego bay

It’s long been one one of the top adults-only all-inclusive resorts in Jamaica. But now the S Hotel Montego Bay is going a bit more family-friendly.  While it won’t be a totally family-friendly resort, beginning July 1, the resort will […]