National News

Flow Plans to Invest US$550 Million to Boost Internet Connectivity in Jamaica

MONTEGO BAY, Jamaica  – An announced plan by Flow to invest half a billion US dollars in Jamaica over the next three years, has been welcomed by Minister of Tourism, Hon Edmund Bartlett as a boost to connectivity and tourism development locally.

Investment of the funds was announced by Chief Executive Officer of FLOW’s parent company, Liberty Latin America, Balan Nair during a dinner at the Rose Hall Great House to wrap up the company’s board of directors’ meeting held in Montego Bay recently.

Boosting Internet Connectivity in Jamaica - Minister of Tourism, Hon Edmund Bartlett (centre) shares a light moment with Country Manager of Flow Jamaica, Stephen Price and Chief Executive Officer of Flow’s parent company, Liberty Latin America (LLA), Balan Nair
Minister of Tourism, Hon Edmund Bartlett (centre) shares a light moment with Country Manager of Flow Jamaica, Stephen Price and Chief Executive Officer of Flow’s parent company, Liberty Latin America (LLA), Balan Nair

“We have spent about US$550 million in the last 36 months. Liberty and Flow will spend the same amount, US$550 million in the next 38 months. We’re so excited about Jamaica,” said Mr. Nair.

Benefits of Connectivity

Expressing thanks to the multinational telecommunications and entertainment company for investing in Jamaica, Minister Bartlett reflected on the record growth in tourist arrivals pre and post COVID-19 and asserted: “We do this because we’re connected and your business is about connectivity and productivity, and you’re part of this great revolution that has now created not just a connected world but a hyper connected world.”

Technology Boost to Tourism

Mr. Bartlett added that “for the first time we’re beginning to see communication moving itself from the centre to the peripheries; it’s now knowledge that is available to anyone, to everyone everywhere.”  He said this level of connectivity was challenging what was being done and the way things were being done, and “tourism has been that vehicle through which global connectivity has been realized. That’s what we do. We simply travel, move from one place to the other for the purpose of connecting with individuals, cultures and processes and redefining the way that relationships are understood.”

He pointed out that this was being achieved through technology and that telecommunications infrastructure provided the backbone for that connectivity “which now provides for us the opportunity to bring consumption patterns to diverse places on planet earth.”

In doing so, “we leave a footprint of economic value, and Jamaica’s position as a destination has enabled us to earn in the last two years, US$7 billion and provided employment for 175,000 people directly and 354,000 indirectly,” Minister Bartlett told the Liberty Flow directors.

In the same vein, Minister Bartlett posited that the telecommunications industry was being challenged in its ability to drive the future of tourism “because our connectivity now is no longer dependent on our ability to move from one location to another but is contingent on our appreciation, our knowledge and ability to manipulate the virtual space.”

Wi-Fi Access Expands to 17 Communities,10 Parishes Across Jamaica

South Florida Caribbean News

The SFLCN.com Team provides news and information for the Caribbean-American community in South Florida and beyond.

Related Articles

Back to top button