STEPHON NICHOLAS
Senior Reporter
Minister of Works and Infrastructure Jearlean John said the MV Blue Wave Harmony sailed for Tobago last night, carrying all cargo that arrived at the Port of Port of Spain.
According to the Port Authority, 185 trucks and flatbeds and five 20-foot containers departed for Scarborough on what officials said was a fully cleared sailing.
Minister John, who visited the port yesterday morning, returned in the evening to make sure operations went smoothly. She had earlier instructed officials to keep the ramp down until 9 pm, some 30 minutes before the vessel’s scheduled departure from Trinidad.
In a video posted by the ministry, Port Authority CEO Marcia Charles-Elbourne said 185 trucks, flatbeds and five 20-foot containers left for Scarborough.
“Everything that came went on board? You left back nobody?” Minister John asks in the video.
“We cleared the yard,” Charles-Elbourne replied.
As she boarded the vessel, Minister John observed sand, bricks and gravel loaded for transport.
“Tobago business is good business,” she said.
She dismissed criticism of the cargo service, saying:
“If there is a shortage it means there needs [to be] more suppliers in Tobago.”
The minister had earlier described the US$25,000-per-day cargo vessel as a “beast” capable of “taking everything” aboard.
The MV Blue Wave Harmony has been under scrutiny since its arrival on January 22, 2026. Mechanical issues and an incident that damaged its hull near Tobago delayed its maiden commercial sailing by a week.
On Friday, the T&T Chamber of Industry and Commerce warned of what it described as disruption to cargo service on the sea-bridge, saying operational costs were rising and businesses were under tremendous pressure to maintain current prices.
Chief Secretary Farley Augustine also revealed that Studley Park Enterprises Ltd has been struggling to secure a supply of bitumen from Trinidad for its quarry operations.
Minister John also spoke with Charles-Elbourne yesterday morning and received assurances that there was no backlog of cargo at the port.
However, truckers and members of the business community said unpredictable and inconsistent sailings have reduced their weekly trips to Tobago from five to three, placing strain on the delivery of goods to the island.