Stabroek News

Starr Computers CEO rolls out Electric Car ‘fuel’ offer

-

Even as Starr Computers’ Chief Executive Officer, Mike Mohan, asserts that his company continues to seek to deepen its footprint in the informatio­n technology sector, the United Statesbase­d Guyanese businessma­n had dropped a hint that his company is interested in further investment­s in what is now the country’s oil-driven economy. Last week the Starr Computers’ boss issued a statement announcing that it had made donations of Smart Labs to the Guyana Police Force Academy and the New Amsterdam Technical Institute in Berbice, gestures which the release describes as amounting to “a significan­t boost to educationa­l resources within the Berbice community.”

Setting aside its Brickdam complex which continues to market a range of informatio­n technology-related inventory, Starr Computers has also evinced a long term interest in supporting the establishm­ent of Smart Laboratori­es as well as upgrading the informatio­n technology resources in local schools. The showroom in the upper flat of the company’s Brickdam complex has frequently played host to groups invited there to experience the company’s info tech inventory. In its release, the company said that the collaborat­ive initiative which resulted in the donations to the institutio­ns in Berbice “has provided the community with essential tools to support its educationa­l framework and enhance vocational skills,” undertakin­gs which he said marked “a milestone in Starr Computers’ commitment to social responsibi­lity.” The company, the release added, was “thrilled to extend our resources and technology to facilitate learning and developmen­t in Berbice.”

Evidence of Starr Computers’ continuing interest of investing in Guyana’s growing economy is reflected in ongoing renovation and expansion works to the company’s Brickdam complex where it is expected that other companies will be able to access space for their various entreprene­urial pursuits. While Mohan is yet to disclose specific plans for the expanded complex, it already accommodat­es a Guyana Telephone Telegraph Company (GTT) facility inside its complex to market its MMG service. When Mohan spoke with Stabroek Business earlier this week, he disclosed his intention to attend the four-day third edition of the Guyana Energy Conference and Supply Chain

Expo at the Marriott Hotel which concluded on Thursday.

Meanwhile, Mohan also informed the Stabroek Business of the company’s intention to shortly provide an electric vehicle ‘fueling’ facility to owners of

such vehicles once they make a purchase from the Starr complex. While Mohan is yet to disclose the extent of his likely investment in the fast emerging electric vehicles’ industry, the short-term ‘charging’ service which he is

offering would appear to point to interest in a longer-term investment in the sector. Statistics on the rapidly emerging electric car industry are likely to have significan­t implicatio­ns for the energy

sector as estimates seen by the Stabroek Business would appear to point to the likely need for less than 5 million barrels of oil per day by 2030.

Starr Computers may well be dropping a broad hint that it intends to invest in the vehicle sector though he shared no details of such a plan with the Stabroek Business. The Guyanese businessma­n’s seeming interest in the sector comes on the heels of disclosure­s that, going forward, electric cars are set to surge to yet another record in 2024, growing their share of the global car market that could take electric cars to one-fifth of the overall market, a circumstan­ce that would result in a major transforma­tion of the auto industry as well as the energy sector, especially oil.

Informatio­n contained in the current edition of the Internatio­nal Energy Agency’s (IEA) Annual Global Electric Vehicle Outlook reportedly indicates that sales are expected to grow by another 35% this year to reach 14 million. “Electric vehicles are one of the driving forces in the new global energy economy that is rapidly emerging – and they are bringing about a historic transforma­tion of the car manufactur­ing industry worldwide,” IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol is quoted as saying. The IEA boss has added that “the trends we are witnessing has significan­t implicatio­ns for global oil demand. The internal combustion engine has gone unrivalled for over a century, but electric vehicles are changing the status quo. By 2030, they will avoid the need for at least 5 million barrels a day of oil. Cars are just the first wave: electric buses and trucks will follow soon,” Birol is quoted as saying.

The overwhelmi­ng majority of electric car sales to date are mainly concentrat­ed in three markets – China, Europe and the United States. China is the frontrunne­r, with 60% of global electric car sales taking place there in 2022. Today, more than half of all electric cars on the road worldwide are in China. Europe and the United States, the second and third largest markets, both saw strong growth with sales increasing 15% and 55% respective­ly in 2022.*

 ?? ?? Starr Computers CEO Mike Mohan.
Starr Computers CEO Mike Mohan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana