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The first five months of 2026 have reshaped the compliance landscape for every contractor, investor and in-house counsel operating in Trinidad and Tobago’s energy sector. The government’s termination of the Safe To Work (STOW) certification regime, announced on 22 January 2026, removed a cornerstone of contractor mobilisation requirements overnight, leaving contractual gaps, refund disputes and unanswered HSE questions in its wake. Simultaneously, parliamentary questions on National Energy Corporation of Trinidad and Tobago (NECTT) dividends, Budget and Public Sector Investment Programme (PSIP) pressure, and public discussion of a possible electricity surcharge have created fresh counterparty and regulatory risks.
This guide, current as at 10 May 2026, provides the practical legal analysis, permitting checklists and contract-drafting guidance that energy lawyers Trinidad and Tobago practitioners and their clients need to navigate these changes with confidence.
On 22 January 2026, the Energy Minister publicly announced the termination of the STOW certification regime during a broadcast carried by TTT. The announcement confirmed that the government would no longer require STOW certification as a condition of contractor access to energy-sector work sites. By 23 January 2026, the decision was reported by the Trinidad and Tobago Newsday and the Trinidad Express, with the latter carrying statements from the Energy Chamber of Trinidad and Tobago regarding contractor eligibility for refunds of audit fees already paid.
The decision was framed as a rationalisation of the regulatory burden on energy-sector participants. Industry observers note that the practical effect will be to shift HSE assurance from a centralised, government-mandated certification body to a regime where operators and principal contractors bear primary responsibility for verifying subcontractor HSE competence.
STOW, Safe To Work, was a certification programme under which contractors operating in Trinidad and Tobago’s energy sector were required to demonstrate compliance with defined HSE management standards. According to the official STOW website FAQs, the programme involved third-party audits of a contractor’s safety management systems, with successful completion yielding a certificate that was typically a prerequisite for mobilisation onto upstream and downstream energy installations. The programme applied across the oil, gas and petrochemical value chain and was recognised by major operators, including state-owned entities, as the baseline HSE gatekeeper.
The certification cycle involved initial audits, periodic renewals and associated fees. Contractors invested significant time and resources in achieving and maintaining STOW status. The cancellation therefore created immediate questions about sunk costs, refund entitlements, contractual performance conditions and what replacement standard, if any, would be mandated.
The termination of the STOW regime is not merely an administrative change; it triggers a cascade of legal and contractual consequences across the energy sector. Every EPC contract, services agreement and subcontract that references STOW as a performance condition, mobilisation prerequisite or indemnity trigger must now be analysed and, in most cases, amended.
The Trinidad Express reported on 23 January 2026 that the Energy Chamber confirmed contractors who had paid for STOW audits that had not yet commenced would be eligible for refunds. However, the precise refund mechanism, including timelines, documentation requirements and the administering body, has not been set out in legislation or regulation. This creates uncertainty for contractors holding pre-paid audit fees.
From a legal perspective, contractors should take the following steps to protect their refund entitlements:
STOW certification was, in many cases, referenced in insurance policies, particularly contractors’ all-risks, professional indemnity and employer’s liability policies, as evidence of HSE competence. With the certification removed, contractors should:
The Occupational Safety and Health Act of Trinidad and Tobago continues to impose statutory HSE duties on employers and contractors regardless of STOW status. The Petroleum Act and its subsidiary regulations similarly maintain safety standards for upstream operations. The STOW cancellation does not create a regulatory vacuum, it shifts the burden of proof from a centralised certificate to the contractor’s own documented management systems.
Contracts executed before 22 January 2026 that contain STOW-specific language present the most immediate risk. The following checklist identifies the key clauses to review:
Model clause language for each of these categories is provided in the Appendix below.
With STOW no longer functioning as a gateway compliance step, the standalone licensing and permitting framework for energy projects in Trinidad and Tobago takes on heightened importance. Project sponsors, EPC contractors and foreign investors must ensure that every required approval is independently obtained. The following step-by-step checklist sets out the principal permits, the responsible authority, and key considerations for 2026.
Offshore projects (upstream exploration, development drilling, subsea installations, FPSO operations) require authorisations from the Ministry of Energy and Energy Industries under the Petroleum Act and associated regulations. Key approvals include:
Onshore projects (refinery expansions, petrochemical plants, pipeline construction, gas processing facilities) involve a broader set of land-use, planning and environmental approvals:
Trinidad and Tobago’s renewable energy framework is evolving. Projects involving solar, wind or waste-to-energy generation require:
The EMA’s permitting process is the single most time-sensitive element for new projects. A Certificate of Environmental Clearance application must be submitted before construction begins, and the EIA review process can take several months. Industry observers expect the EMA to maintain or increase scrutiny of energy projects in 2026, given heightened public attention to environmental issues. Project sponsors should engage early with the EMA, budget for public consultation requirements and ensure that their EIA consultants are familiar with the current Terms of Reference templates available from the EMA.
| Permit / Licence | Responsible Authority | Key Considerations for 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Exploration & production licence | Ministry of Energy | Competitive bid rounds; fiscal terms under review |
| Drilling permit | Ministry of Energy | Per-well approval; blowout prevention conditions |
| Certificate of Environmental Clearance | EMA | EIA required; allow 3–6 months for review |
| Marine environmental permit | EMA | Offshore discharge and seabed disturbance |
| Town and country planning permission | Town and Country Planning Division | Onshore projects; change-of-use applications |
| Generation licence | RIC / Ministry of Public Utilities | Renewables and IPPs; capacity thresholds apply |
| Grid interconnection approval | T&TEC | Technical standards; distributed generation rules |
| Customs & tax registration | Board of Inland Revenue / Customs | Required for international EPCs and contractors |
The National Energy Corporation of Trinidad and Tobago (NECTT) is a state-owned enterprise that plays a central role in the country’s downstream energy infrastructure, including the Point Lisas Industrial Estate and associated gas pipeline networks. For private investors, joint-venture partners and contractors who transact with NECTT, the corporation’s financial health and governance practices are material counterparty risk factors.
NECTT’s dividend obligations are governed by its articles of incorporation and, more broadly, by the directives of its sole shareholder, the Government of Trinidad and Tobago acting through the Ministry of Finance. Unlike publicly listed companies subject to stock-exchange disclosure rules, state enterprises operate under a governance framework shaped by Cabinet directives, PSIP allocations and parliamentary oversight.
Parliamentary questions and Order Paper items in the first half of 2026 have raised the issue of whether NECTT should be required to pay dividends to the Consolidated Fund. These questions, recorded in the Hansard of the Parliament of Trinidad and Tobago, reflect political pressure to extract revenue from state enterprises to fund fiscal commitments. While parliamentary questions do not themselves create binding legal obligations, they signal the direction of government policy and can precede formal Cabinet directives or shareholder resolutions compelling dividend distributions.
Investors and contractors with material exposure to NECTT should undertake the following due diligence steps:
Contracts with NECTT and other state enterprises should include robust protections against counterparty credit deterioration:
The 2026 Budget presentation and accompanying PSIP documents published by the Ministry of Finance introduced several fiscal measures relevant to the energy sector. Among the most closely watched is the public discussion of a possible electricity surcharge, a mechanism that, if implemented, could fundamentally alter cost-recovery structures in PPAs and subsidy frameworks across the power generation chain.
An electricity surcharge imposed at the distribution level would increase the effective cost of electricity to end-users and, depending on its design, could be passed through the tariff chain to affect:
Energy lawyers Trinidad and Tobago practitioners are already advising clients to include express surcharge-allocation language in new PPAs and to review existing agreements for change-in-law protections. The likely practical effect of any surcharge will depend on whether it is imposed by statute, regulation or ministerial order, and whether it includes transitional provisions for existing contracts. Early indications suggest that the government is still in the consultation phase, but prudent counterparties should not wait for final legislation before amending their risk-allocation provisions.
Trinidad and Tobago’s energy compliance framework involves multiple regulators with overlapping jurisdictions. Understanding which body enforces which obligation, and the penalties for non-compliance, is essential for contractor compliance and investor risk management in 2026.
The principal regulators are:
| Entity Type | Main Reporting / Compliance Obligations (2026) | Who to Contact / Primary Source |
|---|---|---|
| International EPC / Contractor | Evidence of HSE management systems (ISO 45001/14001); permits for onshore/offshore work; environmental impact statements; tax and customs registration | Ministry of Energy, EMA, Board of Inland Revenue, Customs |
| State-Owned Entity / NECTT | Annual reports; dividend policy compliance (per corporate articles/Cabinet directives); PSIP/Budget submissions; procurement and contract disclosure | NECTT corporate office, Ministry of Finance, Parliament Order Papers |
| Independent Power Producer / Project SPV | Generation and interconnection licences; environmental permits; land lease/title; PPA registration and approvals | EMA, T&TEC grid office, Ministry of Energy, RIC |
Penalties for non-compliance vary by regulator but can include monetary fines, stop-work orders, licence revocation, and criminal prosecution for serious HSE breaches. The EMA, in particular, has the power to issue enforcement notices requiring immediate cessation of activities pending environmental remediation. Contractors and project sponsors should maintain a compliance calendar with all reporting deadlines and renewal dates, assigning responsibility to a named compliance officer or external counsel.
The following ten-point action plan consolidates the key steps that general counsel, EPC contractors and investors should take immediately in response to the 2026 regulatory changes in Trinidad and Tobago’s energy sector:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jon Paul Mouttet at Fitzwilliam Stone Furness-Smith & Morgan, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
The following model clauses are provided as sample wording, legal review by qualified Trinidad and Tobago energy lawyers is required before incorporation into any binding agreement.
“With effect from [date], all references to ‘STOW certification’ or ‘Safe To Work certificate’ in this Agreement are deleted and replaced with: ‘The Contractor shall maintain an HSE management system certified to ISO 45001:2018 (occupational health and safety) and ISO 14001:2015 (environmental management), or such other standard as the Operator may approve in writing, and shall provide evidence of current certification upon request.’”
“Where the Contractor has incurred costs in respect of STOW certification or audit fees that are no longer required as a result of the termination of the STOW regime, the Operator shall, within [30] days of receipt of supporting documentation, reimburse the Contractor for such costs to the extent they were incurred in compliance with the Operator’s prior HSE requirements and have not been recovered from any third party.”
“In the event that any governmental authority imposes, enacts or increases any surcharge, levy or tax on the generation, transmission, distribution or consumption of electricity (‘Surcharge Event’), the economic effect of such Surcharge Event shall be allocated between the Parties in accordance with the change-in-law provisions set out in Clause [X]. The Party bearing the Surcharge Event shall be entitled to request a tariff adjustment within [60] days of the effective date of the Surcharge Event.”
“If at any time (a) the Government of Trinidad and Tobago directs or causes the [State Entity] to make a dividend payment, asset transfer or capital reduction that results in the [State Entity]’s net current assets falling below [TT$ amount], or (b) a material adverse change occurs in the financial condition of the [State Entity] such that, in the reasonable opinion of the Contractor, the [State Entity]’s ability to perform its payment obligations under this Agreement is materially impaired, the Contractor may by written notice require the [State Entity] to provide additional security in a form satisfactory to the Contractor within [30] days, failing which the Contractor shall be entitled to suspend performance.”
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