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Why All Eyes Should Be on Port Chinourette: Haiti’s Biggest Economic Opportunity in 100 Years
Why All Eyes Should Be on Port Chinourette: Haiti’s Biggest Economic Opportunity in 100 Years
Why All Eyes Should Be on Port Chinourette: Haiti’s Biggest Economic Opportunity in 100 Years

Why All Eyes Should Be on Port Chinourette: Haiti’s Biggest Economic Opportunity in 100 Years

For more than 200 years, Haïti has stood at the intersection of possibility and exclusion. The first black republic in the world was born in revolution, forged by boldness, and blessed with strategic geography. And yet, through a combination of political instability, external interference, and poor infrastructure, Haïti has long remained isolated from the global economic systems that build prosperity.

But today, on the quiet northern coast between Fort-Liberté and Phaeton, a new possibility is rising up from the ground. It’s not another aid project. It’s not a symbolic ribbon-cutting. It is Port Chinourette Terminal, a bold and meticulously planned cargo port that could finally put Haïti back on the map, not as a beneficiary of generosity, but as a competitive player in global trade.

Port Chinourette is more than a logistics terminal. It’s a strategic inflection point. The kind of once-in-a-century infrastructure investment that can create jobs, stimulate industries, decentralize growth, and transform the economy of an entire nation. With capacity to handle up to three-million TEUs annually by 2040, it is the most ambitious port project in Haiti’s recent history. But its true power lies not only in its size, but in what it unlocks.

A Port to Heal the Geographic Divide

Since independence, Haiti’s economic development has followed a narrow and centralized pattern. The capital, Port-au-Prince, has absorbed the lion’s share of national infrastructure, foreign investment, and industrial capacity. Meanwhile, the North, home to revolutionary history, fertile land, and a rich cultural legacy, has remained largely disconnected from national growth.

Port Chinourette seeks to correct that imbalance. Its location in the Nord-Est department is not just convenient, it is intentional. This region, once home to Haiti’s first sugar mills and railway lines, is now positioned to lead a modern resurgence through industrial logistics. The port provides the infrastructure backbone the north has lacked for decades, paving the way for agribusiness, light manufacturing, and export-ready industries to flourish.

A New Caribbean Gateway

Haïti is surrounded by one of the busiest maritime trade corridors in the world. Thousands of ships pass through the Caribbean each year, moving goods between South America, North America, Europe, and West Africa. Yet despite sitting in this strategic location, Haïti captures a minuscule fraction of that traffic, due to underdeveloped port infrastructure and outdated facilities.

Port Chinourette changes the equation. It is designed as a transshipment hub, a place where large vessels can unload cargo, which is then repackaged and shipped to smaller markets across the region. With 670 meters of berthing space, it can host multiple large vessels or a fleet of smaller ones. Its deep-water access, proximity to international shipping lanes, and ample expansion room make it uniquely positioned to become a central Caribbean logistics node.

The primary focus will be container handling, but the port is designed to manage a broad spectrum of cargo activities: bulk storage of goods like steel and cement, agricultural commodities such as rice and sugar, vehicles through Ro-Ro operations, and fuel via liquid bulk tank storage. All of this is structured within a flexible, phased master plan, allowing private operators to invest in and operate individual facilities within a unified authority framework.

An Engine of Employment and Growth

What makes ports transformative goes beyond their concrete and cranes, it’s their ripple effect. Ports create jobs not only for dock workers, engineers, and security guards, but for an entire web of support industries. Every new ship docking brings demands for food, housing, transportation, storage, and distribution. Over time, this turns into a supply chain, then into an economy.

The construction phase of Port Chinourette alone will generate thousands of short-term jobs in land clearing, grading, fuel tank installation, warehouse building, and civil engineering. Once operations begin, the port will support long-term employment in warehousing, customs, equipment maintenance, maritime services, and cargo handling.

But the impact won’t stop at the port’s perimeter. Trucking companies, export-prep centers, logistics firms, agribusinesses, and packaging companies will all find new opportunities. In the surrounding region, small vendors to larger service providers, will find a new customer base and a more predictable flow of income.

The multiplier effect is real. For every direct port job created, studies show that up to five additional jobs can emerge in the surrounding economy. In a country like Haiti, where youth unemployment is high and emigration rates are soaring, this project offers something rarely seen: a reason to stay.

A Bold Business Case with Real Numbers

Beyond the symbolism and vision, Port Chinourette is also a bankable business project. Its financial structure is built for sustainability and return on investment.

on year one, the port is projected to generate $4.8 million in revenue, even as it ramps up operations. By year five, revenues are expected to reach $13.9 million, with operational cash flow of $24.4 million and a net profit exceeding $3.8 million. The return on equity begins to turn positive by year three and continues to strengthen thereafter. This is a rare example of a Haitian infrastructure project that offers both social return and financial viability.

Importantly, the investment model is diversified. Funding includes capital from private operators, equity partners, and structured debt, carefully distributed across core components, warehousing, equipment, fuel storage, and support infrastructure. The financial design emphasizes long-term durability and attractive returns for investors without compromising the project’s local economic mission.

The Cultural and Historical Continuation

There is something poetic about building Haiti’s most forward-looking port in the north.

This is the region that gave the world the Citadel. That saw King Henry Christophe build schools, factories, and an industrial vision in the early 1800s. That hosted sugar refineries, ports, and railroads during Haiti’s earliest economic expansions. In many ways, the north was always meant to lead.

Port Chinourette reconnects with that legacy, grounded in relevance rather than nostalgia. It embodies a move toward production instead of passive consumption. A new pride in shipping goods out, not waiting for them to arrive. It is, at its core, a statement of belief that Haiti’s best chapters are still ahead, and that they can be built with ports, not just politics.

Infrastructure is Economic Freedom

Around the world, ports have served as catalysts for national transformation. In Singapore, a fishing village became a global commerce giant. In Panama, a canal reshaped global shipping and revived national revenue. In Morocco, the Tanger-Med port turned a rural zone into a manufacturing titan.

Haïti has waited far too long to make that leap. With Port Chinourette, the country has a rare opportunity to do so, by leveraging its own strengths: location, labor, and resilience.

This port is not a gift. It is a tool. And tools, in the right hands, change everything.

What if Logistics, Not Politics, Is the Real Revolution?

We’ve long believed that change in Haïti will come from political shifts or international aid. Perhaps we’ve overlooked the quiet power of logistics. The ability to move goods, create efficiency, lower costs, and give entrepreneurs access to the world.

Port Chinourette offers something no foreign donation ever could: the power to compete. To export. To build. To dream economically.

The market is waiting. The project is underway. The time is now.

The Visionaries Behind the Transformation

At the heart of this monumental initiative stands Fatima Group, the bold and visionary private equity firm catalyzing this transformation. With a legacy rooted in Haiti’s soil since 1943, Fatima Group has consistently invested in the country’s most critical sectors, from shipping and media to healthcare and tourism. Now, through Port Chinourette, they are channeling over 80 years of entrepreneurial spirit and infrastructure expertise into a project that could redefine Haiti’s economic destiny.

Their unwavering belief in Haiti’s potential and their ability to turn strategy into action, makes FatimaGroup not just the initiator of this project, but the architect of a new national chapter.

This is more than a port, it’s a legacy in the making. And for investors, whether individual or institutional, Haitian or international, private or public, it represents a once-in-a-generation opportunity to shape the future of Haïti through infrastructure that lasts.

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Toutpuissant Jefferson
Toutpuissant Jefferson
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The literary and philosophical club of Galette-Chambon reveals its second edition: a journey to the heart of books

In an atmosphere of madness, at the Auditorium Saint Jean Marie Vianney de Galette-Chambon, where the laughs broke out, the music resounded, and the talents were dismented, started the second edition of the reading competition, around the theme "Ann Li pou n chanje peyi n ». This initiative, organized by the literary and philosophical club of Galette Chambon (CLPGACH) on Friday 06 October 2024, was marked by an overflowing passion within the public. The spectators came for several reasons: to support the applicants and live their presentations. The works, as "thus spoke of the uncle", "the vocation of the elite" of Jean Price Mars, "the ten black men" of Etzer vilary and "the courage to live in Haïti in the 21st century" of Hérold Toussaint, present innovative arguments linked to the societal context. They intertwine with folklore, Haitian culture, sociology and anthropology. These books are given to the applicants for a period of 15 days. Back, they come with their summaries and, after each presentation, in turn, reveal new perspectives on burning questions and delicate themes from works, while taking into account the concepts learned in public speaking. In this arena where the verve and the verb clash as well as logic, conviction, precision and clarity, it is a question of "saying all in a few words". The judgments are based on three criteria: the methodology concerning the substance and the form of the work; The eloquence which concerns verbal and non -verbal discourse (micro management, good pronunciation, etc.); And finally, an essential criterion: understanding. This is to assess whether the applicant has controlled the work. Questions can be asked without ignoring the context in which he lives. In addition, assistants have the opportunity to vote for the applicant who charmed them the most. This vote is precious at a higher level. Note that this vote can be made not only face -to -face but also online on our Facebook page CLPGACH. In addition, the public has always changed well through this trip to the universe of regional authors. The latter weave the frame and make vital the very repertoire of the competition vital, made up of impactful works such as "the price of irresponsibility" of Montuma Murat, "the return to citizen responsibility" written by Jean Jacquesson Thelucier and "Courage to live in Haïti in the 21st century "Professor Hérold Toussaint, to name a few. Although they died, some writers still live at the heart of our situation through their inheritance. Among them, it is necessary to quote: "the vocation of the elite" of Doctor Jean Price Mars, "the ten black men" of Etzer Villaire and "the Governor of the dew" by Jacques Roumain, as well as so many others . For this literary event to be moving and meets expectations for this second edition, many sacrifices are necessary on the part of the staff as well as the public which never leaves us alone. In this sense, we would like to thank them and call all those wishing to support this event. Indeed, if this competition is a solution found to advance together towards a common goal, its success depends on everyone’s commitment. About two years ago, the security climate in the area was not conducive to the completion of the competition. Although it is not yet ideal today, it is time to triumph over obscurantism and fight the dictatorship of ambient ignorance.

Petit-Goave, Haiti: Decryption of the 3rd rara weekend!

It is more and more obvious that in Petit-Goave the media space is absorbed by the rivalry between Ratyèfè, triple champions and lambi gran lambi dlo, a former champion. The past weekend was once again irrefutable proof of the media tension over these two rival bands. With a carnival-like appearance, the fan club of the first dressed in a white shirt, short orange-yellow skirt, purple tie, black boot; the other dressed in a traditional hat, yellow jersey, red pants, red or yellow tennis shoes. This marriage of colors with the taste of carnival is the expression of cultural diversity as La Fontaine said in his book tales and short stories "diversity is my motto." This formula can adapt well to the rara. If it is true in Léogane this marriage of color has existed for ages. It is no less true that this was the case in Petit-Goave because we had to wait for the strong return of Ratyèfè in 2018 to see the rara fan clubs dress differently each new weekend. Last Saturday more than one expected a new face to face between Lambi gran dlo and Ratyèfè because the latter weighed anchor in the direction of the 2nd plain and the latter, in the direction of the city center. Less than in any other circumstance, this duel at the top was obvious. If for some comments it was a favorable opportunity for Lambi to take his revenge on his rival compared to the previous weekend because he had done the profile although he had the advantage because he was two against one. (Lambi,chenn tamarin vs Ratyèfè). This enormous advantage did not work in their favor because the hours that had passed worked against them, as proof they had gone to sleep while ratyèfè remained to play for at least 30 more rounds. Surprisingly but not surprisingly during the meeting long awaited by less than one, at the Acul not far from the Saint Jean-Baptiste church, lambi had decided not to play anymore. However, according to the customs and costumes of the rara when there are two bands, the one who stops playing first, shows weakness and surrender. Consequently, the other who is opposite out of decency and good morals has no other choice to do the same. It follows that for the umpteenth time the great power formation (lambi grand dlo) was unable to take revenge on its rival. For many cultural journalists who were present to witness this event did not have their tongue in their pocket to give their impression of Ratyèfè’s monster performance. This is the case for Brignol, a cultural commentary which wondered if Ratyèfè had the devil in his body so that the most incredulous were in their feeling of joy. On Sunday evening this monster of animation once again made its mark in the art of its know-how. This is what explains the almost unanimity among the cultural journalists of Petit-Goâve in granting first place to this band for its performance and its musical discipline. So, for this weekend according to the circle of cultural journalists of Petit-Goave and with the approval of many other cultural comments. We have the following classification: 1st Ratyèfè 2nd Grap Kenèp 3rd Orgueil de la jeunesse

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History

History

First black nation to free itself from slavery and gain independence from France in 1804 and influenced other liberation movements around the world, inspiring struggles for freedom and equality.

Natural beauty

Natural beauty

Haïti is blessed with spectacular natural landscapes, including white sand beaches, mountains and rich biodiversity.

Heritage

Heritage

Haïti has a rich historical heritage, including sites like the Citadelle Laferrière and the Sans-Souci Palace, listed as UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

Culture

Culture

Haïti has a rich and diverse culture, influenced by African, European and indigenous elements. Haitian music, dance, art and cuisine are celebrated around the world.

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