• Gender equality tribunal appointed  | Monday, February 20, 2012
  • Louisiana lawyers seek Grand Court liquidation  | Monday, February 20, 2012
  • Canadian university to be first telescope customer  | Monday, February 20, 2012
  • UDP government faces another petition  | Monday, February 20, 2012
  • Immigration revenues up despite economic downturn  | Saturday, February 11, 2012
  • Port Authority loses round one  | Saturday, February 11, 2012
  • Chief Justice appointed to international Judicial Committee  | Thursday, February 2, 2012
  • Bodden Town MLAs hit back  | Thursday, February 2, 2012
  • Groundbreaking nears for Cayman Enterprise City  | Friday, January 27, 2012
  • Concerned Citizens clarify petition numbers  | Thursday, January 26, 2012
  • I told you so, says Dr Tomlinson  | Thursday, January 26, 2012
  • More costs for the financial sector  | Friday, January 20, 2012
  • 73 graduate from International College  | Monday, January 16, 2012
  • Real estate outperforms wholesale and retail trade  | Monday, January 16, 2012
  • Assange alleges money laundering in Cayman   | Wednesday, December 21, 2011
  • Financial sector salvages Cayman economy  | Thursday, December 15, 2011
  • CIMA reviewing directors regulations  | Monday, December 12, 2011
  • Policy Coordination Unit Director appointed  | Sunday, December 4, 2011
  • 2011 Atlantic hurricane season ends  | Sunday, December 4, 2011
  • Activist files suit against cyber bullying  | Sunday, December 4, 2011
  • Young investors club relaunches  | Sunday, October 23, 2011
  • Sagicor Life adopts George Town Primary School  | Sunday, October 23, 2011
  • Schools celebrate World Heart Day  | Sunday, October 23, 2011
  • Insurance company supports school lunch project   | Sunday, October 23, 2011
  • Digicel launches 4G mobile network  | Sunday, October 23, 2011
  • Deputy DPP Appointed  | Sunday, October 23, 2011
  • New business talk show to launch next month  | Sunday, October 23, 2011
Groundbreaking nears for Cayman Enterprise City
1327591781Jason Blick CEO of CEC20.jpg
Jason Blick, CEO of Cayman Enterprise City addresses the audience at the Chamber of Commerce meeting room.

 Cayman Enterprise City (CEC) will be having its groundbreaking ceremony in the Savannah of Grand Cayman in March this year, according to Hillary McKenzie-Cahill, Vice President of Marketing & Business Development.

Speaking at the Cayman Islands Chamber of Commerce BE INFORMED ser

es on Wednesday, 25 January, the VP further noted that CEC was ready to start its operations with eight tenants who would be moving into the HSBC building and the Grand Pavilion Commercial Centre this February.

Ms McKenzie-Cahill further stated that the CEC would be moving to a 45-acre plot developing up to  one million square feet of office space and that pahse one; the gateway building would be completed within 24 months from June.

The CEC noted that their operations would start immediately at the proposed site and have a direct impact to the economy.

“The 800 jobs that will be created by the zone will immediately go to construction and Cindy O’Hara our Director of Design and Development has already promised that local labour will be used,” she said.

Ms McKenzie-Cahill also noted that the Special Economic Zone (SEZ) that CEC had created was a genuinely Caymanian-owned company.

With an estimated initial investment of US$327 million in the Cayman Islands over the next eight years, Cayman Enterprise City, recently signed an agreement with Dubai-based Multi Commodities Centre (DMCC).

The VP noted that the recent signing with the DMCC was a huge benefit, which will help CEC in its commodities exchange, with its experience of trading a billion dollars per day.

CEC is expected to create approximately 5,000 jobs within the zone and another 4,800 outside the zone in Cayman’s domestic economy. Ms McKenzie-Cahill defended this oft -used number by saying that it was calculated through correlation to other zones internationally.

However, the CEC has been greeted with skepticism by some members of public who fear that the project will require government infrastructural input, with the public being required to pay more taxes as a result. However it is understood that there will be no external infrastructural changes needed for this project.

Ms McKenzie-Cahill noted that SEZs are World Bank and OECD approved models. “This gives them an extra layer of protection. We are now allowing them to have a physical presence in the Cayman Islands and we have stripped a lot of barriers that prohibited them from doing so in the past and they can now invest in the Cayman Islands,” she said.

This is through various laws that have been enacted by the government to allow the SEZ to operate. The government also introduced a Zone Authority, which will regulate day-to-day operations of the zone.

“Our diverse markets include new sectors that do not now exist in Cayman, such as information technology, media, biotechnology, commodities and derivatives, outsourcing and academia,” she said.

 “We are matching all the jobs in the zone to qualified Caymanians. Since they have always prepared for local banks, they have to compete internationally if they are to work for Google,” she said.

She noted that the concessions given by government were to make the SEZs more appealing. 

“To start operating in the zone, one needs to set up an exempt zone company, we do the same know your customer information and allow them to operate in 10 days, Ms McKenzie-Cahill noted.

“We are exempt from work permits in the zone. Within the Zone foreign workers need instead a Zone Employment Certificate which is flat rate fee and one that is covered by the developer in its package,” she stated.

The VP also noted that the operators in the CEC will have a zone trade certificate in lieu of a tade and business license.

She noted that the SEZ offered a 20-year exemption from duty on input goods and this was very attractive to companies.

Ms McKenzie-Cahill stated that the Cayman Islands has a zero per cent market share in SEZs and this project alone would have a massive positive impact on Cayman’s economy.

She noted that the CEC was working with venture capitalists around the world to make sure that the next Internet project was in the Cayman Islands.

We are also putting up a $20 million data centre in the Internet Park, said Ms McKenzie-Cahill.

 

 

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