travel > Destinations > caribbean > Bonaire > Doing business & staying in touch while in Bonaire

Doing business & staying in touch while in Bonaire

TIME : 2016/2/16 11:12:52
Bonaire: Doing business & staying in touch

Doing business in Bonaire

General business practices prevail.

Office hours: 

Mon-Fri 0730-1200 and 1330-1630.

Economy: 

During the 1950s, Bonaire began a gradual climb out of chronic economic depression, aided by investment in tourism and the revival of a long-dormant salt industry. The economy gained a further boost in the mid 1970s, when the Bonaire Petroleum Corporation (Bopec) set up an oil transfer depot with a deep-water port, with facilities for transferring oil from ocean-going to coastal tankers. However, plans to build a refinery in Bonaire have been indefinitely shelved.

Other economic activities on Bonaire include rice processing and shipping. There is also some agriculture: Bonaire grows a variety of fruit and vegetables; in particular, it is a major producer and exporter of aloes.

Bonaire has benefited from the offshore financial industry, which has built up among the island group, although most of the companies engaged in the sector are located on Curaçao and St Maarten.

As part of the Kingdom of The Netherlands, Bonaire is an overseas territory in association with the EU; it also holds observer status at the regional CARICOM trading bloc.

GDP: 

US$3.3 billion (Netherlands Antilles; 2005).

Main exports: 

Petroleum products.

Main imports: 

Crude petroleum, food and manufactured goods.

Main trading partners: 

Venezuela, Mexico, USA, Brazil and Gabon.

Keeping in Touch in Bonaire

Mobile phone: 

Roaming agreements exist with some international mobile phone companies. Coverage is average.

Internet: 

There are Internet cafes in Kralendijk and varius Internet Access Centres around the island. WiFi is also available between Flamingo Airport, at the southern-most point of Bonaire, to Playa Lechi.

Post: 

Airmail to and from Europe takes four to six days. Surface mail takes up to six weeks.

Media: 

The country enjoys freedom of the press and speech as guaranteed under Dutch law. The weekly English-language Bonaire Reporter is an independent publication focusing on news as it relates to the island's residents and visitors. It is distributed free on the island and publishes online (www.bonairereporter.com). There is a government-run TV station broadcast from Curaçao.

You Might Also Like

Most Popular