Stabroek News Sunday

Revisiting the oil situation

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Flurry of activities

There continues to be a flurry of activity and plenty conversati­on about oil and gas in Guyana. This heightened activity in a yet to be fully formed oil and gas industry keeps attracting more than curious onlookers. Consisting of about 53 per cent of global energy sources, oil and gas production in Guyana will only add to the importance of this source of energy for the global community. In a press release issued in July this year, ExxonMobil indicated that it had made an investment decision to begin the first phase of developmen­t of the Liza field offshore Guyana. As the company has been saying all along, it intends to begin production in less than four years. Unless additional informatio­n is gotten, the gross recoverabl­e resources are estimated at between 2.35 billion to 2.75 billion oil equivalent barrels. This informatio­n includes the discoverie­s at Liza, Payara and Snoek. Averaging the two points of the range, one can say that, for now, Guyana has a reserve of 2.55 billion barrels of oil. One does not know what the later discoverie­s of Liza Deep and Turbot will add to the reserves when fully evaluated. Yet, these discoverie­s while important to Guyana are no more than a drop in the bucket of Exxon’s proven reserves and moreso when compared to other countries with significan­tly larger resources. This article seeks to situate Guyana in the global oil context. (Territoria­l Sea and Contiguous Zone)

Exclusive Economic Zone

Before doing so, it seems useful to reflect on the set of circumstan­ces that enables Guyana to benefit from the discoverie­s that ExxonMobil has made off the shores of the country. There are many things that are taken for granted and the control of an Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) is one of them. Extending to as much as 200 miles offshore, the EEZ is one of those things that was out of sight. Its furthest points are not visible from shore and do not readily gain the attention of the general public. The EEZ did not always exist. It came alive in 1982 at the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. The Convention gave coastal states sovereign rights over the natural resources in the zone. The coastal state therefore has sovereign rights to explore and exploit the natural resources of the EEZ. It also has the responsibi­lity to conserve and manage the living resources in the zone. Territoria­l control goes beyond enjoyment of the resources in the zone. It includes the exclusive right to construct and to authorize and regulate the constructi­on and installati­on of structures.

It is this sovereignt­y over the area that gives Guyana the right to let ExxonMobil and others explore for oil and to develop the oilfields. Exxon exercised those rights on the basis of an agreement that it had reached with the Government of Guyana. The government was in turn able to extend the right as a consequenc­e of the existence of the EEZ over which it enjoys sovereignt­y. The discoverie­s by Exxon and its partners have meaning not only for Exxon as a company, but also for the oil and gas industry as a whole.

Oil reserves

One area of interest is that of oil reserves. Current estimates put the world oil reserves at 1.64 trillion barrels. A review of the table below reveals some interestin­g characteri­stics. Source: Gulf Business TABLE 1 reserves in every other country, based on current informatio­n, will not last as long as a century, except for Canada and Iran whose reserves barely go past 100 years. The comfort offered by the reserves in the Venezuelan oilfields is something that must occupy the minds of oil company executives. Access to those reserves could only be seen as a must. One could therefore expect further pressure on the South American country until its internal strife has ended and its economic philosophy becomes much more orthodox.

TABLE 2

The other thing is that seven of the eight countries are either involved in some conflict or were involved in a conflict. Saudi Arabi is in conflict with Yemen and tensions remain high between Saudi Arabia and Iran which it has accused of aiding Yemen in a recent rocket attack. Iran and Iraq have gone at each other before while Iraq attempted to annex Kuwait before.

Offshore According to some sources, an estimated 20 per cent of the oil reserves could be found in fields that were offshore. That means with existing data, offshore sites account for about 328 billion barrels of oil. If one were to place the declared reserves of Guyana in the global context, it would amount to less than one per cent. When considered from an offshore perspectiv­e, the announced reserves would be closer to one per cent. Unless something happens, either way Guyana will be a minuscule contributo­r to oil reserves. Even when the proven reserves of ExxonMobil alone are taken into account, Guyana accounts for no more than three per cent of the total 91 billion in reserves.

Resource-dependent With there being so many producers, in economic parlance, Guyana will be a pricetaker. It is a situation that is not unfamiliar to the country. Guyana relies currently on eight products to earn substantia­l amounts of foreign exchange. Six of these eight products are either agricultur­al or primary commoditie­s which are described as consumable or transferra­ble assets. This means that there is little else to do with these assets other than to use or consume them. By 2020, it will add oil to the export basket. Therefore, not only will Guyana continue as a price-taker, it will also continue as a resource-dependent country.

LUCAS STOCK INDEX

The Lucas Stock Index (LSI) rose 1.92 percent during the second period of trading in November 2017. The stocks of five companies were traded with 820,991 shares changing hands. There were four Climbers and no Tumblers. The stocks of the Demerara Distillers Limited (DDL) increased 6.54 percent on the sale of 4,000 shares. The stocks of Sterling products Limited (SPL) also increased 5.59 percent on the sale of 400 shares. The stocks of Banks DIH (DIH) and the Demerara Tobacco Company both increased by 2.86 percent on the sale of 815,993 and 33 shares respective­ly. In the meanwhile, the stocks of the Guyana Bank for Trade and Industry Limited (BTI) remained unchanged on the sale of 565 shares.

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