Stabroek News

Country got ‘decent deal’ from Exxon – Gaskin

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Minister of Business Dominic Gaskin yesterday fired away at critics of the Production Sharing Agreement signed with ExxonMobil and its partners urging them to stop the rhetoric and use facts in their arguments which would show the country got a “decent deal”.

“As far as the contract is concerned, the fact that a handful of people have been repeating on a daily basis that this contract is bad for Guyana and that we’re getting chicken feed does not make these statements true,” he told an oil and gas conference hosted by the Private Sector Commission at Duke Lodge in Kingston.

“The Government of Guyana will receive in the first year of oil production 2% of the gross value and 50% of profit oil. Based on the production of 100,000 barrels per day and at today’s oil price of about US$60 per barrel, this amounts to in excess of US$300M in government revenues in the first year. That’s not chicken feed,” he added.

He compared the revenues that the oil and gas sector would bring in to Guyana’s gold sector saying that the country’s current export earner will pale compared to the returns from oil and gas.

“Let’s compare this with what is earned from the gold industry. And I’m not knocking gold, I like gold, but gold is Guyana’s biggest export earner by far and Guyana has been exporting gold for about 150 years. The last eight years have been the best years ever for gold production in Guyana both in terms of the amount of gold produced and the value of gold produced and exported and also the value of royalties and taxes collected by government. Yet the government has collected just over US$300M in royalties and taxes from all the gold produced in Guyana over the last eight years. In the first year of oil production the Government of Guyana will earn about the same that it has earned from the last eight years of gold production. That can’t be chicken feed,” he posited.

“The gold produced over the last eight years from which the government would have earned this US$300M would have been sold for approximat­ely US$5B. For a similar value of oil under this so-called chicken feed oil contract the government would have earned around US$700M. Yet I’ve not heard anyone complain about Government’s share of gold revenues, and our gold is a valuable, non-renewable natural resource just like our oil. By 2022 when the second phase of developmen­t starts to produce oil, Government revenues will increase to approximat­ely US$800M per year. So for anyone to assert that our government is selling out and giving away our oil is just plain nonsense,” he added.

Gaskin said that while he welcomes constructi­ve criticisms, comparison­s made to other countries just cannot hold since some countries have not only different fiscal regimes but that logistical and other factors were vastly different.

‘Decent deal’

The Minister of Business said that he could not blame the People’s Progressiv­e Party/Civic (PPP/C) government for the contract it signed back in 1999 because he understand­s that being a frontier country like Guyana an attractive package would have had to be offered to get investors.

“Could we have gotten more? You can always get more. You can also get less. But the fact remains that you can’t just start off with no industry and no proven reserves and want to play hard ball with investors who have years of experience in the field and who can easily take their business elsewhere without any major consequenc­es. I am spending some time on this, not because I’m trying to tell you that this is the best contract in the world. Of course there’s room for improvemen­t. But you need to know that there is nothing ridiculous or lop-sided about this contract,” he said.

“Because if you buy into the propaganda and become distracted by the negativity, you are not likely to prepare yourself for the transforma­tion that oil production can bring to our country. I believe this is a decent deal and I say this not just as a government Minister but as a proud Guyanese citizen. I will not stand here and try to sell you something that I myself don’t buy. And my views transcend politics. This is why I don’t blame the previous government for the terms and conditions of the contract they negotiated, in the context of an offshore basin that had not yet been derisked, it may not have been prudent to demand more. Who knows where we might have been today had that agreement not been signed,” he added.

He stressed that the public needs to understand that the company had a contract since 1999 and it was mutually agreed to by the present government and the company to have it modified in 2016.

“There was no formal negotiatio­n process. The company had a valid agreement with the Government of Guyana which was not up for renegotiat­ion. So

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