Stabroek News

Global Witness put out ‘Lala-land’ estimates

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The full Global Witness report has now been published. Does anybody still take seriously the estimate of US$168 billion to Guyana from oil production? Or the extra US$55 billion that Exxon is supposed to give up because Global Witness say Exxon can afford it - ignoring the real world where Exxon answers to its shareholde­rs not Global Witness?

If so, please read page 11 where Global Witness say that their estimate of the extra US$55 billion will be “incorrect” if the internatio­nal community meets the Paris Agreement targets for reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. Global Witness concedes that, “It is critical that the Paris Agreement targets are met.” So, why don’t they estimate on the basis of the Paris Agreement? Here is Global Witness’s excuse:

“……. Global Witness and OpenOil believe that revenue calculatio­ns under a scenario where Paris targets are met should be used for illustrati­ve purposes only. This is because, were the price of oil to drop dramatical­ly, the Rystad estimates upon which the OpenOil analysis is based will be wrong.” In other words if Global

Witness includes the ‘critical’ Paris Agreement then the estimates by Global Witness, Open Oil and Rystad are wrong.

When OpenOil and Global Witness take into account the ‘critical’ Paris Agreement they drop their estimate of Guyana’s revenue down to $40 billion over 20 years. Even that estimated US$40 billion is speculativ­e given the way that global energy and financial markets are moving. So, why did Global Witness put out ‘Lala-land’ estimates of US$168 billion revenue and an extra US$55 billion?

I like Shuman. Unlike the miscreants in the PPP and APNU, this guy comes across as balanced. More importantl­y, the indigenous peoples of Guyana need Shuman. Very badly. They are the most marginaliz­ed ethnic group in this country. At this pivotal juncture where oil wealth is about to meet corrupt winner-takes-all racial leadership from the two major ethnic groups and the real disaster of a surging foreign immigrant deluge swarming into Guyana unfolding with urgency, the

Global Witness’s revised estimate of US$40 billion depends on Global Witness’s stated assumption­s that the government will monitor Exxon’s production and costs to see that Guyana gets its share, the government will get a fair market price for Guyana’s oil, Guyana will ‘develop the capacity to fight corruption’, and Exxon will take sufficient environmen­tal precaution­s to avoid a BP type well blowout which Global Witness put at a cost of US$65 billion. Indeed, but we do not live in an ideal world.

Why didn’t Global Witness listen to the many people who have said there are serious legal grounds for questionin­g this oil deal? Why didn’t they call for respect for the rule of law instead of for renegotiat­ing a deal of questionab­le legality? Only the judges, acting on the basis of the evidence and arguments presented in court, can determine the legality or illegality of part of any deal and their decisions must be respected by everybody.

Yours faithfully,

Melinda Janki

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