Stabroek News

The South American Guyana-Suriname Basin could be the last big oil boom

- By Matthew Smith for Oilprice.com

The oil reserves of the two countries has captured the internatio­nal oil industry’s attention. This is not only because of the sheer volume of discoverie­s, but also due to the extremely low breakeven prices, estimated to be US$35 per barrel and falling, associated with offshore drilling there.

The tiny South American countries of Guyana and Suriname are the focus of Latin America’s latest oil boom. A slew of oil discoverie­s by ExxonMobil since 2015 in its offshore-Guyana Stabroek block which now sees the global energy super major estimating that the block contains over eight billion barrels of recoverabl­e oil resources, has captured the internatio­nal oil industry’s attention.

By some estimates, breakeven prices in the Stabroek block have already fallen below US$35 per barrel. The Liza phase two developmen­t, which comes online next year, lifting production capacity of the Liza oilfield to 340,000 barrels daily, is expected to pump crude oil at a breakeven price of an extremely low US$25 a barrel. The quality of the discovered crude oil is also another factor explaining the considerab­le interest in the Guyana-Suriname Basin.

Exxon is pumping relatively low sulfur content light API gravity crude oil at its Liza-1 oilfield in the Stabroek Block and after receiving approval from Guyana’s government for its Payara project, expects to be pumping 750,000 barrels daily by 2026. The energy super major is planning to install up to 10 FPSOs (floating production storage and offloading units) in the block with five operationa­l by the end of 2026. In a global operating environmen­t where cost cutting is a key focus for oil companies in the wake of the March 2020 oil price crash, demand for lighter sweeter crude oil grades is climbing and the popularity of offshore Guyana is soaring.

Even Exxon’s latest disappoint­ing drilling results in Guyana have done little to curb that growing interest. During November 2020, Exxon announced that while it had discovered the presence of hydrocarbo­ns at the Tanager-1 well in the Kaieteur block, which neighbors the Stabroek block, the find was not economic to operate on a stand-alone basis.

That was followed by the integrated oil super major failing to find oil at the Hassa-1 exploratio­n well drilled in the prolific Stabroek block earlier this month. Earlier this month Exxon announced the spudding of the Bulletwood-1 well in the offshore Guyana Canje block, which is adjacent to the Stabroek block.

The integrated oil company which owns a 35% interest in the block is also the operator and the remainder is owned by Total also with a 35% stake, JHI Associates at 17.5%, and Mid-Atlantic Oil & Gas owning the remaining 12.5%.

This is the first well being drilled on the Canje block and it is targeting Lizastyle late Cretaceous and Campanian age geological formations estimated to contain prospectiv­e oil resources of around 500 million barrels. The hope is that despite the recent setbacks for Exxon in offshore Guyana, the company can repeat the runaway success it experience­d with the Stabroek block.

It is not only Guyana’s portion of the Guyana-Suriname Basin where major oil discoverie­s are being made. At the end of 2020, Exxon and partner, Malaysian national oil company Petronas, announced oil had been discovered at the muchhyped Sloanea-1 exploratio­n well in

Block 52 offshore Suriname. Apache and partner French oil super major Total, which is now the operator, have had to date, outstandin­g success at Block 58 offshore Suriname.

Guyana and Suriname have a competitiv­e advantage over many other oil-producing jurisdicti­ons, especially in a world where a crude oil supply glut is weighing heavily on prices and demand is expected to peak in less than a decade.

Since January 2020 they have made four discoverie­s, the latest being in January 2021, of what Apache described as light to medium API gravity oil which amount to world class hydrocarbo­n resources.

According to investment bank Morgan Stanley, the 1.4-million-acre Block 58 holds potential oil resources of up to 6.5 billion barrels of oil equivalent. That number accords with Exxon’s experience with the Stabroek block and is supported by the spate of discoverie­s made by Apache and Total. While Apache and Total both hold a 50% interest in the block, Suriname’s national oil company Staatsolie has the contractua­l right to farm-in and gain a 20% stake at an estimated cost of US$1 to US$1.5 billion. As far back as August 2020, Staatsolie was reputedly considerin­g exercising that right.

Oil industry consultanc­y Rystad Energy, last year projected that Block 58 and new projects in Suriname’s waters potentiall­y have a breakeven price of US$45 per barrel. That number, like in offshore Guyana, will fall as expertise, technology and infrastruc­ture improves. It is speculated that the breakeven price for offshore oilfields in the Guyana-Suriname Basin could eventually be as low as US$23 per barrel, making operations highly profitable even at US$55 per barrel

Brent. That compares to US$46 to US$52 per barrel for the major U.S shale oil basins and a 2021 fiscal breakeven price of just under US$68 a barrel for Saudi Arabia. Those numbers alone make Suriname a compelling location for global oil majors to invest.

The attractive­ness is further amplified by Suriname’s government offering of favorable production sharing contracts with 30-year terms, considerab­ly longer than many other jurisdicti­ons. Paramaribo has establishe­d a royalty rate of 6.25% which, while higher than neighborin­g Guyana’s 2%, is still lower than most other jurisdicti­ons where the global average is 10% to 15%. For those reasons, Guyana and Suriname have a competitiv­e advantage over many other oil-producing jurisdicti­ons, especially in a world where a crude oil supply glut is weighing heavily on prices and demand is expected to peak in less than a decade. The GuyanaSuri­name Basin and its considerab­le petroleum potential will become the hottest offshore drilling location globally, attracting considerab­le investment from foreign oil companies.

The favorable conditions in the Guyana-Suriname Basin, coupled with a long running global crude oil supply glut and diminishin­g demand means this may be the last major oil boom ever witnessed.

Reprinted from the Rio Times February 1, 2021

The Guyana-Suriname Basin (Photo internet reproducti­on)

Guyana and Suriname have a competitiv­e advantage over many other oil-producing jurisdicti­ons, especially in a world where a crude oil supply glut is weighing heavily on prices and demand is expected to peak in less than a decade. (Photo internet reproducti­on)

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