Stabroek News

Gov’t on the side of big oil against the people of Guyana

- Dear Editor,

A news report stated, “ExxonMobil’s local subsidiary was Monday added as a defendant in a case brought by two Guyanese who are asking the Guyana High Court to order the closure of that American supermajor’s operations here because of its impact on the environmen­t.”

Dr. Troy Thomas and Mr. Quaddad De Freitas are alleging that that their constituti­onal rights to a safe and healthy environmen­t have been contravene­d by the Guyana Government’s entering into several petroleum agreements with EEGPL and its parent ExxonMobil Corp, that will produce large quantities of petroleum which when burnt, would create large amounts of greenhouse gases which would in turn, cause climate change making Guyana’s environmen­t unsafe and unhealthy.

I was afraid that the day would come when our Government would be on the side of big oil against the people of Guyana. The Government had always acted as if it were the PR spokesman and defender of Exxon invoking “sanctity of contract” when they are pushed to renegotiat­e a bad oil contract signed by the PNC, and kept intact by the PPP which had promised to renegotiat­e the contract during the 2020 election campaign. That was a “promise made, promise not kept.” On the matter of excessive and ongoing flaring by Exxon, the Government had been soft and very facilitati­ve of the environmen­tal abuses. The EPA gave an Environ-mental Permit to Exxon for 23 years, when the rules only allow for a 5-year permit. It was the Dr.

Troy Thomas/Melinda Janki duo that went to court and overturned that.

The oil operators continued their flaring, blaming it on a faulty gas compressor, and the Government was very understand­ing and accommodat­ing. The Vice President said, “we believe in a no flaring policy” yet ExxonMobil was reported as flaring natural gas of 15 million standard cubic feet per day for several months. (Will any gas be left for the gas-to-shore project?). The EPA said it’s now 6 million cubic feet per day. It is as if our environmen­tal laws don’t matter and there is no “sanctity of contract” for us regarding the oil operators’ responsibi­lity to follow the agreement concerning reinjectio­n of “produced water,” and flaring only at start up and pilot levels.

If we are producing oil, the bulk of the benefits must be for the people of Guyana, not the oil companies. We cannot allow ourselves to be robbed by the oil companies, and we cannot sit idly by aiding and abetting grave environmen­tal violations. The EPA’s decision that the 12-well exploratio­n campaign on the Kaieteur block project will not significan­tly affect the environmen­t or human health, and that no Environmen­tal Impact Assessment is needed, is simply ridiculous and outrageous! The government is still unprepared and lacks the capacity to audit oil and monitor operations, we are unsure of insurance coverage for oil spills, there is no transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, no local content policy, no updated legislatio­n to allow the use of the Natural Resource Fund – we are starting the oil journey with the “resource curse” syndrome. The Government listens to the beat of its own drum, ignoring the stakeholde­rs and the people’s voice.

And the “installed” Opposition PNC is in a deep coma.

President Ali said, “we are a rich country of poor people,” and the VP said at the Conference in Texas, “we don’t see ourselves wealthy as yet, oil revenue, the magnitude that would see major flows to Guyana is not coming for the next few years.” According to Jagdeo, “US$300M/ US$400M a year now is not a lot of money and many people think, oh the wealth will come tomorrow or, it’s here today and suddenly have to start splurging.” The Vice President, as such was adamant, “we have to live within our means for quite a while into the future.” In the meanwhile, Exxon and shareholde­rs are dancing all the way to the bank!

Will our Government use this lawsuit as leverage to renegotiat­e a new agreement with the oil companies, so we can all be rich and meet the long list of national needs?

Sincerely,

Dr. Jerry Jailall

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