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Guyana among countries that will attract biggest growth in oil & gas investment this year - Rystad Energy

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The independen­t Norway-based energy research and business intelligen­ce company, Rystad Energy, has tagged Guyana as being among two other named countries and a region that will attract most of the growth in investment in the global oil & gas industry in 2022. The report also names Brazil, Australia and West Africa, as the other locations where much of the remaining investment in the sector for this year is expected to be focussed.

Rystad projects that this year, investment in oil & gas research will grow by 20% to around US$344.4 billion, up by 20% from last year. The disclosure also sets aside the earlier 8% projected increase in funding in the sector. The company also informs that the level of this year’ projected investment in the global oil & gas sector is the highest forecasted growth since 2008.

Apart from attributin­g the “higher activity” in the sector mainly to “high commodity prices,” describing the phenomenon as “the main driver” of the current “recordhigh investment growth,” a report in the British on-line newspaper, The Independen­t, pays specific attention to Guyana which it says “has experience­d rapid growth in its oil and gas activity in recent years,” alluding to ExxonMobil’s disclosure of “three new discoverie­s for a total of eighteen (18) new discoverie­s since 2015.”

The report in The Independen­t also points to what it says is an ExxonMobil projection that “Guyana’s total production capacity is set to reach 340,000 barrels of oil per day by the end of this year, with further production set to come online within the next few years.”

Since the staging of the Glasgow Climate Summit in October-November last year, the oil & gas industry has come under increasing scrutiny for what the powerful global climate change lobby says is its continuing significan­t contributi­on to worsening anomalies in climate behaviour. The conundrum has become even more complex in recent months with countries in the west seeking to fill their anticipate­d energy shortage on account of moves to reduce their dependence on Russian oil and gas in response to Moscow’s hostilitie­s in Ukraine.

Guyana, regarded as the precocious ‘new kid’ in the global oil & gas ‘block, reportedly anticipate­s “US$957,874,800 revenues in 2022, US$1,165,443,900

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