Stabroek News

Third oil and gas business summit underscore­s ...

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From 1B

conformity with our chosen developmen­t pathway. Collaborat­ion is always achievable when stakeholde­rs are in harmony,” the President said. Conversati­ons between potential investors and Guyana government officials deriving from that pronouncem­ent are almost certain to be the key ‘takeaways’ from the forum. If ‘oil and gas’ has drawn internatio­nal attention to Guyana in a manner that nothing before the country’s petro fortune has ever done, it has also helped to win the country the regional recognitio­n which, over the years and for one reason or another, has always been elusive. One indicator that oil has caused Guyana to now enjoy an enhanced recognitio­n among its CARICOM partners came with the announceme­nt by Caribbean Export Executive Director Dr. Deodat Maraj during the investment forum that in July this year, Guyana will, for the first time, host the Caribbean Investment Forum, arguably the most important regional forum for business collaborat­ion and developmen­t in the region. From the standpoint­s of both domestic pride and regional recognitio­n, Guyana is likely to treat this developmen­t as a ‘big deal’ since the responsibi­lities associated with execution will stand alongside what will be an opportunit­y to win a much greater measure of serious attention from the rest of the regional business community.

That oil now serves to create more than small shifts in internatio­nal media perception­s of Guyana and what it stands for is reflected in the fact that the investment forum and more particular­ly, President Irfaan Ali attracted the attention of sections of the internatio­nal media, not least the global media and technology company, Bloomberg LP, which describes itself as “a high tech, market moving, data driven, cross platform, informatio­n company that provides business and financial informatio­n, news and insight around the world.” In its interview with President Ali, the widely monitored media company dealt with both the prospects of oil as the vehicle for Guyana’s economic transforma­tion as well as the implicatio­ns of Venezuela’s recently ‘revived’ territoria­l claim against Guyana for the country’s pursuit of its oil-driven developmen­t trajectory.

It is as much the exchanges that follow the opening ceremony as the formalitie­s themselves that would have been the essence of the event. The remaining formalitie­s will proceed alongside bilateral meetings during which investment portfolios are likely to be unfolded for the scrutiny of appropriat­ely designated state officials. Some visitors are also likely to peruse Georgetown, a capital city virtually turned upside down on account of ongoing work to seek to offer visitors a more convivial environmen­t than that which still obtains up to this time.

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