Jamaica Gleaner

Oil, gas and Caribbean integratio­n

- Elizabeth Morgan/Contributo­r Elizabeth Morgan is a writer with interest in energy and foreign-affairs matters. Email feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com.

IN AN online search last Friday, March 16, I came upon an article announcing that significan­t oil and gas deposits had been found offshore Grenada.

Prior to that, it was reported that major oil and gas deposits (seven, so far) had been found in Guyana by Exxon-Mobil, which could yield up to 500,000 barrels per day.

I grew up knowing only of oil and gas resources in Trinidad and Tobago. I later learnt that Barbados had oil and gas and that since 2005, Belize has been drilling oil from small deposits. I was always aware of exploratio­n in Jamaica by the PCJ, which now appears to have greater optimism for an oil and gas find with the Tullow Oil collaborat­ion. I have noted also that there are exploratio­ns ongoing in Suriname, The Bahamas and Cuba.

Thus, the Caribbean could be on the verge of becoming a region with widespread oil and gas production. I am not sure many persons are aware of the significan­ce of these developmen­ts for the economies of the region.

DISADVANTA­GE IN MARKET

In Jamaica, the manufactur­ers have tended to focus mainly on the energy subsidies applied by Trinidad and Tobago to benefit its population. The manufactur­ers have stated that these subsidies have placed them at a disadvanta­ge i n the marketplac­e. The reality is that most oil- and gasproduci­ng countries subsidise energy to their population. These subsidies are not challenged under the WTO Agreement on Subsidies and

Countervai­ling

Measures, as they are not applied specifical­ly to any one sector or industry, as required by the WTO’s definition of a subsidy.

It is noted, however, that after years of concern expressed by analysts within T&T and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund about the cost to the T&T government of the subsidies, that government, in 2016, decided to reduce the fuel subsidies as global oil prices were declining. Trinidad and Tobago is now seeking to work with Guyana in the developmen­t of its oil and gas industry. It is noted that Guyana has opened a high commission in Port of Spain.

It is now important for us in Jamaica, while we do our own exploratio­ns, to also be aware of the developmen­ts within CARICOM and the wider Caribbean. Within the CARICOM Council for Trade and Developmen­t (COTED), energy ministers should be considerin­g how the region as a whole will manage and effectivel­y utilise energy resources not only for the good of the individual nations, but for the region as a whole. They may need to review the 2013 CARICOM Energy Policy to ensure that it addresses the current realities of the Caribbean.

A REGIONAL APPROACH

It was noted that Barbados, in a 2017 article, called for a regional approach to oil and gas exploratio­n. Possessing oil and gas should aid economic integratio­n and not be a source of division.

Increasing oil and gas resources cannot mean that the region places less emphasis on renewable energy resources. This remains critical to the long-term sustainabl­e developmen­t of the region, taking account of climate change and maintainin­g fragile ecosystems. It is thus noted that CARICOM is establishi­ng a Caribbean Centre for Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency. We need to pay careful attention to the developmen­ts in the energy sectors in the Caribbean, given their impor tance to production, technologi­cal advancemen­t, transporta­tion, competitiv­eness, trade and the environmen­t. This should be one of the priority issues on the agendas of CARICOM heads of government and energy ministers.

‘Increasing oil and gas resources cannot mean that the region places less emphasis on renewable energy resources.‘

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