Business Day

Election dispute shows resources curse is starting to poison politics in Guyana

• ExxonMobil project promises oil wealth for the tiny impoverish­ed nation; now the fight is on to control it

- Kevin Crowley and Peter Millard Georgetown

When ExxonMobil came to Guyana, the US oil giant brought with it the promise of extraordin­ary economic growth. Now the tiny South American country is embroiled in a bitter battle over who might control that wealth just as the crude starts to flow.

In November, the IMF gave Guyana the nod as the world’s fastest-growing economy on the strength of Exxon’s oil finds.

Since then, a fight for political control has led to a disputed election, which is spurring calls for internatio­nal sanctions as a price rout subverts the nascent oil boom and a killer virus settles in.

Together, the three events are spurring rising concern over the future of both Guyana and Exxon within a nation politicall­y split along sharp racial lines.

The danger: with the government’s legitimacy at issue, Guyana risks limiting its oil riches and becoming another Venezuela, a neighbouri­ng country that is an economic and humanitari­an disaster zone.

“This is the first step of the oil curse,” said Schreiner Parker, the vice-president for Latin America at consultant Rystad Energy, citing the political clash. “The first thing that you can do wrong has been done wrong.”

FLAWED ELECTION

President David Granger is accused of miscountin­g votes to stay in office and of fighting a recount even after the US and regional groups said the March 2 vote was flawed.

Diplomats from the US, EU, UK and Canada recently quit an attempted recount, saying the process was not credible.

They warned in a joint statement that Guyana, which has a population of about 780,000, risks “isolation” from the internatio­nal community as a result.

A spokespers­on for Granger said there was “no evidence” of fraud in the election, and that a recount was blocked by the courts not the president.

But Granger’s challenger, Bharrat Jagdeo, said his supporters would not recognise Granger as president, “and we will not participat­e in the parliament”. Instead, they will work with the internatio­nal community and push for sanctions.

“Just when we thought we were moving forward as a country, this happens and taints us for years.” Jagdeo said in an interview.

Exxon, meanwhile, continues to see Guyana as its golden ticket in tough times, with billions of barrels of oil at play.

The company is accelerati­ng drilling at a cost that remains profitable even after the biggest price crash since the 1980s, and its partner, New York-based Hess Corporatio­n, said in January it expected to sell its first cargo of oil from Guyana this month.

Output from the project will escalate in coming months to 120,000 barrels a day, while Exxon has forecast it will produce at least 750,000 barrels a day by 2025.

“We are invested in a longterm, mutually beneficial relationsh­ip with the people of Guyana,” Exxon said.

The sheer size of the oil reserves — pegged at about 8billion barrels — suggests that Guyana’s annual GDP, now sitting at about $4bn, will expand to about $15bn by 2024, according to IMF estimates. At present the average income in Guyana is just $385 a month.

RESILIENT PEOPLE

It is a level of newfound wealth that has served to widen the split between Granger’s People’s Progressiv­e Party, which is supported primarily by the IndoGuyane­se people, and Jagdeo’s People’s National Congress, supported mainly by AfroGuyane­se residents.

“People are suspicious and fed up on both sides,” said Nicholas Deygoo, president of the Chamber of Commerce, speaking by phone from

Georgetown, the capital.

Gavin Singh, a Guyana-based investment banker, said the people he talked with were “scared and concerned”, but the Guyanese were “a resilient people. We’ve been through hard times before.

“As much as people are concerned, they’re also hopeful. They just want this to be over with, whatever the outcome.”

Guyana is Exxon’s secondbigg­est growth project after the Permian Basin in the US, and the first group of offshore wells are profitable even after the biggest price rout since the 1980s, according to energy consultanc­y Wood Mackenzie.

While Exxon was one of the first oil majors to announce spending cuts in response to the price crash, including in the Permian, its Guyana operation is expected to move forward.

Exxon’s partner, Hess Corporatio­n, excluded Guyana from its cuts to capital spending earlier in March, indicating the project will continue despite the crash in oil prices.

“For a project of this magnitude, and considerin­g it is deepwater, it is one of the best,” said Marcelo de Assis, the head of Latin American upstream research at Wood Mackenzie.

PAYMENT PROBLEMS

“Guyana is still attractive for investment. The external environmen­t should curb any increase in government take. This is not a time to toughen up fiscal terms.”

Still, if the domestic political crisis drags on at a time when a global pandemic and a price war are forcing companies across the world to their knees, Exxon could quickly run into problems with paying for its oil production, according to Parker.

The entire offshore oil industry was struggling to staff offshore facilities amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, and Guyana’s remote location made this more difficult, he said.

Guyana has four cases of the virus, according to the World Health Organisati­on. It has advised limiting social contact and closed some facilities.

There was “real panic” when the first case surfaced, according to Singh, with lines forming outside supermarke­ts.

“We just want our lives to go back to some sense of normality,” Singh said.

“To be able to shop and look at each other with a sense of security.”

 ?? /Reuters /Reuters ?? David Granger
Best finds:
ExxonMobil’s two largest growth projects are in Guyana and the US’s Permian Basin. Exxon is cutting spending in the Permian after the oil price crash, but it and its exploratio­n partner have kept capex budgets intact for Guyana’s deepwater reserves.
/Reuters /Reuters David Granger Best finds: ExxonMobil’s two largest growth projects are in Guyana and the US’s Permian Basin. Exxon is cutting spending in the Permian after the oil price crash, but it and its exploratio­n partner have kept capex budgets intact for Guyana’s deepwater reserves.

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