Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Guyana loser in Exxon oil deal, group says

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Michael Weissenste­in of The Associated Press and by Kevin Crowley of Bloomberg News.

A natural-resource watchdog group alleges in a new report that Guyana may have lost as much as $55 billion in potential revenue by poorly negotiatin­g a deal with ExxonMobil to pump reserves that are expected to make the small South American country into the world’s newest major oil producer.

London- and Washington-based Global Witness says in the report released Monday that the 2016 deal giving Guyana 52% of the revenue from oil pumped from a big offshore oil block was far better for ExxonMobil than Guyana because such deals typically give national government­s 65% to 85% of revenues.

Guyana had a strong bargaining position when the contract came up for renegotiat­ion because Exxon had just made a giant offshore oil discovery, but “inexperien­ced” bureaucrat­s failed to press for substantia­lly better fiscal terms, the report said.

Government officials were more concerned with a maritime border dispute with Venezuela than negotiatin­g better terms, the group said. Natural Resources Minister Raphael Trotman signed an “exceptiona­lly bad” deal compared with other frontier oil nations, Global Witness said, citing a fiscal analysis by OpenOil, a Berlin-based public-policy researcher.

“A country with inadequate schools, a declining sugar industry, and crumbling sea defenses that cannot protect it from rising sea levels deserves a better deal,” the group says.

Trotman declined to comment beyond previous statements in which he said it was in Guyana’s best interests to gain “security in what it had” rather than engage in a protracted renegotiat­ion.

ExxonMobil said the report failed to account for the risk the oil giant assumed in exploring the unproven deep water area known as Stabroek.

“The conclusion­s drawn are based on hypothetic­als and circular reasoning that do not take into considerat­ion Guyana’s status as a frontier hydrocarbo­n province,” the company said Monday. Exxon said Global Witness’s conclusion­s are “misleading.”

The group compared Guyana to mature oil-producing countries that have lower-risk profiles and failed to acknowledg­e that the “material economic terms were agreed to in 1999 and remained in effect in 2016,” the Irving, Texasbased company said.

Even for a company the size of Exxon, Guyana is becoming a critical project. Under pressure from investors upset by its poor, longterm stock performanc­e, Chief Executive Officer Darren Woods last week championed the project’s high returns as an example of the fruits of his $35 billiona-year spending plan.

ExxonMobil began shipping the first tankers of Guyanese oil this year and the offshore fields are estimated to contain more than 8 billion barrels, one of the world’s largest reserves.

The revenue is expected to transform the finances of Guyana by generating an estimated $168 billion over the life of the project, 120 times the country’s annual budget.

Global Witness said it had found no evidence of corruption in Guyana’s deal with ExxonMobil, but called for closer scrutiny of the relationsh­ip between Trotman and Nigel Hughes, who has worked as a lawyer for ExxonMobil.

Trotman and Hughes are leaders of a Guyanese political party, Alliance for Change.

“The relationsh­ip between Trotman, Hughes, and Exxon should be investigat­ed to determine the existence or extent of any conflict of interest,” the report said.

Hughes could not immediatel­y be reached for comment on the report.

Guyana is a relatively poor nation of about 740,000 people. It holds general elections on March 2, and the opposition People’s Progressiv­e Party has issued some statements indicating that it will seek to renegotiat­e oil concession­s, although the specifics of its position remain unclear.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States