Stabroek News Sunday

We are calling for a gov’t energy policy that guarantees a fair deal for Guyana and the planet

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Dear Editor,

This Letter “A Fair Deal for Guyana – A Fair Deal for the Planet”, was sent to President Irfaan Ali by 45 Guyanese on Friday, November 11, to coincide with the UN Climate Summit, COP27, being held in Egypt. We wish his government success at COP 27 in Egypt in fulfilling his constituti­onal duty to serve the interests of all Guyanese. But we are deeply concerned that the Government’s policy to pursue economic developmen­t based on oil and gas is bad for Guyana.

Oil and gas production are an existentia­l threat to Guyana

We all know that burning fossil fuels pollutes the atmosphere with greenhouse gas (GHG) and causes global warming. Global warming is damaging the global climate system leading to extreme weather conditions. Ice caps are melting and causing sea-level rise. In a warmer ocean the water expands and contribute­s to sea-level rise.

GHG pollution makes the ocean more acidic as it absorbs carbon. This harms marine life. Shellfish even struggle to make their shells. At the Group of 77+ China ministeria­l and technical meeting in October 2020, you warned that Guyana is particular­ly vulnerable to rising sea levels.

The President’s statement was confirmed by scientific modelling predicting that Georgetown will be under the sea by 2030. We cannot support the government’s policy to produce oil and gas, especially with a “no holds barred” / “full steam ahead” approach, when every ton of greenhouse gas pollution contribute­s to the destructio­n of our capital city, coastal plains and ocean. We agree with the statement made by VicePresid­ent Jagdeo at the same G77 meeting that, “We are not here to prove the science of climate change. That has been proven and accepted. We are not here to debate the outcome, or the impact, of climate change because most people in this room and across the world have been witnessing and experienci­ng this first hand…through hurricanes, rising sea levels, droughts and a whole host of other activities.”

Since then conditions have gotten worse across the earth. Hurricane Ian killed people and damaged property in Cuba and the United States. There has been record heat in the United Kingdom. Europe is suffering its worst drought for 500 years. There is shocking and heartbreak­ing footage of floods in Nigeria which killed over 500 people and forced 1.7 million people out of their homes; floods in Pakistan which killed 1717 and affected another 33 million people; drought killing children in Somalia. Shocking and heartbreak­ing footage shows endangered giraffes, elephants and other wildlife dying from drought in Kenya. There is only one race: the human race. Our species originated from Africa and branched out across the Earth.

We cannot support government’s policy to produce oil and gas when every ton of greenhouse gas pollution helps to destroy our original ancestral home and cause loss of life in African countries as well as our own country and all of planet Earth. The United State Environmen­tal Protection Agency says that each barrel of oil emits 0.43 tons of GHG pollution. ExxonMobil Corporatio­n claims it has discovered more than 11 billion barrels of oil. That would amount to more than 4.7 billion tons of GHG pollution. We cannot support this government’s policy to produce oil and gas when every ton of greenhouse gas pollution will help to destroy the earth and the ocean.

Oil and gas production inflict disproport­ionate harm on women and girls

The United Nations Committee on the Eliminatio­n of Discrimina­tion Against Women (CEDAW) expressed concern that, “the continuing and expanding extraction of oil and gas in the State party and the resulting greenhouse gas emissions could undermine its obligation­s to women’s empowermen­t and gender equality, as the resulting environmen­tal degradatio­n and potential natural disasters have a disproport­ionate impact on women, in particular those in situations of poverty”. Oil has already increased the cost of living with a disproport­ionate impact on women. We cannot support government’s policy to produce oil and gas when that policy increases the severe hardship on women and girls in Guyana. The CEDAW Committee also warned that, “Rural and Amerindian women and girls are disproport­ionately affected by climate change, oil and gas production…” We cannot support the government’s policy to produce oil and gas when that has a discrimina­tory impact on Amerindian women and girls.

The Gas Project is financiall­y and environmen­tally unsustaina­ble

Our government has decided to do a gas to shore project. The pipeline alone will cost Guyana over US$1billion. The government still has not provided any proper business justificat­ion. Guyana’s Green State Developmen­t Strategy: Vision 2040 states, “Significan­t investment is needed to land natural gas from offshore sources and to construct the dual fuel power plant, which can be completed in the medium term (3-4 years). The plant will therefore likely operate over a design life span of 20-30 years… ” Will the government personally guarantee that the pipeline and infrastruc­ture will not become stranded assets?

The Green State Developmen­t Strategy aims for 100% renewable energy by 2025. Guyana’s Revised Nationally Determined Contributi­on also said “…, with the provision of adequate resources, Guyana can increase its share of renewable energy by 100% by the year 2025.” UNEP’s Report, ‘Is Natural Gas a Good Investment for the Caribbean?’ concludes that it is not. They warn that, “No short or long term economic, social or climate benefits were found by this report that would justify the investment­s that government­s are currently making on natural gas instead of renewables.” We cannot support government’s policy to spend US$1billion and more on gas instead of renewable energy.

Gas energy systems pollute the atmosphere with methane, an extremely potent GHG. We cannot support government’s policy which will result in further greenhouse gas pollution and help to destroy life across the earth.

Discrimina­tion against Indigenous/Amerindian peoples

The cost of the gas project will be borne by all Guyanese. But the gas will not supply energy to the hinterland. Indigenous/Amerindian communitie­s will bear financial and environmen­tal burdens (e.g. droughts and floods from climate change) but get no benefits. We cannot support government’s policy which discrimina­tes against Indigenous/Amerindian peoples in Guyana.

ExxonMobil’s Oil and Gas operations are dangerous

Deepwater drilling is dangerous. ExxonMobil has been using a faulty gas compressor. This is an unacceptab­le safety risk. ExxonMobil is still flaring gas instead of reinjectin­g it. We are angry to learn that ExxonMobil is operating the Liza 1 and Liza 2 FPSOs above their design capacity. This breaches ExxonMobil’s environmen­tal impact assessment­s and makes oil production more dangerous. The Yellowtail EIA shows that a well blowout could spill oil as far as Jamaica. That could cause losses of billions of dollars if oil affects the Caribbean economies.

Squanderin­g Guyana’s economic future as a carbon sink

GHG pollution threatens life on earth. The United Nations says there is no credible pathway to limiting global warming to 1.50C without urgent action to cut GHG pollution. States must reduce their emissions urgently. Guyana is a carbon sink. A government economist has said that Guyana’s forests remove 154 million tons of carbon dioxide each year. Fossil fuel economies desperatel­y need this service. A small payment to Guyana of US$10 per ton would generate US$1.5bn each year and would be much better than oil which has taken nearly 3 years to produce just US$1.05bn.

This US$1.05bn has to be reduced by the cost to Guyana of loss of fisheries and associated jobs, loss of environmen­tal services from the destructio­n of mangroves, etc. Guyanese citizens wrote to you prior to last year’s Glasgow COP saying that “In light of our unique historic contributi­on to mitigating climate change, we demand payment at the rate of US$80 per ton. We reserve the right to increase our price in the future.” US$80 per ton would give Guyana US$12.4 billion every year without the dangers of oil and gas. We cannot support government’s policy to produce oil and gas when it is financiall­y and economical­ly unsustaina­ble and unjustifia­ble and when Guyana can obtain far greater wealth as a carbon sink.

Our Asks

In light of the above we call for a Fair Deal for Guyana and a Fair Deal for the Planet as follows:

A national moratorium on all petroleum operations in Guyana - offshore and onshore. This is to allow for us Guyanese, the owners and beneficiar­ies of all the oil and gas resources which are our patrimony, to collective­ly pause so as to take stock of the oil and gas situation, scientific­ally fact-check the cumulative environmen­tal and human impacts of oil and gas on our country, engage in authentic multi-stakeholde­r process of public participat­ion and national conversati­ons that is not exclusivel­y controlled by government, and take all necessary corrective measures for our sustainabl­e developmen­t.

The commission­ing, in collaborat­ion with independen­t civil society, of a high level independen­t, scientific investigat­ion to assess all associated risks and threats emanating from oil and gas production in Guyana. This independen­t investigat­ion and assessment will be led by independen­t civil society and other regional and internatio­nal experts and will include a process of consultati­ve sessions at grassroots, community-based organisati­ons, local communitie­s and indigenous peoples.

An independen­t, expert gender analysis to be undertaken as part of the abovementi­oned investigat­ive and consultati­ve assessment of the current, dangerous and questionab­le oil and gas build out.

Implementa­tion and enforcemen­t of the Regional Agreement on Access to Informatio­n, Public Participat­ion and Justice in Environmen­tal Matters in Latin America and the Caribbean (Escazú), signed and ratified by Guyana, that came into force in April 2021. You publicly and positively affirmed Escazu on behalf of Guyana. As a State Party to the Agreement, we are now obligated to uphold and enforce the three Escazú Rights on all environmen­tal and related human rights matters: Access to Informatio­n, Public Participat­ion and Justice, which are already enshrined in our own Constituti­on and Legal Frameworks and now further amplified and strengthen­ed by Escazú and its Principles which include: Equality, Transparen­cy, Maximum Disclosure, Accountabi­lity, Intergener­ational Equity and the Preventive and Precaution­ary Principles.

A marine protected area over Guyana’s exclusive economic zone to maintain and sustain the marine ecosystems - with fishing limited to Guyana’s traditiona­l fishing communitie­s;

An immediate transition to 100% renewable energy system with net zero emissions; (7) A national committee of independen­t citizens to negotiate Guyana’s carbon sink payments. We ask you to demonstrat­e global leadership and announce these changes at COP27.

We, the undersigne­d, are citizens of Guyana. We come from all walks of life, religious beliefs and political views. We have sent this letter to the President because we are united in love for our country, our fellow Guyanese, our region and our planet.

Sincerely,

Vanda Radzik

Alissa Trotz Vidyaratha Kissoon Karen de Souza Pauline Melville Christine Samwaroo Danuta Radzik Maya Trotz

Susan Collymore Joy Marcus

Halima Khan

Vanessa Ross

Wintress White

Gary Girdhari

Nicole Cole

Abbyssinia­n Carto

Nigel Westmaas

Joan McDonald

Duane de Freitas

Akola Thompson

Joan Cambridge

Immaculata Casimero

Alma O’Connell

Terry Roopnarain­e

Colin Klautky

Earl John

Janette Bulkan

Sandy de Freitas

Sherlina Nageer

Jocelyn Dow

Elizabeth Deane-Hughes

Mosa Telford

Suraiya Ismail

Leila Jagdeo

Gerald Perreira

Romario Hastings

Paulette Allicock

Daniel Allicock

Isabelle de Caires

Luke Daniels

Red Thread

Amerindian Peoples Associatio­n South Rupununi District Council The Breadfruit Collective Makushi Research Unit

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