The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Guyana must go with flow as oil boom hits

- BRIAN WILSON ■ Brian Wilson is a former UK energy minister

Itook part recently in the fourth annual Aberdeen Guyana Gateway event hosted by Granite PR, Brett Jackson’s public relations firm, which brought together some of the key players in that country and its developing oil industry.

My interest in Guyana is very much long distance and is based on the fact it has the potential, one way or another, to be the classic case study of how and whether a small, poor country can come to terms with the sudden arrival of the internatio­nal oil industry.

There is no shortage of precedents to that question and the answers have not always been encouragin­g. However, the dichotomy between size of population and scale of resource is probably unique to the case of Guyana.

There are just 750,000 people in Guyana and a reasonable share of the wealth that is about to flow from their waters could give all of them a comfortabl­e, peaceful life for generation­s to come, with quite a bit to spare.

That’s the optimistic vision and it was much in evidence during these two days of discussion­s. There is a keen awareness of the need to build local supply chains and also to partner with foreign companies which have relevant experience – a clear opportunit­y for the UK given historic links.

Equally, there could hardly fail to be a keen awareness of how things could go horribly wrong with the blessing becoming a curse. One does not have far to look for the example of how oil wealth can heighten inequality rather than eliminate poverty. Neighbouri­ng Venezuela has had oil for more than a century and little good it has done the impoverish­ed masses.

I listened to my fellow speakers with a degree of optimism and the event was agreed by all to have been valuable and informativ­e. Aberdeen has twinned with Georgetown and is absolutely right to do so. The lessons to be learned from how the north-east turned the North Sea industry to its advantage are as helpful as they are likely to find.

Where optimism arises, a corrective soon corrects itself. This came in the form of an article written for Bloomberg by a veteran Latin American specialist, Mac Margolis, who feared that the divisive nature of Guyana’s politics, based on ethnicity, was already threatenin­g to turn opportunit­y into disaster.

“Cronyism, graft and self-dealing have long made Guyana’s identityri­ven politics a race to the bottom,” he wrote.

“Unless Guyanese society holds its carping political establishm­ent to a higher bar, South America’s breakout nation risks sabotaging a centuries-deferred vision of creating common wealth and democratic stability, and instead enriching only the oil behemoths”.

On balance, I prefer to take the optimistic view – that Guyana is capable of coming to terms with its extraordin­ary new wealth, but also that it needs external assistance to do so. And that is where the UK should surely be rethinking its position on the ludicrous prohibitio­n on support from the Department of Internatio­nal Trade for companies in the oil and gas sector, in which it has been followed by the Scottish Government.

Guyana’s oil industry is not going to shut up the shop it has just opened any time soon.

If British companies and institutio­ns do not give the industry the support and massive experience they can contribute, then others will fill that void – perhaps with less regard for the regulation, environmen­tal and transparen­cy standards by which our companies are bound by law. We should be pro-actively encouragin­g involvemen­t in Guyana at this stage, not obstructin­g it.

There is another reason for this, Guyana has recently been going through terrible flooding. The country has been in the front line of dealing with the impacts of climate change. Much of the money that comes from oil will be used to fund its own energy transition to renewables. Should we not also be involved in all of that?

For the time being, outsiders can only hope that oil becomes a net blessing rather than a curse for Guyana.

However, there is no need for Aberdeen, Scotland or the UK to be bystanders in that contest.

 ??  ?? ALL HANDS ON DECK: A small, poor country like Guyana must come to terms with the sudden arrival of the internatio­nal oil industry.
ALL HANDS ON DECK: A small, poor country like Guyana must come to terms with the sudden arrival of the internatio­nal oil industry.

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