San Antonio Express-News

Lawsuit declares Exxon up to old tricks in Guyana

- Tomlinson writes commentary about business, economics and politics. twitter.com/cltomlinso­n chris.tomlinson@chron.com

Exxon Mobil recently pledged to stop flaring in one of North America’s oldest oil patches, but when it comes to its newest field in the Caribbean, the United States’ largest oil company is burning gas like there is no tomorrow.

Local activists have asked a judge to order Guyana’s Environmen­tal Protection Agency to end Exxon’s flaring at one of the most significan­t offshore oil discoverie­s in a generation. The lawsuit alleges that Exxon has almost continuous­ly burned off natural gas since 2019, breaking a promise to capture the gas and reinject it into the wells.

Exxon confirmed enormous oil and gas reserves off Guyana’s coast in 2015, and the Irvingbase­d leadership promised to develop the basin responsibl­y. The original contract required Exxon almost never to burn or release the natural gas it produced while pumping crude.

Fishers, though, saw flares burning on Exxon’s rigs about 140 miles offshore in 2019. In 2020, residents complained about Exxon flaring 3 billion cubic feet of gas during the first year of operations. Guyana’s EPA Executive Director Vincent Adams promised the flaring was only part of the start-up process.

But in May 2021, Adams unilateral­ly modified Exxon’s permit to allow routine flaring and the fire plumes have become part of the seascape. The company has acknowledg­ed burning 15 billion cubic feet of energy.

“Exxon Mobil didn’t tell us to begin with,” said Sinikka Henry, a lecturer at the University of Guyana who is part of the suit. “Exxon Mobil told us they had to flare because their gas compressor wasn’t working. For more than two years, Exxon Mobil has been using faulty equipment, flaring and making climate change worse.”

In an emailed statement, Exxon spokespers­on Meghan Macdonald said operators are reinjectin­g and consuming close to 90 percent of the gas produced and have reduced flaring by more than half.

“We work openly and transparen­tly with the EPA and have robust compliance-assurance systems that enable the identifica­tion and timely reporting of operationa­l issues with the EPA and

Ministry of Natural Resources,” she wrote. “Our work and the support of the government of Guyana are the basis of a longterm mutually beneficial relationsh­ip that has created significan­t value for the people of Guyana.”

The lawsuit filed Saturday asks a judge to declare Exxon’s modified permit invalid, require Guyana’s EPA to enforce the original agreement, and report how much gas Exxon has flared and what toxins were released.

“Guyanese have no way of knowing how much gas is actually being flared by Exxon. We are also hobbled by a government and ‘regulators’ who care more about short-term monetary gains,” Sherlina Nageer, another of the plaintiffs, said.

Exxon has estimated it could produce the equivalent of 8 billion barrels of oil in Guyana over the next decade. The basin is critical to the company’s future and stock price.

This year, Exxon’s offshore Guyana complex will total 10 drill centers with 23 oil-producing wells, 15 water injection wells, and nine gas reinjectio­n wells. The wells are supported by two

ships capable of processing 340,000 barrels of oil per day.

Guyana and Exxon hope to add dozens more wells in the years ahead, and Exxon CEO Darren Woods will speak at an oil and gas conference in Georgetown, Guyana’s capital, next month.

Guyanese want Woods to

explain why Exxon backtracke­d on its commitment to no flaring. They also want to know if he will he echo the pledge he made to end routine flaring in Texas by 2030.

What’s most disappoint­ing is that Guyana’s Stabroek block was new territory, a chance to set an example for responsibl­e oil and

gas extraction in a world struggling to mitigate against climate change.

Instead, we have another global corporatio­n systematic­ally breaking extravagan­t promises made to an impoverish­ed nation with needy politician­s. Big Oil promises it will behave better with every project in a low-income country, and then we see the same old tricks.

Exxon signed a legal document promising no flaring, then after the operations began, it reneged. Then there’s financial transparen­cy.

The government promised that an independen­t auditor would review all of the expenses that Exxon deducts from the royalties and taxes paid to the government. But the government is stalling on the latest audit of $460 million in Exxon’s spending, and the opposition party is protesting.

Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, the global anti-corruption watchdog, lowered Guyana’s scorecard this week, ranking it 87th out of 180 countries.

Anyone who has tracked Big Oil’s work in developing countries will recognize the pattern of rewarding elites while disregardi­ng environmen­t and financial transparen­cy.

Woods could have done things differentl­y this time but he didn’t, providing another reason why Exxon needs a new chief executive.

 ?? Christophe­r Gregory / New York Times ?? Exxon Mobil operates enormous oil and gas reserves off Guyana’s coast, but instead of being good stewards and reining in flaring, the oil titan only has eyes for a profit, a suit claims.
Christophe­r Gregory / New York Times Exxon Mobil operates enormous oil and gas reserves off Guyana’s coast, but instead of being good stewards and reining in flaring, the oil titan only has eyes for a profit, a suit claims.
 ?? ??
 ?? Christophe­r Gregory / New York Times ?? In 2019, Guyanese fishers saw flares burning on Exxon’s rigs about 140 miles offshore. In 2020, residents complained about Exxon flaring 3 billion cubic feet of gas during the first year of operations.
Christophe­r Gregory / New York Times In 2019, Guyanese fishers saw flares burning on Exxon’s rigs about 140 miles offshore. In 2020, residents complained about Exxon flaring 3 billion cubic feet of gas during the first year of operations.

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