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HomeOpinionCommentaryTransparent transformation - Safeguarding Guyana's oil boom

Transparent transformation – Safeguarding Guyana’s oil boom

By Dr Carolyn Walcott and Dr Terrence Blackman

In May 2015, when the government of Guyana, through global oil investors, announced that oil was discovered in significant quantities offshore, economic transformation and development became state actors’ preoccupation. The discoveries meant that Guyana’s post-independent realities, primarily shaped by geopolitical contours that have impacted its financial and governance structures for decades, were about to shift.

Schreiner Parker, Rystad Energy’s SVP and head of its Latin American operations speaking at the Guyana Business Journal (GBJ) & Caribbean Policy Consortium July 21, 2022, Webinar,

Guyana Upstream: A Rystad Energy Industry and Country Benchmarking update, noted that initial prospecting for Guyana’s black gold commenced as early as the 1940s and continued into the 1960s. However, following Guyana’s independence in 1966 and its embrace of a socialist national development model, Guyana did not aggressively embrace the search for oil. The nation’s leadership resisted foreign investment and viewed western interests in Guyana’s mineral resources with suspicion as it sought to escape the shadow of colonization.

Now, more than 50 years after gaining its independence from Britain, Guyana’s emerging pro-investment ethos has changed its foreign investment posture. Oil giants, including the US-based Exxon Mobil, punctuated local and international news headlines based on the 2015 oil discoveries. The oil wells discovered there since 2015 accounted for 18 of the top 30 most significant offshore discoveries. As a result, Guyana has become a prime repository of the industrialized world’s most sought-after resource for economic expansion. These resources signal an unprecedented opportunity for the nation’s holistic transformation based on oil revenues.

Guyana’s fossil-green economy, a model climate change agent

The most recent forecasts by leading global energy analysts at Rystad Energy point to a nation on the threshold of astonishing wealth. Rystad estimates that Government revenues from oil production could reach as high as USD$1.5 billion this year depending on prices and an average of $3.6 billion per annum through 2030 (and $12.4 billion annually between 2031 and 2040). Furthermore, Rystad Energy forecasts production to result in Guyana’s fortunes peaking at $16 billion per year in 2036.

Cumulatively, this amounts to an estimated $157 billion for the state by 2040. It bears noting here also that in a world acutely sensitive to the intersection of fossil fuel resources and climate change and its implications for Guyana’s environmental footprint, the emissions intensity of Guyana’s production is nine kgCO2/boe–half of the global average. Guyana is threading the proverbial needle, and in this regard, the report notes that she can outperform ~75 percent of global producing assets.

Guyana’s transformation is an inevitable reality. However, the Rystad report notes that concerns persist around transparency issues and the state’s efforts to ensure that the legislative framework is in place to secure and safeguard its transformation. Guyana is rated “fairly low” in this regard. The EITI found “weaknesses in company reporting and tax administration policies that prevent public supervision of oil and gas revenues.”

Rystad sees the implementation of new governance mechanisms and institutions, based on global best practices, as critical to the state’s management of its oil wealth. Rystad Energy noted that the 2021 amendment of the Natural Resources Fund Act passed in 2019 and the Local Content Act 2021 were vital steps in the right direction but work still needs to be done.

The Rystad report makes it clear that Guyana is firmly on the path to long-term change; its leadership must judiciously safeguard this transformation through an intentional engagement with the citizens of Guyana and other key stakeholders. Moreover, the report clarifies that if Guyana succeeds on this journey, its socio-economic and political economy must become more inclusive, transparent, and accountable. These components, the Rystad report concludes, are equally vital to securing the nation’s transformation.

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