Senior Reporter
andrea.perez-sobers@guardian.co.tt
Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley says in decades to come T&T will still be a natural gas-exporting country.
Prime Minister Rowley made the comment at the energy town hall segment on day one of the Energy Conference at the Hyatt Regency yesterday.
He indicated there will still be demand for energy from hydrocarbons in 2050.
Rowley said even if people stop producing and using internal combustion engines, the demand will exist across other industries.
“The bottom line is, 27 years from today, I would think that T&T will still be a gas-exporting country even if we would have used up most of the gas on our border. There is serious European interest in what is happening in T&T as it attempts to bring to market resources from South America. So, given what the world’s geopolitics has turned out to be, a lot of interest exists now in having security for fuel out of an area that is traditionally stable,” he said.
Touching on the green energy aspect that the world is currently moving towards, the Prime Minister said the current costs associated with those ventures are restrictive.
“The cost of greening, carbon capture, and so on, is a huge cost and these are not costs that can be absorbed by the Government. We just don’t have the capacity and we certainly can’t commit our limited finances to the risks of those things,” Rowley stressed.
However, he said when the costs are within a doable range, T&T will play a bigger role, adding that the government has engaged in projects such as solar power, apparently referring to the National Gas Company’s investment of 30 per cent in Lightsource solar project.
“We can do more of that if we are in a better position to participate, but we need to overcome the cost challenges so that if we have a larger green input into our infrastructure, Point Lisas will become a diamond, not only for us but in the world economy and that’s what we are aiming for,” Rowley explained.
Also speaking at the conference was Energy Minister Stuart Young, who noted that the successful restructuring of Atlantic LNG is a matter of high importance not only for the country, but to all our upstream players as well.
The restructured ownership and commercial framework, Young said, will provide these upstream companies with the clarity necessary for sanctioning the next wave of upstream gas projects.