Senior political reporter
The Dragon natural gas agreement with Venezuela includes allocations for domestic gas as well as LNG. The agreement is not only for the pursuit of Dragon field gas, but details can’t be given due to confidentiality terms, Energy Minister Stuart Young said yesterday.
In his contribution to debate on the 2024 Budget in the House of Representatives, Young also said Government hopes to sign the final agreement on the restructuring of Atlantic, the liquefied natural gas (LNG) in Point Fortin within the next month.
The minister spent half of his contribution criticising the former People’s Partnership administration’s management of the energy sector and listing the achievements of the PNM Government.
Commenting on Opposition questions about the Dragon field agreement with Venezuela, Young pointed out: “Trinidad and Tobago isn’t the only place interested in Venezuela.
“When I was in Venezuela a couple of weeks ago at PDVSA headquarters, as I walked out of the boardroom to strategise, there were literally a number of multinational companies meeting them. There are other countries in the world wanting to do business with Venezuela, but what we’ve done is manage the relationship to ensure we’re the priority.”
Young said a commercial term sheet was negotiated and signed in 2018.
He dismissed Opposition queries about the many agreements signed, pointing out that this was “because the US put sanctions!”.
Young added: “And that’s what stopped it otherwise the Dragon gas would have been in Trinidad and Tobago since 2020! The US put sanctions and stopped the project.”
He also recalled that the Opposition wrote the US seeking sanctions on him and the Prime Minister “because they were supporting ‘President Guaido’ and asking why I let Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodriguez into Trinidad and Tobago. Thank God I did!”
Young said the agreement that was signed between him and Venezuela’s Minister of the People’s Power of Petroleum was for the promotion of joint projects in the gas hydrocarbon sector.
“And it is not only for Dragon but also as part of that agreement ... I cannot get into the terms of it since, as happens with all energy sector commercial agreements, there are terms of confidentiality,” he said
He explained this was because if many parties were negotiating, Venezuela wouldn’t want each party to know the terms of the deal.
“Dragon is well on the way,” he declared.
Young said the agreement is not only for the pursuit of gas, dismissing claims it was only for LNG.
“There’s an allocation for domestic gas! And we’ve had a number of meetings and we’re now negotiating the pricing,” he said.
On other issues, the minister said the Manatee field, which is part of the Loran-Manatee field between T&T and Venezuela, was part of a unitisation agreement but when the Government saw what was occurring as a result of the US sanctions, they negotiated and “got President Maduro to allow us to produce the Manatee field, so that is going to happen”.
“And it’s only natural that Loran will follow. In my recent discussions with the Venezuelans, and in particular President Maduro and Vice President Rodriguez, they’re looking at Loran coming to Trinidad and Tobago.”
Young said as the Dragon, Manatee and Calypso arrangements come on stream, companies like Haliburton and others that left will return.
On the Atlantic LNG agreement, he said: “Thousands of pages are now being reviewed to a restructured Atlantic LNG that would mean better shareholding for the people of Trinidad and Tobago. We also managed to negotiate third-party access to gas so that means that not only NGC, Shell and BP can bring gas to ALNG in the future but others can as well.”
He said that now presents opportunities for deepwater, Woodside, regional gas and cross-border gas.
Other endeavours outlined by Young include a memorandum of understanding and meetings with Suriname, the Lara solar project, the pursuit of wind for electricity generation and the first green hydrogen project.