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Sunday, May 18, 2025

Energy panel discusses improving the investment climate in T&T

by

Geisha Kowlessar-Alonzo
843 days ago
20230126
 Rystad Energy, Senior Vice President and Head of Latin America, Schreiner Parker, speak during the Panel Discussion on Improving the Investment Climate at the Energy Conference, Hyatt Regency Port-of-Spain.

Rystad Energy, Senior Vice President and Head of Latin America, Schreiner Parker, speak during the Panel Discussion on Improving the Investment Climate at the Energy Conference, Hyatt Regency Port-of-Spain.

ANISTO ALVES

As the glob­al en­er­gy sec­tor be­comes more com­pet­i­tive T&T needs to move faster in en­sur­ing it can re­al­ly of­fer what in­vestors need.

Ac­cord­ing to Do­minic Ram­per­sad, pres­i­dent, Phoenix Park Gas Proces­sors Ltd, in­vestors are seek­ing cer­tain things in­clud­ing a sta­ble in­vest­ment cli­mate.

Speak­ing on a pan­el ti­tled, “Im­prov­ing the In­vest­ment Cli­mate,” at the T&T En­er­gy Con­fer­ence, Ram­per­sad ex­plained, “As an in­vest­ment ter­ri­to­ry we tend to be in­ward fo­cused. We look at what we have to of­fer to the world,” as he ref­er­enced that in the 1990s and in the ear­ly 2000s T&T, at that time, pre­sent­ed a mod­el which was con­sis­tent with what in­vestors were look­ing for.

“You had cheap gas, long-term con­tracts, you had cheap elec­tric­i­ty…the bot­tom line was we were the low-cost pro­duc­er in the re­gion and there­fore, in­vestors came in here in­flux.

“To­day I’m not so sure that still ex­ists.One of the things that comes out very clear­ly is when you lis­ten to even some of our ex­ist­ing multi­na­tion­als as they rein­vest back in­to the coun­try is they are look­ing for cer­tain things and one of the things they are look­ing for is sta­bil­i­ty,” Ram­per­sad out­lined.

He fur­ther ad­vised that T&T needs to look for the gaps and plug them.

“We re­al­ly have to stand back and un­der­stand as a gas-pro­duc­ing coun­try where our lev­el of com­pet­i­tive­ness is, where it is rel­a­tive to what in­vestors are look­ing for and where our gaps are. The prob­lem is in do­ing that we don’t have a lot of time to do it be­cause new provinces are show­ing up.

“We’ve seen the im­pact of the ‘Shale Rev­o­lu­tion’ over the last cou­ple of years and now we are see­ing the im­pact of Guyana and Suri­name on our mar­ket. Be­ing able to move quick­ly is go­ing to be a re­al im­por­tant fac­tor for us as a coun­try,” Ram­per­sad re­it­er­at­ed.

In the mean­time he added, in­vestors are not wait­ing as they have a host of oth­er op­tions.

Hence, un­less T&T presents a pack­age to in­vestors as to why it’s bet­ter than the al­ter­na­tive, “we will just be sim­ply wast­ing time,” Ram­per­sad em­pha­sised.

The com­pe­ti­tion, there­fore, not on­ly re­mains very re­al among oth­er coun­tries but there’s al­so com­pe­ti­tion be­tween cap­i­tal that would have gone to tra­di­tion­al hy­dro­car­bons ver­sus the cap­i­tal that’s go­ing to­wards re­new­ables.

As an in­ter­na­tion­al play­er Paul Baay, pres­i­dent and CEO of Touch­stone Ex­plo­ration, an oil and nat­ur­al gas ex­plo­ration and pro­duc­tion com­pa­ny in T&T, out­lined some of the walls he faces.

“When I go in to give a pitch in Lon­don or Toron­to I re­al­ly don’t have to pitch about Trinidad, sta­bil­i­ty of Gov­ern­ment, the rocks... but the ques­tion that al­ways comes up is the fis­cal take, the net­back and how much cash we are ac­tu­al­ly gen­er­at­ing and that’s where this com­pet­i­tive­ness sort of dis­ap­pears and you don’t have that same com­pe­ti­tion for cap­i­tal,” Baay ex­plained.

He said it’s more than just the fis­cal regime in T&T.

“It’s like on­ly hav­ing one buy­er of your gas. In our par­tic­u­lar case we have to get a gas con­tract to get the fi­nanc­ing to de­vel­op a gas plant so the first thing you have to do is ne­go­ti­ate with NGC but we don’t have a lot of lever­age when it’s the on­ly buy­er and I need the mon­ey to op­er­ate the plant,” Baay added.

This, Baay said, is re­flect­ed in pric­ing, not­ing that in­vestors like to in­vest in com­pa­nies where they will get the uptick.

An­oth­er ob­sta­cle fac­ing the sec­tor is time to pro­duc­tion which can al­so af­fect com­pet­i­tive­ness.

Schrein­er Park­er, se­nior vice-pres­i­dent, of the con­sult­ing firm Rys­tad En­er­gy ref­er­enced the case of Man­a­tee, a con­ven­tion­al gas de­vel­op­ment lo­cat­ed in the shal­low wa­ter in T&T and is op­er­at­ed by Shell T&T.

“We’re talk­ing about dis­cov­er­ies com­ing in­to pro­duc­tion that were made in 2005 which is the case with Man­a­tee. We’re in 2023 now and we’re talk­ing about pro­duc­tion maybe start­ing in 2028 so that’s a su­per long lead time and what it does is it puts a lot of pres­sure on the coun­try in gen­er­al be­cause you’re not re­al­is­ing the ul­ti­mate val­ue of the re­source that has been dis­cov­ered when it’s sit­ting there in a non-sanc­tioned sce­nario,” Park­er ex­plained.

He added that look­ing at the av­er­age time of 15 years in T&T means there’s a lot of mon­ey that’s be­ing left in the ground, both for com­pa­nies and the Gov­ern­ment.

How­ev­er, he not­ed that at the same time, an en­ti­ty may de­cide to go this route, par­tic­u­lar­ly when deal­ing with gas as­sets be­cause of mar­ket volatil­i­ty and the dif­fer­ent rea­sons it may not want to move for­ward.

Ac­cord­ing to Park­er if the fis­cal terms are at­trac­tive enough then op­er­a­tors will want to put those dis­cov­er­ies in­to pro­duc­tion, adding that there must be li­cens­ing terms in place that re­quire the as­sets to take the next steps af­ter dis­cov­ery.

Ad­di­tion­al­ly, achiev­ing a bal­ance be­tween a re­turn for in­vestors and do­ing good by the peo­ple was al­so dis­cussed.

This, Ram­per­sad said, is “ba­sic in­vest­ment 101.”

He said the sec­tor has to be mar­ket-dri­ven, not­ing that too much of the con­ver­sa­tion around in­vest­ing in T&T starts and cen­tres around fis­cal in­cen­tives.

“We seem to al­ways ex­pect the Gov­ern­ment and the peo­ple of T&T to pro­vide the in­cen­tive for peo­ple to in­vest here. That has to be bal­anced,” Ram­per­sad ad­vised.

He said while he agreed that a coun­try’s mi­cro­eco­nom­ic sys­tem has to be at­trac­tive, this has to be bal­anced with the “mar­ket that the prod­ucts are even­tu­al­ly chas­ing.”

“All of these prod­ucts that we’re pro­duc­ing; whether it is from the en­er­gy sec­tor or the man­u­fac­tur­ing sec­tor or even the ser­vices sec­tor..is chas­ing a mar­ket and we tend to not want to fo­cus enough on these in­vest­ments be­ing mar­ket-based verse them be­ing too much fis­cal in­cen­tive-based.

“We have to find that bal­ance be­tween what the mar­ket can tol­er­ate and where we as a coun­try now need to step in to en­sure there’s a fair re­turn for the in­vestor as well as the peo­ple of T&T,” Ram­per­sad ex­plained.

Us­ing the coun­try’s Cen­tral Bank as an ex­am­ple, he said the in­sti­tu­tion has done a good job of cre­at­ing a sta­ble en­vi­ron­ment for in­ter­est rates to al­low and en­cour­age peo­ple and in­vestors to bor­row.

Stat­ing that this bal­ance must be across the board, Ram­per­sad al­so not­ed that in the past fis­cal in­cen­tives have been pro­vid­ed and as soon as the as­sets are mon­e­tised there’s more call for more fis­cal in­cen­tives.


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