Energy Minister Stuart Young will return to Venezuela shortly to complete the finalisation of the term sheet for the Dragon gas field arrangement with Venezuela - and the negotiation is expected to be closed very soon, Prime Minister Keith Rowley said yesterday at the Whitehall news conference
After the US agreed T&T can do straight up commercial arrangements with Venezuela to get its gas and pay for it according to the terms on the term sheet, Rowley said there were minor adjustments like humanitarian concerns. "But the bottom line is the door is open for commercial arrangements."
He said Young is currently on a week's vacation. "As soon as he gets back here he'll be on his way to Caracas to complete the dotting of the Is and crossing the Ts on the term sheet and in the meantime Shell, our operating partner, will be moving full speed ahead on the technical side of things," Rowley added.
He said that at this stage, not everything could be divulged, "because these commercial arrangments are subject to certain confidentialities."
Rowley added,"Very soon we expect to close off that negotiation and the last thing to happen is for the licence to operate... when all parties are satisfied with conditions, the licence to operate will be issued,"
He said T&T got a commitment from Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro that the licence would be issued. Rowley said he couldn't say when first gas will be obtained from the field until the licence is received. He said the platform for the field already exists.
Rowley said the venture was for the long term since if TT didn't discover major fields to replace what is being consumed daily and didn't get access to where the gas exists, T&T would be forced to accept a "significant reduction of fortunes". TT is now down to 2.6Billion Cubic Feet of gas a day.